
But don't talk about life cycle cost!
The current mix of American fighters on Diego Garcia will give you an idea of how USN/AF will deal with this situation should the Chinese get some bright ideas.They have already war gamed extensively the possible scenarios and *are* prepared for a war in defense of Taiwan.Singha wrote:how does the USN plan to deal with masses of chinese flanker/j10 over taiwan using fa18/ef ? will they play a low profile and depend on land based fighters from korea and japan?
Agreed, but you also need to know that Russia is supplying China from way before Indo-US relationship grew positive. Now I can't believe any Indian Leader if not all tried to talk with Russia on that but still the Vodka loving friend of our kept supplying weapons from top end fighters, bombers, missiles, ASAT tech, etc to the Panda and allowed it to grow bigger threat to India. Atleast US won't supply such stuff to China. Pak is a different issue (Also note, US is being supplying Pak for 40 years now it still isn't a big challenge for India)Shankar wrote:alcoholic friend who designed out our nuclear submarine - and our stealth fighters and our stealth frigates and our supersonic cruise missiles - and sober friends who still not have agreed to most guarded technology even when offered a 10 billion dollar deal
It is the end of Mig-35's story as far as MRCA is concerned.. looks like the message has been convayed to Russian DM by AKA.NEW DELHI: India has agreed to buy 250 to 300 advanced stealth fighter jets from Russia, Defence minister AK Antony said Thursday, announcing a deal that could be worth up to 30 billion dollars.
Antony told a press conference with his counterpart Anatoly Serdyukov that the countries had agreed that Russia would supply the Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) as well as 45 transport planes.
"India will receive 250-300 most advanced FGFAs," Antony said. "These are the two major projects for the next ten years which will be a shining example of Indian-Russian cooperation."
Experts say each FGFA is worth up to 100 million dollars.
dinesha wrote:"India will receive 250-300 most advanced FGFAs," Antony said. "These are the two major projects for the next ten years which will be a shining example of Indian-Russian cooperation." [/b]
Correct. Its the Khan's double standards and contradictions that are creating the doubts.nrshah wrote:The reason is we don't have sweet memories of our dealings with US... hence the evil angle which is so common you see... They want US specific Nuke Liabliity bill, EUMA, CISMO, Logistic agreement and every hell restriction that they can think of.. Evil angle is because of sudden stoppage of supply for everything (incl nuts and bolts) because US president finds himself on the wrong side of the bad on one fine morning... With Russians and france, it is only money.......Kartik wrote: bhai sahab, its the same situation everywhere ! Or do you believe that other nations are offering their fighters/transports/helicopters/tanks/howitzers is because they are in love with India ?! Its business as usual everywhere, so what is with the non-stop US bashing ? Its frankly getting very very tiring between you and Philip and few other posters constantly bringing in the evil US Uncle angle into every damn discussion.
Why should they condemn on something they have been knowing since decades , Weapon and Cash supplied by US to pakistan is a way to win PA loyalty and to check mate India.jai wrote:I am also wondering why no condemnation from US on Musharraf's candid admission on Puki state sponsored terrorism so far; True - the others have not either, but they are also not gifting pukis free weapons and are not claiming to lead the global fight on terror.
Austin wrote:Why should they condemn on something they have been knowing since decades , Weapon and Cash supplied by US to pakistan is a way to win PA loyalty and to check mate India.jai wrote:I am also wondering why no condemnation from US on Musharraf's candid admission on Puki state sponsored terrorism so far; True - the others have not either, but they are also not gifting pukis free weapons and are not claiming to lead the global fight on terror.
Similarly weapons supplied to India is a way to supply systems that can help India deal with China , its a three way arms race that is in US interest . Its a state of unstable equilibrium between the three that helps US strategic objective and arms industry.
Can you suggest a better solution sir?Neshant wrote:dinesha wrote:"India will receive 250-300 most advanced FGFAs," Antony said. "These are the two major projects for the next ten years which will be a shining example of Indian-Russian cooperation." [/b]
purchase of expensive stuff from overseas is not a shining example of cooperation.
its a shining example of cash and carry with near-zero development of India's R&D base.
I give the Mig better position then Rafale. But EF is on top.(Only if the intended level of ToT will come).My Vote is with EF, followed by Rafale followed by MIG 35.
Yep we will be too busy dealing with Pakistan and China which means more arms which means more sales , in the mean while US will keep supplying Pakistan free arms and money and will turn a blind eye to our problem.Willy wrote:Got that right ,there!! They build up India to needle China and prop up Pakistan to keep India in check. That way uncle SAM keeps everyone tied up regionally while maintaining US as teh paramount power.
On the face of it, India has strong political reasons to favor one of the two US suppliers - Boeing and Lockheed Martin - as ties between Washington and New Delhi continue to warm. President Barack Obama will stress these political incentives when he doorsteps India, model planes in his briefcase, in November. Yet sources close to the competition suggest that the American aircraft did not shine in the Indian Air Force's technical evaluation, that they compare poorly on cost, and that their promised level of technology transfer is underwhelming. ''We need to get full technology transfer: India will not budge on that issue,'' says Arun Sahgal, of India's United Services Institute. ''Some of the bidders need to bring their prices down and offer a lot more than license manufacturing''.
America's rivals are fighting hard. Sahgal describes Swedish company Saab's offering of full technology transfer as ''phenomenal''; the Eurofighter Typhoon is understood to be highly rated by Indian decision-makers; and Russia, a long-time Indian defense partner, is also seen as a safe backup option with its MiG-35. The point is that the US - just like other hopefuls - must offer India a genuinely excellent deal if it wants to secure this contract, not merely hold out vague prospects of American friendship.
I suspect the Pukis are not capable of loyalty. If they have any, it seems to be with the Panda right now. Khan is being taken for a rideAustin wrote:Why should they condemn on something they have been knowing since decades , Weapon and Cash supplied by US to pakistan is a way to win PA loyalty and to check mate India.jai wrote:I am also wondering why no condemnation from US on Musharraf's candid admission on Puki state sponsored terrorism so far; True - the others have not either, but they are also not gifting pukis free weapons and are not claiming to lead the global fight on terror.
Similarly weapons supplied to India is a way to supply systems that can help India deal with China , its a three way arms race that is in US interest . Its a state of unstable equilibrium between the three that helps US strategic objective and arms industry.
We should rename it Cyclone because the mega storms in the Indian Ocean are called Cyclone.Lalmohan wrote:ok, i am casting my vote in stone: eurofighter typhoon (we can rename it toofani like the old ouaragans in IAF service)
capability - strong, growth path, access to leading edge tech
political benefits - big, brings us closer to Germany, UK, Italy and Spain in terms of G7-G20 issues and votes - good balance against unkil's tendency to bully, france doesn't lose out entirely either through participation in EADS, and other deals, e.g. subcomponents and also other upgrades
industrial benefits - huge, if we get proper industrial integration with EADS
strategically, this carries more benefits than pleasing unkil with short term payoffs and long term liabilities
Good question.Cosmo_R wrote:@Luxtor^^^ Not worried about Rafales to the Pakis they want free stuff. It's the Chinese I'd worry about. The French are pressing the EU to lift the PRC arms embargo.
Just curious, what 'strategic benefits' do you think the EU might bring to the table?
AFAIK, Dassault has never offered to make India a partner in "Rafale Program". So, I do not see why we will have any say regarding the sale of Rafale by France to any third Nation.Carl_T wrote:Out of curiosity why is it a problem if France wants to sell things to China/Pak? If we join the Rafale program wouldn't we effectively have a say in who gets the Rafale?
Cosmo_R wrote:@Luxtor^^^ Not worried about Rafales to the Pakis they want free stuff. It's the Chinese I'd worry about. The French are pressing the EU to lift the PRC arms embargo.
Just curious, what 'strategic benefits' do you think the EU might bring to the table?
While I'm not a US basher, this statement of yours is amusing, since the U.S. continues to gift billions of dollars worth of weapons and equipment to our sworn enemy.RSoami wrote:Bhai US-bashers,
US was not a reliable weapons supplier because we were close to USSR.To expect US to be a perfect businessman when we do dealings with their sworn enemy is unreasonable.
nachiket wrote:While I'm not a US basher, this statement of yours is amusing, since the U.S. continues to gift billions of dollars worth of weapons and equipment to our sworn enemy.RSoami wrote:Bhai US-bashers,
US was not a reliable weapons supplier because we were close to USSR.To expect US to be a perfect businessman when we do dealings with their sworn enemy is unreasonable.
I agree. It's hard to accept why the US feeds the beast.nachiket wrote:While I'm not a US basher, this statement of yours is amusing, since the U.S. continues to gift billions of dollars worth of weapons and equipment to our sworn enemy.RSoami wrote:Bhai US-bashers,
US was not a reliable weapons supplier because we were close to USSR.To expect US to be a perfect businessman when we do dealings with their sworn enemy is unreasonable.
Sure Pakistanis are in a deep mess. However, that doesn't justify our week stance. National interest first. I hate to be quoting Nitin Pai so often but he is right when he says that Pakistan isn't a problem, those scaffolding Pakistan are a problem.Cosmo_R wrote:I agree. It's hard to accept why the US feeds the beast.
One way I've tried to rationalize it is that the Pakistani nation (such as it is) has and continues to pay a huge price in terms of sovereignty. Ever since Zia signed on for the Afghan Jihad against the Soviets, the Pakistani nation and people have lost. The PA have won but they are a criminal enterprise anyway. The US controls the list of who can travel out of Pakistan, has kala pani guys running amok and daily predator strikes not to mention hostility for even government and army wallahs when they come to the US. Humiliation in a thousand ways seems to be the price.
In short, the Oliver Hazard Perrys, the F-16s and assorted instruments can cause India a lot of pain but they are not free. Unkil is not in the free lunch business. It is a price India would not pay and as a buyer (if it wants to) has the opportunity to make the US go through the seller buyer wooing process. Cash is king.
On a completely different if slightly off color topic, I saw Michelle Flournoy the other day. She is certainly not handsome. The term 'rugged' along with other less flattering adjectives come to mind. I am convinced she could stop a clock (the 'L' being silent as in the Polish language) at 200 hundred paces. But she has personality for what that's worth.