The United States on Tuesday announced the contract for building the
next generation long-range strike bombers at a whopping $55 billion
(Rs.3,57,500 crore), providing a stunning contrast to the way India has
gone about concluding the purchase of Rafale fighters from France.
Pentagon selected the U.S. defence major Northrop Grumman to build a
fleet of stealth bombers that can strike deep inside enemy territory
with nuclear bombs, and will replace the fabled B-52s, B-1s and B-2s. It
is the biggest military contract anywhere in the world, and will result
in the building of 100 new-age bombers that will begin entering service
from 2020.
The way U.S. military authorities went about selecting the new
generation bombers is an instructive manual for the way big spending
military purchases are carried out in a transparent system. And it
provides comparative frames to understand why the proposal to purchase
36 Rafale fighters from France, announced by Prime Minister Narendra
Modi when he was in Paris in April, has not fully satisfied any of the
players involved in the deal.
The IAF says the numbers are not enough, and many in the force also
foresee the possibility of the two Rafale squadrons ending up being a
heavy burden on the budget of the Air Force. The French side feels the
Indian bargain to give the same rates they quoted for MMRCA — the
original contract for 126 fighters — and a 50 per cent offset in an
off-the-shelf purchase, are not justifiable.
The very announcement of the 36 Rafale purchase in Paris was almost
abrupt, and the Air Force was left with a fait accompli, according to
several sources. “The projection was for 126 fighters, the present
number was thrust upon the IAF,” one senior officer, who had been
involved in formulating the entire MMRCA proposal for 126 fighters,
said. IAF chief Arup Raha admitted as much in recent weeks. “I cannot
say I only want Rafale. I want the capability of Rafale-type aircraft.
So, the government will have a look at it and based on urgency and the
type of contract signed with Dassault Aviation, further decisions may be
taken by the government. I cannot predict,” Air Chief Marshal Raha
said, admitting that the IAF needed much more than just 36 fighters.
Another source said that the government did not “pay much attention to
the customer’s (IAF) requirements.” He said the move could have long
term repercussions—on the mix of fighters IAF would have for decades to
come, expenses involved in maintaining the fleet, and ambitions about
developing an indigenous aerospace industrial base.
The U.S. contract for the 100 bombers was awarded to a domestic company,
ensuring that the technology and investment stayed within the national
boundary, while protecting the classified nature of the programme. The
selection came after a fierce competition between Northrop Grumman on
the one side and a joint proposal from Boeing and Lockheed Martin.
Details of how Pentagon ensured that the programme remained within the
budget and timeframe and met the requirements of the user provide
valuable lessons for India. And a telling commentary on how to conclude a
big ticket military contract.
The U.S. Air Force had a special team of acquisition officials, called
the Rapid Capabilities Office that handled the programme. They ensured
that new requirements do not creep in occasionally and unnecessarily
balloon the cost and timeline. The B-2 bomber had itself reflected many
of those failures—originally, the projected requirement was 132, but the
Pentagon ended up buying just 21.
The project team also worked closely with the industry to finalise the design and other requirements.
One of the most noticeable aspects is that the future bomber would
integrate several existing technologies, so as to reduce the cost and
time needed to complete the project. Officials also made it public that
the fleet was designed in such a way that it could be upgraded to keep
up as threats evolved and technology changed.
“We have wavered so much in our strategy to acquire an MMRCA. What
started as a proposal to buy more Mirage-2000 emerged into MMRCA
contract for 126 fighters, but has now ended up being just 36 fighters,”
one Indian officer summed up. “In some sense, I get a feeling that we
are back to doing something like the Mirage-2000 deal,” another officer
who was involved in the Mirage-2000 acquisition in the 1980s, said.
thehindu
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