I think our position has changed no doubt, we are now given TOT and partner status but its just bcoz of money and economy situation.
How others perceive us , still that is where we were 40 years back ie;A country which depends heavily on foreign tech for defence needs.
We cant give any thing substantial, apart from Some Space Launching capability/manufacturing doors,airframe at reasonable price.
Thats why we will partner only in FGFA dev/ while 0% in PAK FA simply bcoz what we can contribute is not good enough
I am sure Israel if had money could have dev Barak alone.
Similarly Russia if had funds Brahmos would have been russian alone.
They came to us for joint dev and mass production bcoz they can cut costs while meantime making profit for their industries also.
We still are struggling with essential tech
Electronics for TANK+HELICOPTORS+FIGHTER JETS are all Israel/Western
Avionics for ALH/LCH/LCA all are from foreign collaboration/manufactured under licence.
Engines powering Dhruv/LCA are foreign partners.
What we have achieved till now will not be considered self reliance until we achieve 100% indigenous tech.
It will take time and bold effort - it could have been easy if we were not forced at war , we easily could have become self reliant like France till now.
Still Gov is more worried abt more indigenous devlopment while Army wants best tech to defend our land- thats where problem lies and delays creep in . Bcoz everyday tech keeps changing.
Gov is doing everything to build up our homeland devlopment- new procurement policy+non stop funds + time even at cost of loosing pilots with every crash.
If we dont take up indigenous dev more seriously countries will always arm-twist us
Now only IAF+ARMY have started supporting home made products so better things will come in future
Whatever we see - ARJUN+TEJAS+ARIHANT+SHIPs+FRIGATES+ AIRCRAFT CARRIERS
still uses more than 50% foreign components but at least products are showing maturation.
This MRCA decision will go long enough in history to determine what self reliance we can achieve in future, any mistake will keep us where we are currently now
However Let me ask all of us a question, iam including myself coz Iam also looking for an answer.
Apologies if this is off topic, but I think its relevant what I am saying.
Now the so called TOT as we all know is a major issue.
What we are trying to do here to foreign firms is as we are asking them to give much with a little or more than what they will get in return.
It seems very much inconvincing to me to ask someone to transfer 50% tech or some tech by just paying intellectual property right. technology is the bread and butter for these companies and they are the big names coz of the BIG technology they have.
1. Look at what happenned to Mahindra and BAE JV in 2008 I guess when BAE wanted a 49% share in a JV.
2. Also Illushin was turned down a share of 49% when it wanted to start the JV with HAL for MRTA.
In late April 2008, MoD had proposed to relax FDI cap of 26 per cent to allow Russia’s Ilyushin Aviation Complex to own 49 per cent stake in a JV with India’ State controlled HAL for co-development of multi-role transport aircraft. If the public sector company is able to get favourable treatment, why the same can not be extended to a reputed private company?
If the MoD’ aim is to treat both the public and private sectors equally, it should have fought hard to see the proposal pass though, or at best deferred the proposal till a suitable redressal mechanism was found. Either way, the MoD’s efforts could have satisfied the private sector which is critical of the government’s protectionism attitude towards the defence public sector enterprises.
Perhaps, the greatest damage caused by this incident is the palpable loss of confidence of the foreign companies in India’s decision makers responsible for defence production. It is to be noted that if the MDS-BAE JV had passed thorough, it would have been the .rst one in India’s defence industry involving a domestic private player and an international partner with near 50-50 ownership rights. A successful passage of this JV would have paved the way for many such ventures in future. By turning down the JV the decision-makers have not only silenced the expectation of a particular case but created a situation where the foreign companies looking for greater Indian presence become more suspicious of the government’s seriousness of attracting higher investment.
Our over protectiveness will not pay us good until and unless MOD and MOF open up and pave doors like GOI did to IT,ITES and health sector. Clearly these sectors are booming and we are seeing a progress.
I am in strong belief that things might change in NEAR future and India might give a 46% cap on FDI in defence sectors.
but these kind of slowness in decisions are only hampering our national security.
and unless and until this happens we will be getting rotten parts and knocked down kits and keep complaining with what we are getting as of now.
We need to take some drastic step now. else we will always talk about TOT, but never get the full advantage of it...
please feel free to comment.