Will buy only 36 Rafales, no need for 126: Parrikar

Raises questions on tendering process initiated by former Defence Minister A K Antony

NEW DELHI: India has decided to buy only 36 Rafale fighter jets scrapping the earlier plan to acquire 126 of the French aircraft on grounds of huge cost.
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar termed as “economically unviable” the previous United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government’s 20 billion USD deal for purchase of the 126 Rafale fighter planes more than three years after France’s Dassault Aviation was declared the lowest bidder.
“We are not buying the rest. We are only buying the direct 36,” Parrikar told PTI in an interview when asked what will happen to rest of the requirement.
He said the UPA deal for 126 Rafales was way too expensive and it would have hampered other modernisation plans of the Indian military.
The deal would have required around Rs 1.3 lakh crore over a period of 10-11 years, he added.
“Would there be any money for any other work?” he asked.
“I also feel like having a BMW and Mercedes. But I don’t because I can’t afford it. First I can’t afford it and second I don’t need it. So, 126 Rafales was economically unviable. It was not required,” Parrikar said.
During his visit to France last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the decision to buy 36 of the Rafale jets in a fly-away condition under a government-to-government (G2G) contract.
Parrikar underlined that the decision to acquire the 36 French jets came in view of the “urgent requirement” of Indian Air Force(IAF).
He also raised questions on the tendering process initiated by former Defence Minister A K Antony and said his predecessor had “hammered” the tender in such a way that the Rafale deal would have never seen the light of the day.
Rejecting criticism from the Congress that the prime minister had by-passed the Finance Ministry and the Defence Acquisition Council, the apex body of the Defence Ministry that takes the call on military projects, Parrikar said “the deal is yet to be inked” and they should hold their horses till the process was complete.
 He expressed confidence that the committee, that has been set up to work out the contract, would complete the task in the next two to three months. 
He also wondered why Antony was trying to force the French firm Dassault Aviation, manufacturer of the Rafale jets, to come back to him even after it was selected as the lowest bidder.
“After L1 was determined, he said go ahead with cost negotiations and, after negotiations are complete, go back and check on methodology of L1, whether it was correct or not?”
“Why did it happen? There are only two reasons. You are forcing your supplier to come back to you. What is the reason? He (Antony) should answer,” Parrikar said refusing to
elaborate further.
The minister underlined that Rafales are not a replacement for MiG-21s. He said that the MiGs would be replaced by the indigenous Tejas light combat aircraft.
Asked if the Rafale deal meant that the Modi government will only go through G2G deals for strategic assets in defence, Parrikar said the Defence Procurement Procedure does not prevent the government from using the G2G route.

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