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India pays for US weaspons and still faces US interference

kurup

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India's military modernization largely depends on U.S. equipment, even though the Defense Department’s rules for arms sales can be onerous, India’s new ambassador to the U.S., said today.

“If you look at our defense purchases, a lot of it is centered around U.S. sourcing,” Ambassador S. Jaishankar said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Washington office. “Frankly, the U.S. system was so difficult to navigate,” he said of his role in negotiating arms purchases from the U.S. “When you’re selling me something, you’re the salesman and I’m the customer, and I’m supposed to be the difficult one.”

Even with those restrictions, India is buying a fleet of U.S. military transport and surveillance planes, making it one of the largest operators of such aircraft after the Pentagon, said Jaishankar, who’s been in the position for a month and previously served as India’s ambassador in Beijing.

Loosening U.S. arms export regulations and restrictions on transfers of military technology to the South Asian nation has been at the heart of the U.S.-India relations since 2005, when the two countries improved ties and reached an agreement that allows India, a nuclear-weapons state, to buy reactors and nuclear material for its energy industry.

U.S. defense officials, including former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, have acknowledged India’s irritation over controls on the transfer of U.S. military technology at a time when the Obama administration is seeking a greater role for India in the Asia-Pacific region.


Streamlining Processes ::
During a 2012 visit to India, Panetta said the Pentagon was undertaking an effort to “streamline our bureaucratic processes and make our defense trade more simple, responsive, and effective.”

Panetta also said U.S.-India ties would move beyond a seller-buyer relationship to “substantial co-production and, eventually, high-technology joint research and development” of weapons.

India is buying 10 C-17 transport planes, valued at about $5.8 billion, making it the largest operator of the aircraft after the U.S. Air Force, and eight P-8I maritime surveillance aircraft, both made by Chicago-based Boeing Co. (BA) It’s also buying six Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT) C-130J transport aircraft valued at about $1.2 billion.

Boeing and Lockheed lost out in 2012 on a $11 billion Indian order for 126 jet fighters to Dassault Aviation SA (AM) of France, maker of the Rafale.


‘Disappointed’ Contractors ::
Although U.S. defense contractors were disappointed that India chose a French jet over theirs, “they have gotten over it,” Jaishankar said. The U.S.-India relationship “cannot run on the basis of ‘you owe me,’” he said. “It has got to run on a much more equitable basis on what works for both of us.”

Trade between the U.S., the world’s largest economy, and India, which is Asia’s third-biggest economy, has grown fourfold since 2005, Jaishankar said. There is room to increase trade and investment between the two nations further, he said, describing it as a “relatively small economic relationship” that has “moved not too badly in the last couple of years.”

“For us to matter to the United States, clearly, this needs to be scaled up,” the ambassador said.

Faster growth in India and improving the environment for foreign companies operating there are ways to attract more investment into the country, he said. India posted growth of 5 percent in the last fiscal year, the slowest economic expansion in a decade.

Defence News - India pays for US weaspons and still faces US interference
 
10 C-17 transporters for 5.8 billion USD! Isn't that more expensive than AWACs? :close_tema:
 
Boeing E-3 sentry

Role Airborne early warning and control (AEW&C)
Manufacturer Boeing Defense, Space & Security
Westinghouse Electric (radar)
First flight EC-137D: 9 February 1972
E-3: 25 May 1976[N 1]
Introduction March 1977
Primary users United States Air Force
NATO
Royal Air Force
Royal Saudi Air Force
Produced 1977–1992
Number built 68
Unit cost
US$270 million (FY1998 constant dollars)[2]
Developed from Boeing 707

Globemaster C17 III
Role Strategic/tactical airlifter
National origin United States
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas / Boeing
First flight 15 September 1991
Introduction 17 January 1995
Status In service
Primary users United States Air Force
Royal Air Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Indian Air Force
Produced 1991–present
Number built 250 as of December 2012[1]
Unit cost
US$218 million (flyaway cost for FY2007)[2]
Developed from McDonnell Douglas YC-15

Hope that answers your question....
 
India paid 580 million USD for each C-17. First, that's a rip off. Second, that's half the initial price of 126 Rafales. :o:
 
10 C-17 transporters for 5.8 billion USD! Isn't that more expensive than AWACs? :close_tema:
A lot of that money was funnelled back into India for projects that did not get much attention. For example, half a billion was spent by Boeing to establish a cutting edge high altitude test faciity for jet engines in India. We did not have that before, and were dependant on Russia for the same.
 
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