Sanku wrote:Somnath, many of the assertions you are making are clearly inaccurate, there appears to be an either a wide chasm in your knowledge base and understanding, or you are deliberating manufacturing data to suit your theories.
You will yourself know which is which
Meanwhile can you answer at least this one ?
Sanku wrote:Are you saying that Russians and French do not have a software system to track and document supply chain that they use routinely?
Please supply links to back up your claim.
Sanku, I mentioned once before that you had long stopped making even rhetorical sense on this topic, forget logical ones..
About "software system to track..." - anyone with a scintilla of education/awareness about SCM would know that SCM is not about having a document tracking software..It is about a whole system, processes, procedures - and integrating them with third party militaries is a very different challenge..
the American military has been waaay ahead of everyone else in the world on this for many decades now - many of the essential concepts of SCM - starting with MRPI, MRPII etc - have originated from the US Army....
about Russian efficiency of "after sales service" - look no beyond the CAG reports! Not to mention the innumerable crib posts here itself on BRF about Russian after sales..Even if they have a computer and a software to "track documents", it isnt obviously all that effective! About the others. look no beyond the spare parts problems with the Hawk months after the aircraft started flying in India....
All this is not surprising - the Americans spend way more than anyone else on their military, and export a lot more than most countries, and also export a whole lot more to "advanced" militaries than anyone else...
we sign agreement with Russian, we sign one with American, Agreement is agreement know, whats is different it is equal equal only"
And where exactly did I say that we sign the "same type" of agreement with Russia and US? The so called "offending points" in EUMA are known, in many cases "experientialled" as well..In any problem, you have an objective function, and some boundary conditions..Our objective function is (hopefully) well known, things like the EUMA clauses would be boundary conditions in the decision making process (much like Russian proclivity on delays, poor servicing record, French record of highly priced platforms and even higher priced spares and accessories etc)..
If you read the real analysists (like Brahma Chellaney) even they while opposing are not talking about "selling out" or anything..they are fearing that these are going to bring Indian foreign policy in congruence with the US - which is a fair point in case the assumption is something like that is necessarily bad for us..
Finally, I suggest you do some reading on high politics - start with Henry Kissinger's Diplomacy - before going ballistic over things like "selling the country cheap" sort of rhetoric..