Sanku wrote:The only inanity on display here is the clear cut avoidance of basic truth...
Well said.
The basic truth which is being strenuously avoided is that there is no comparable aircraft to the C17 in production that could be tested out in a MRCA type of multi-vendor competition by the IAF.
The so-called new and improved Il76 and An124 exist on paper and in board rooms. It is not IAF's responsibility nor charter to bankroll the Russian companies to do the necessary R&D and building of production facilities to get the aircraft in production so that it can buy 10 or maybe 20 aircraft. And then the Russians make a profit by selling them to the Chinese in greater numbers.
[Folks cry blue murder due to the fact that the US sells arms to Pakistan,as they should rightfully. However, there's thundering silence over the fact that the Russian do the same with the Chinese - the Chinese operate more Il76s than do the IAF].
To get around this fundamental truth we've had this amazing display of inanity that every theoretical plane from the 37 ton Airbus transport of which not a single copy has yet been built (and which has a potential order backlog of 180 odd aircraft), all the way to a 150 ton An124 (that the Russians may build for the US military if all the stars align) being touted as a better buy than the C17.
Yet one fundamental question remains unanswered:
1) How much would the 37 ton Airbus transport cost?
2) How much would a "new and improved" Il76 cost?
3) How does/would a 150 ton version of the 120 ton An124 cost?
And how much would a service contract comparable with what Boeing is willing to sign the dotted line on would cost with these three vendors?
Do note that apparently all the shouting against the C17 is because of the cost factor.
Even Sanku ji hasn't yet taken the line that we shouldn't buy the plane because its a piece of crap!
So cost should be the overriding consideration na?