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Defence Ministry likely to clear buying 114 Rafale fighters

Defence Procurement Board approves proposal to acquire 114 Rafale jets
Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI: The Defence Ministry is all set to approve a Rs 3.25 lakh crore deal this week to buy 114 Rafale fighter jets from France for the Indian Air Force, according to reliable sources. The clearance is scheduled to take place ahead of French President Emmanuel Macron’s forthcoming official visit to Delhi.
After the Defence Ministry’s approval, the deal will eventually need clearance from the Cabinet Committee on Security chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
According to the proposal, India will purchase 18 off-the-shelf Rafales from French defence giant Dassault Aviation, while the remaining 96 fighter jets will be ‘made in India’. Some of these jets will be twin-seater aircraft to be used for training. The deal will involve the transfer of state-of-art fighter jet technology and a strategic partnership to give a fillip to the ‘Make in India’ programme.
The Indian Air Force already has 36 Rafales in its fleet, comprising two squadrons, with the last delivery of the ‘C’ variant taking place in December 2024. Another 26 Rafale jets of the ‘M’ version, have also been ordered for the Indian Navy in a deal worth Rs 63,000 crore. The naval variants will be operated from the aircraft carriers INS Vikrant and INS Vikramaditya.
That deal includes facilitation of fleet maintenance, logistics support, and personnel training under a MRO (maintenance, repair and overhaul) agreement. The Rafale jets were successfully used in Operation Sindoor to hit precision targets in Pakistan, as part of India’s military response to the Pahalgam terror attack in May last year.
The Rafales were used to launch the SCALP, an air-launched cruise missile developed that can strike hardened targets over 250 km away with extreme precision. It can also carry Meteor long range air-to-air missiles and the Hammer, a stand-off strike weapon, and the Spectra, an advanced e-warfare suite, as well as advanced radar and targeting systems.

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