What's new

Why India needs to rethink the Rafale deal

. .
Fighter planes fall into two categories – the hunters and the hunted. The French are pitching their Rafale as the dogfight duke that is the crème de la crème of jet fighters. But the Russian side disagrees. Alexander Kadakin, Russia's ambassador in India, says Chinese-made Sukhoi-27s would be able to swat the Rafales like “mosquitoes on an August night.”
At this point it’s pointless to deliver the verdict on which aircraft is superior. The Rafale is a largely unknown commodity in aviation circles. Like most French fighters, it is most likely an unassuming, unspectacular but honest aircraft.
But what Kadakin left unsaid is ominous. First up, he said the hundreds of Su-27 Flankers supplied by Moscow to Beijing are much less advanced than the Flankers in India’s inventory. Now forget the Su-27 for a while and let’s talk about the two squadrons of the latest Su-35 Super Flanker that Russia has cleared for sale to China. This new iteration is a huge advancement over the already potent Su-27. If the aircraft's stupendous performance at the 2014 Paris Air Show is any indication then the Rafale is likely to fare even worse against the Su-35.
Costing dogfight

To be sure, the most significant aspect of the Rafale deal is the cost. Originally pegged at $10 billion, the size of the deal has climbed to a stratospheric $30 billion. So instead of bolstering the country’s air power, the Rafale is threatening to blow a gaping hole in India’s overstretched defence budget.
India may the third largest economy on the planet but in the backdrop of numerous projects requiring bucket loads of cash, New Delhi can’t afford to splurge on weapons, especially when alternatives are available for far less.
The IAF’s requirement of 126 aircraft can be quickly met – at a fraction of the cost of the Rafale – by inducting more numbers of the technologically superior Su-30s, which the IAF described as its “air dominance fighter,” and which is being produced at Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL).

Each Indian made Su-30 costs approximately $75 million per unit. So if the IAF goes for 126 of them, the total cost will come to under $10 billion, which coincidentally is the originally envisaged amount. Plus, the Sukhois will provide more bang for the buck. “These aircraft will be the high end of India’s air power, and can be expected to remain in the force past 2030, and are competitive with or superior to top-end European fighters and American F-15 variants,” says Defense Industry Daily.
Another option is to buy more of the – even more cheaper – MiG-29, which is the mainstay of India’s interceptor force, and which had shattered the morale of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) during the 1999 Kargil War.

With the $20 billion or so saved, India can import leading edge aviation technology – from France, Russia, Germany or even the US to beef up its military aviation. With manufacturing declining in the US and Europe and thousands of defence sector jobs facing the axe, western engineers would be more than happy to work in India.
There is a precedent in this area. After 1991 when elite Soviet weapons engineers and scientists found their jobs gone, many of them found work at Chinese and South Korean companies – both military and civilian. Russian scientists and engineers ended up transforming the defence sector in both these Asian countries.

India too needs to tread the same path. Hiring unemployed or underemployed European defence sector workers would cut the development time frame of Indian defence projects. In fact, even Pakistan has a tenuous Russian connection. An administrator of Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission from 1967 to 1970 was Polish aeronautical engineer air commodore Wladyslaw Turowicz. Born in Siberia, the Pole made significant contributions to Pakistan’s missile programme as an aeronautical engineer.

That brings up the third option. India’s homemade Tejas light combat aircraft (LCA) is being fielded in limited numbers, and further development can easily make it a world class fighter. India can then produce hundreds of LCAs costing around $40 million – for the IAF. For decades, China has adopted this policy of having hundreds of obsolete aircraft because “quantity has a quality all its own”.
Sending hundreds of LCAs swarming into Pakistani air space would completely overwhelm that country’s defences. In effect, the Tejas fleet would kick the door in, allowing the Sukhois to pulverise targets with the supersonic BrahMos cruise missiles.
The LCA even become the military equivalent of India’s $2000 TATA Nano car, for which there was a waiting list in Sri Lanka. Similarly, the LCA could be the ideal export aircraft to small countries with limited budgets. Aircraft such as the Su-30, MiG-29 and F-18 are too expensive and too big for the use of such nations. India could be the first to market a no-frills fighter.

Why Rafale?

When the MMRCA tender was floated over a decade ago, it seemed like a good idea. One, it was aimed at lowering India’s overwhelming dependence on Russia for advanced weapons.

Secondly, India wanted to acquire a medium aircraft that would fill the gap between the low-end LCA and the premium Sukhois.
The third reason was to shore up the IAF's depleting fighter fleet. The IAF’s sanctioned strength is 39.5 squadrons (an IAF combat squadron consists of 18 aircraft in service with another 3-4 in maintenance) but its current fleet is down to 34 squadrons. The air force says it requires 44 squadrons to meet a full-scale war with Pakistan, while also maintaining "a dissuasive posture" against China.
Earlier this year, the IAF told a Parliamentary standing committee on defence that a "collusive threat" from China and Pakistan would be difficult for it to handle. This was played up by the media, which failed to see the fine print: the IAF admitted (in the same statement) China may not pose “a collusive threat” if hostilities were to break out between India and Pakistan.
Indeed, why would the Chinese team up with a rapidly balkanizing Pakistan and attack a fellow BRICS member? It is not only counterintuitive but also a ridiculous idea.

As for the threat from Pakistan, it is really a joke. The arrival of the MiG-29 and the Sukhoi-30 in the 1990s has given the IAF a fearsome qualitative advantage over the PAF. This edge was demonstrated during the 1999 Kargil War. While a number of IAF aircraft took part in that campaign, it was the cover provided by the MiG-29 that spooked – and demoralised – the PAF pilots.
Says Strategy Page in a report dated May 20, 2005: “While PAF fighters did fly Combat Air Patrols (CAP) during the conflict, they stayed well within Pakistani air space. On occasions, IAF MiG-29s armed with the deadly R-77 BVR air-to-air missiles were able to lock on to PAF F-16s, forcing the latter to disengage.”

So scared were the Pakistani pilots of the Indian MiGs that the “PAF simply refused to play any part” in the war.
In the report “Airpower at 18,000 feet: IAF in the Kargil War” published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 2012, Benjamin Lambeth says the Pakistani F-16s “typically maintained a safe distance of 10 to 20 miles on the Pakistani side of the LoC”.

Qualitatively, the IAF is on an upward curve. In fact, in an interview to the media in 2012, former air force chief N.A.K. Browne gave the lie to the claim that the IAF was becoming weaker. According to Browne, the IAF is replacing older MiG-21s with Su-30s. He said once older aircraft are replaced with brand new Sukhois the IAF will have “far greater capability than even what we have today”.
If India and France sort out the numerous issues dogging the MMRCA deal and a contract is signed this year, then the first 18 Rafales will arrive from France in 2016. If all goes smoothly, the rest of the 102 aircraft could start rolling off HAL’s assembly lines by 2018.
But here’s the rub: around 2020 Sukhoi’s stealth fighter, the PAK-FA, in which India is a junior partner, will be ready to join the IAF. Why India is committing itself to a stopgap aircraft is mysterious.

Why India needs to rethink the Rafale deal | Russia & India Report


All wrong. Not convinced with the OP argument. it almost sounds like Russians are crying.

India must not buy Russian fighters based of such whining. French is the way to go.


Heck with $30-50 billion dollars of expense, India can design and build its own. I have already in a different thread.
 
Last edited:
.
Lol gripen use same Radar and engine does this bar them to sell their aircraft to brazil or others.Brazil is a bric nation for example. Please come with better excuse next time
Tell me any country interested in lca? Give a reason why they won't buy cheap chinese fighters?
 
. .
Tell me any west nation except usa.Which is superior to China in terms of tech and indigenous equip.?

France, the UK, Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands, Germany and Russia all have tech that is equal to or superior to that of China... much is ingeniously designed and manufactured as well. If we are counting Turkey as European, they were in the running for EU candidacy, then I would add them to my list as well.
 
. .
France, the UK, Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands, Germany and Russia all have tech that is equal to or superior to that of China... much is ingeniously designed and manufactured as well. If we are counting Turkey as European, they were in the running for EU candidacy, then I would add them to my list as well.
Waste of time Mate Either this guy Trolling for Reason or He completely no Idea what he is Talking about.
 
.
swedish are Eu partner they have history of building jet fighters they have access to western par tech unlike india which a new Player .jf-17 even cannot fir Bvr too except few Photoshop-ed picture none of the proofs are available jf -17 inducted after getting just ioc.:rofl::rofl:
Don't act like a noob found this on wiki
JF-17 can be armed with up to 3,629 kg (8,001 lb) of air-to-air and air-to-ground weaponry, and other equipment mounted externally on the aircraft's seven hardpoints.[12] One hardpoint is located under the fuselage between the main landing gear, two are underneath each wing, and one is at each wing-tip. All seven hardpoints communicate via a MIL-STD-1760 data-bus architecture with the Stores Management System,[12] which is stated to be capable of integration with weaponry of any origin.[55] Internal armament comprises one 23 mm (0.91 in) GSh-23-2 twin-barrel cannon mounted under the port side air intake, which can be replaced with a 30 mm (1.2 in) GSh-30-2 twin-barrel cannon.[2][77]

The wing-tip hardpoints are typically occupied by short range infra-red homing AAMs. Many combinations of ordnance and equipment such as targeting pods can be carried on the under-wing and under-fuselage hardpoints. Underwing hardpoints can be fitted with multiple ejector racks, allowing each hardpoint to carry two 500 lb (230 kg) unguided bombs or LGBs—Mk.82or GBU-12. It is unknown whether multiple ejector racks can be used for ordnance such as beyond visual range (BVR) AAMs.[3] Active radar homing BVR AAMs can be integrated with the radar and data-link for mid-course updates. The ChinesePL-12/SD-10 is expected to be the aircraft's primary BVR air-to-air weapon, although this may change if radars of other origin are fitted. Short range, infra-red homing missiles include the Chinese PL-5E andPL-9C, and the AIM-9L. The PAF is also seeking to arm the JF-17 with a fifth generation close-combat missile such as the IRIS-T or A-darter. These will be integrated with the HMS/D and the radar for targeting.[3][12]

Unguided air-to-ground weaponry includes rocket pods, gravity bombs and Matra Durandal anti-runway munitions. Precision-guided munitions such as LGBs andsatellite-guided bombs are also compatible with the JF-17, as are other guided weapons such as anti-ship missiles andanti-radiation missiles.[12] Pakistan plans to bring the Brazilian MAR-1 anti-radiation missile into service on its JF-17 fleet in 2014.[
 
.
France, the UK, Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands, Germany and Russia all have tech that is equal to or superior to that of China... much is ingeniously designed and manufactured as well. If we are counting Turkey as European, they were in the running for EU candidacy, then I would add them to my list as well.
Remove russia,
Well rest of the list is rubbish. Any of the countries have fifth gen fighter programs?Dont be biased.China is a superior military power than the west
 
. .
Waste of time Mate Either this guy Trolling for Reason or He completely no Idea what he is Talking about.
Well who is trolling let's see.
The guy who compares an operational plane to a prototype,the guy who says Bhutan should buy lca they don't even have airforce or major helis and the guy who said jf17 can't fire bvr
 
.
Remove russia,
Well rest of the list is rubbish. Any of the countries have fifth gen fighter programs?Dont be biased.China is a superior military power than the west

Really??? That's your retort? When did a lack of a 5th gen fighter program indicate a lack of knowledge or manufacturing capability? A nation may lack the funds, the need or the political will, but that doesn't mean that they lack the tech. The US doesn't produce nuclear icebreakers, diesel-electric subs or corvettes, does this mean the US lags behind Russia in this category? No, it means there is a differing need and priority which drives their production. The European nations lack the will and desire to produce a 5th gen fighter, but that doesn't mean they can't or they lack the technical sophistication to do so. Their tanks, ships, missiles, aircraft, EW capabilities, each are more than a match for any other nation.

Here's a fun comparison for you to ponder. The UK's Astute class submarine is better then all but the best in the USN, doesn't this mean it's better then China too? China is not a superior power when compared to the West, ask any of the Chinese members on PDF and they will tell you the same!

Also you say I should remove Russia from my list. But the Russians are regarded as even less capable then the Europeans who possess superior technical sophistication. Russian electronics still lag behind their Western counterparts... their engines too and their understanding and application of stealth capabilities.
 
Last edited:
.
he guy who compares an operational plane to a prototype
really operational i never seen it in Action in Either Operations Against TTp or in N-Wazirstan :disagree::disagree:

the guy who says Bhutan should buy lca they don't even have airforce or major helis and the guy who said jf17 can't fire bvr
so that Will remain Same or bhutan your might get an idea about modi policy for bhutan,nepal, bangladesh,vietnam or SAArc nations.Jf-17 is can,t fire bvr if you have video Evidence Please put :lol::lol:Till then Enjoy photo shopped pictures of jf-17 carrying BvR:enjoy:
 
.
Really??? That's your retort? When did a lack of a 5th gen fighter program indicate a lack of knowledge or manufacturing capability? A nation make lack the funds, the need or the political will, but that doesn't mean that they lack the tech. The US doesn't produce nuclear icebreakers, diesel-electric subs or corvettes, does this mean the US lags behind Russia in this category? No, it means there is a differing need and priority which drives their production. The European nations lack the will and desire to produce a 5th gen fighter, but that doesn't mean they can't or they lack the technical sophistication to do so. Their tanks, ships, missiles, aircraft, EW capabilities, each are more than a match for any other nation.

Here's a fun comparison for you to ponder. The UK's Astute class submarine is better then all but the best in the USN, doesn't this mean it's better then China too? China is not a superior power when compared to the West, ask any of the Chinese members on PDF and they will tell you the same!

Also you say I should remove Russia from my list. But the Russians are regarded as even less capable then the Europeans who possess superior technical sophistication. Russian electronics still lag behind their Western counterparts... their engines too and their understanding and application of stealth capabilities.
USA doesn't produce diesel subs because they have to project their navy.You can't deny that chinese equipment is good,they have quality with quantity. European nations can't afford ef,germans have grounded their fleet.What more? About russia and china they may not be superior in tech as you told me ur post but they have numbers and still their tech is no where inferior.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom