The indigenous Tejas fighter, first approved in 1983, has missed yet another deadline to become fully combat-ready. After several target revisions, the government had repeatedly declared over the last couple of years that the jet would get its final operational clearance (FOC) by June 2018.?
But the single-engine Tejas is still far away from achieving the FOC, amidst galloping costs and operational concerns, say defence ministry officials.
The estimated overall development and production cost of the first 123 light-weight Tejas ¨C only nine delivered till now in their initial operational clearance (IOC) configuration ¨C has also zoomed past Rs 75,000 crore.?
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India desperately needs its own home-grown fighter, with IAF down to just 31 fighter squadrons when at least 42 are required to tackle Pakistan and China. The fall in numbers will continue due to progressive retirement of 10 squadrons of old MiG-21s and MiG-27s.?
India also relaunched its Rs 1.25 lakh crore project to acquire 114 fighters, the bulk of them to be built domestically, in April.
But it¡¯s still early days for this long-drawn contest among F/A-18 and F-16 (US), Gripen-E (Sweden), MiG-35 (Russia), Rafale (France) and Eurofighter Typhoon, for which the six aviation majors submitted their initial bids last week.
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Consequently, the continuing delay in Tejas remains a big operational worry. In 2011, DRDO had grandiosely announced Tejas would get FOC ¡ª which means the jets are ready for battle -- by 2012. Six years down the line, it remains a pipe dream.?
¡°The entire project management of Tejas needs to be overhauled. Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd is far away from delivering 16 Tejas per year as required. MoD is also examining the Rs 50,000 crore being demanded by HAL for producing 83 Tejas Mark-1A fighters, with 43 improvements over the existing version,¡± said an official.?
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For now, Tejas needs to demonstrate its ¡°engine relight and air-to-air refuelling¡± capabilities as well as firing from its twin-barrel GSh-23 cannon.?
Though Navy has rejected its aircraft carrier-capable variant, IAF has put its weight behind Tejas. In addition to the ¡°committed¡± 123 jets, it is open to inducting another 201 Tejas Mark-II jets if they are entirely new fighters with much better avionics and radars, enhanced fuel and weapons carrying capacity, and more powerful engines, as earlier reported by TOI.