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Ajai Shukla / New Delhi May 18, 2010, 0:04 IST
spent this last week travelling in the US at the invitation of The Boeing Companys defence arm, Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS). I visited Boeings rotorcraft facilities in Philadelphia; a US Navy aircraft carrier (USS Harry S Truman) and naval air base (Oceana) in Norfolk, Virginia; Boeings space division in Florida; and its C-17 transport aircraft plant in California. With the US-India defence relationship on a high-growth trajectory, here are my perceptions on what India is dealing with.
The most striking characteristic of the US defence industry is its primarily inward focus. About 85-90 per cent of the combined revenue of US defence corporations accrues from sales to the US Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and Coast Guard; just 10-15 per cent of their revenue comes from overseas. In contrast, non-US defence contractors including those in Russia, Europe, Canada, Brazil, Korea and Singapore need significant overseas business to cover their development costs. But the volume of sales to the US military amortises the development costs and renders overseas buyers like India peripheral in terms of market leverage
Indias Ministry of Defence (MoD) likes to believe that its big arms purchases place it in the driving seat while tendering and contracting. In buying from non-US companies, this is indeed true. But, in buying from the US, New Delhis leverage is hardly impressive.
Take, for example, Indias proposed purchase of 10 C-17 transport aircraft. The Boeing plant in Long Beach, California, has already delivered 200 C-17s to the US military and more are in the pipeline.
Or consider Indias procurement of 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA), a deal that has generated so much hype that South Block might believe that this is the biggest fighter purchase ever. In fact, Boeing, which is offering India the F/A-18 Super Hornet, has already sold the US Navy and Marine Corps over 900 F/A-18s (Hornets and Super Hornets); another 320 have been sold abroad. A single US Navy base at Oceana is home to 170 F/A-18s.
This commercial security allows US defence companies to walk away from contracts where New Delhi lays down conditions that are difficult to meet. Texas-based Bell Helicopters has already declined to participate in Indias tender for 197 Light Utility Helicopters (LuHs), citing unreasonable offset provisions. BAE Systems refused to offer its M777 gun in the Indian tender for ultra-light howitzers, apparently because the trial requirements were unreasonable.
spent this last week travelling in the US at the invitation of The Boeing Companys defence arm, Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS). I visited Boeings rotorcraft facilities in Philadelphia; a US Navy aircraft carrier (USS Harry S Truman) and naval air base (Oceana) in Norfolk, Virginia; Boeings space division in Florida; and its C-17 transport aircraft plant in California. With the US-India defence relationship on a high-growth trajectory, here are my perceptions on what India is dealing with.
The most striking characteristic of the US defence industry is its primarily inward focus. About 85-90 per cent of the combined revenue of US defence corporations accrues from sales to the US Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and Coast Guard; just 10-15 per cent of their revenue comes from overseas. In contrast, non-US defence contractors including those in Russia, Europe, Canada, Brazil, Korea and Singapore need significant overseas business to cover their development costs. But the volume of sales to the US military amortises the development costs and renders overseas buyers like India peripheral in terms of market leverage
Indias Ministry of Defence (MoD) likes to believe that its big arms purchases place it in the driving seat while tendering and contracting. In buying from non-US companies, this is indeed true. But, in buying from the US, New Delhis leverage is hardly impressive.
Take, for example, Indias proposed purchase of 10 C-17 transport aircraft. The Boeing plant in Long Beach, California, has already delivered 200 C-17s to the US military and more are in the pipeline.
Or consider Indias procurement of 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA), a deal that has generated so much hype that South Block might believe that this is the biggest fighter purchase ever. In fact, Boeing, which is offering India the F/A-18 Super Hornet, has already sold the US Navy and Marine Corps over 900 F/A-18s (Hornets and Super Hornets); another 320 have been sold abroad. A single US Navy base at Oceana is home to 170 F/A-18s.
This commercial security allows US defence companies to walk away from contracts where New Delhi lays down conditions that are difficult to meet. Texas-based Bell Helicopters has already declined to participate in Indias tender for 197 Light Utility Helicopters (LuHs), citing unreasonable offset provisions. BAE Systems refused to offer its M777 gun in the Indian tender for ultra-light howitzers, apparently because the trial requirements were unreasonable.