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India, Russia ink S-400 missile system deal

Launch 72... we will launch just one...

Always keep in this mind.. Pakistan doesn't have second strike capability so Pakistan will make sure in its first and ONLY strike that we will max damage your ENTIRE country.... else if your respond.. we hardly care.. we are more concerned about to remove India @ max in our first strike.. nbody think about fucking 72 shits...

LOL, easier said than DONE. :bunny::bunny::bunny:
 
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So many threads with just title change... anyway, what are the odds the radar of s400 can be jammed.?
Probably the Chinese could answer your question sometime down the lane because they received their first batch of S-400 in July 18'

Launch 72... we will launch just one...

Always keep in this mind.. Pakistan doesn't have second strike capability so Pakistan will make sure in its first and ONLY strike that we will max damage your ENTIRE country.... else if your respond.. we hardly care.. we are more concerned about to remove India @ max in our first strike.. nbody think about fucking 72 shits...
And you think India would only defend itself and not go on the offensive? We would probably empty our silos on you guys if that were to happen
 
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The Roots of India’s Shadow-Bank Crisis
The country still hasn’t figured out how to pay for the billions in infrastructure it needs.

By
Mihir Sharma
October 3, 2018, 12:12 AM EDT Updated on October 5, 2018, 6:13 AM EDT
1000x-1.jpg

Government money alone can’t solve the problem. Photographer: Pratik Chorge/Hindustan Times/Getty Images
Read more opinionFollow @mihirssharma on Twitter
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When one of India’s largest shadow bankers — an institution with 169 subsidiaries that calls itself Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services — admitted to a series of defaults last week, Indian markets came close to a crisis. Fearing that a prolonged investment slowdown would intensify, the government invoked a little-known clause in India’s Companies Act and appointed a new board. The rot the defaults revealed is about more than one organization, however, or even this particular moment in the Indian economy’s fragile recovery. Behind the messy descent of IL&FS from a gilt-edged, quasi-sovereign debt issuer to the object of a bureaucratic bailout lies one unpalatable truth: India hasn’t a clue how to pay for infrastructure.



It’s not as if the government hasn’t tried. Soon after taking power, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration doubled down on public spending on roads and Indian Railways, hoping the investment would pay for itself in a revival of private-sector activity. It hasn’t, and now the government is running out of fiscal space while bond yieldsare soaring.





Modi and his officials felt they had little choice. The previous government, under then-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, had tried to build infrastructure in partnership with the private sector. That model, in which a company would agree to use subsidized resources to build a road or a power plant for the state in return for a cut of the revenue, had collapsed well before Singh was voted out and in fact contributed greatly to his defeat. Contracts were poorly drafted and implemented; accusations of corruption multiplied; the government failed to fulfill its part of the bargain with its private-sector partners; and huge chunks of capital got locked up in half-built projects, sharply slowing growth.



Singh had chosen the PPP model in the first place because he felt that India couldn’t afford to build all the infrastructure it needed — trillions of dollars’ worth — out of taxes that could be better spent on, for example, rural welfare. Modi’s choice of the alternative model is now coming back to haunt him, as distress spreads across India’s vast rural hinterland. On Tuesday, Delhi’s police used water cannons and tear gas on tens of thousands of protesting farmers who were denied permission to enter the capital.



So, if the public sector can’t afford to build infrastructure, and it can’t sign contracts with the private sector to do the job, then what’s left? Couldn’t a private-sector funder aggregate such projects and raise funds for them from debt-market players that would otherwise avoid project finance like the plague? That’s what IL&FS attempted to do. Unfortunately, it ran into the old maturity mismatch problem. Using its quasi-public sector status — it’s a private company, but everyone pretended it wasn’t — it splurged on unsecured debt with a one-year tenure. When its long-gestation projects got held up thanks to land disputes, it suffered a liquidity crisis.

It’s hard to see how this problem can be avoided. Just as when one mortgage fails many others are likely to do so — a root cause behind the subprime blowup in 2008 — when one Indian infrastructure project is delayed, it’s likely others will be, too.

What about creating a fund that raises capital only from long-term investors? That’s the six-year old idea behind India’s National Investment & Infrastructure Fund, in which the sovereign wealth funds of Singapore and Abu Dhabi are major investors. The concept isn’t a bad one.

But it only reduces the problem; it doesn’t eliminate it. In order to reassure foreign investors, the government had to put in almost half the money: It owns 49 percent of the NIIF. That means the size of the fund is limited by the state’s straitened resources. While the government hopes the NIIF will grow to have $6 billion to invest, that’s a drop in the bucket. India’s finance minister estimated in 2016 that the country’s infrastructure build-out would require more than $1.5 trillion over 10 years. It’s tough to see half of that coming out of the Indian government’s budget.

This looks like an insoluble problem. It isn’t, if you believe one simple thing is true: The infrastructure projects worth building are those that pay for themselves in the long run. If that’s the case, there’s got to be a way to structure investment so that they get built. Governments shouldn’t have to put their own money in: They should instead commit to getting out of the way and ensuring that they aren’t doing anything that halts projects before they’re finished.

It’s the private sector that needs to put more resources into figuring out what’s worth building and what isn’t — and how to make money off it. Countries like India are where the potential profits are. Yet, too often, Western finance looks for intermediaries like IL&FS instead of doing its job and evaluating risks itself.

After all, there’s one more model on offer: China’s. The People’s Republic has proved that the government can build infrastructure — too much of it! — if private-sector finance isn’t allowed to operate freely. Unless the capital markets start working to solve the problem of long-term debt, they’re going to find that governments decide they aren’t worth keeping around.

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/arti...needs-better-model-for-funding-infrastructure

@soundHound
 
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Good luck with American sanctions buddy. ;)

And you seriously think the Americans are really stupid to let go the only other country who could challenge :china:, huh??

At present the Yankees need us more than we need them. You ain't know the reality I guess. :cheesy::cheesy::cheesy:
 
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Hey buddy I heard the Indian economy has not been doing well lately. I wouldn't get too excited.

Naah, whole world financial system is in frenzy this days, look at Turkey for example, I thinks this was an overdue correction, irrespective of sensex FDI still looks solid.
 
.
The Roots of India’s Shadow-Bank Crisis
The country still hasn’t figured out how to pay for the billions in infrastructure it needs.

By
Mihir Sharma
October 3, 2018, 12:12 AM EDT Updated on October 5, 2018, 6:13 AM EDT
1000x-1.jpg

Government money alone can’t solve the problem. Photographer: Pratik Chorge/Hindustan Times/Getty Images
Read more opinionFollow @mihirssharma on Twitter
COMMENTS


5
LISTEN TO ARTICLE


4:48
SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Share


Tweet


Post


Email
When one of India’s largest shadow bankers — an institution with 169 subsidiaries that calls itself Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services — admitted to a series of defaults last week, Indian markets came close to a crisis. Fearing that a prolonged investment slowdown would intensify, the government invoked a little-known clause in India’s Companies Act and appointed a new board. The rot the defaults revealed is about more than one organization, however, or even this particular moment in the Indian economy’s fragile recovery. Behind the messy descent of IL&FS from a gilt-edged, quasi-sovereign debt issuer to the object of a bureaucratic bailout lies one unpalatable truth: India hasn’t a clue how to pay for infrastructure.



It’s not as if the government hasn’t tried. Soon after taking power, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration doubled down on public spending on roads and Indian Railways, hoping the investment would pay for itself in a revival of private-sector activity. It hasn’t, and now the government is running out of fiscal space while bond yieldsare soaring.





Modi and his officials felt they had little choice. The previous government, under then-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, had tried to build infrastructure in partnership with the private sector. That model, in which a company would agree to use subsidized resources to build a road or a power plant for the state in return for a cut of the revenue, had collapsed well before Singh was voted out and in fact contributed greatly to his defeat. Contracts were poorly drafted and implemented; accusations of corruption multiplied; the government failed to fulfill its part of the bargain with its private-sector partners; and huge chunks of capital got locked up in half-built projects, sharply slowing growth.



Singh had chosen the PPP model in the first place because he felt that India couldn’t afford to build all the infrastructure it needed — trillions of dollars’ worth — out of taxes that could be better spent on, for example, rural welfare. Modi’s choice of the alternative model is now coming back to haunt him, as distress spreads across India’s vast rural hinterland. On Tuesday, Delhi’s police used water cannons and tear gas on tens of thousands of protesting farmers who were denied permission to enter the capital.



So, if the public sector can’t afford to build infrastructure, and it can’t sign contracts with the private sector to do the job, then what’s left? Couldn’t a private-sector funder aggregate such projects and raise funds for them from debt-market players that would otherwise avoid project finance like the plague? That’s what IL&FS attempted to do. Unfortunately, it ran into the old maturity mismatch problem. Using its quasi-public sector status — it’s a private company, but everyone pretended it wasn’t — it splurged on unsecured debt with a one-year tenure. When its long-gestation projects got held up thanks to land disputes, it suffered a liquidity crisis.

It’s hard to see how this problem can be avoided. Just as when one mortgage fails many others are likely to do so — a root cause behind the subprime blowup in 2008 — when one Indian infrastructure project is delayed, it’s likely others will be, too.

What about creating a fund that raises capital only from long-term investors? That’s the six-year old idea behind India’s National Investment & Infrastructure Fund, in which the sovereign wealth funds of Singapore and Abu Dhabi are major investors. The concept isn’t a bad one.

But it only reduces the problem; it doesn’t eliminate it. In order to reassure foreign investors, the government had to put in almost half the money: It owns 49 percent of the NIIF. That means the size of the fund is limited by the state’s straitened resources. While the government hopes the NIIF will grow to have $6 billion to invest, that’s a drop in the bucket. India’s finance minister estimated in 2016 that the country’s infrastructure build-out would require more than $1.5 trillion over 10 years. It’s tough to see half of that coming out of the Indian government’s budget.

This looks like an insoluble problem. It isn’t, if you believe one simple thing is true: The infrastructure projects worth building are those that pay for themselves in the long run. If that’s the case, there’s got to be a way to structure investment so that they get built. Governments shouldn’t have to put their own money in: They should instead commit to getting out of the way and ensuring that they aren’t doing anything that halts projects before they’re finished.

It’s the private sector that needs to put more resources into figuring out what’s worth building and what isn’t — and how to make money off it. Countries like India are where the potential profits are. Yet, too often, Western finance looks for intermediaries like IL&FS instead of doing its job and evaluating risks itself.

After all, there’s one more model on offer: China’s. The People’s Republic has proved that the government can build infrastructure — too much of it! — if private-sector finance isn’t allowed to operate freely. Unless the capital markets start working to solve the problem of long-term debt, they’re going to find that governments decide they aren’t worth keeping around.

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/arti...needs-better-model-for-funding-infrastructure

@soundHound

This are just opinions buddy, and article mostly speaks about budget required and availability, am telling you again our fundamentals are strong.
 
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My bad, of course. We don't have any countermeasures against Pakistani response.
I think you will find...
1. Like the rafale deal ... this will take a long time and may ultimatly be cancelled.
2. Pakistan isnt asleep as your air chef keeps saying. Drones galore to keep your air defences busy.
3. Our stand off weapons will give you a good wakeup call to.
4. Best not to indulge in war just to win an election. As pakistan may start to target the homes of the bjp goons who will be leading the average indian soldier tk his death after hunger in the mountains
 
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I wouldn't get too comfortable, for India is at risk of sanctions by USA! :lol:

A Risk we are willing to take clearly, since we have been “warned”. Lol

What really isn’t a risk is the guaranteed meeting with said non gender specific virgins for PAF pilots lol
You can count on that! Win win for both parties!
 
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Launch 72... we will launch just one...

Always keep in this mind.. Pakistan doesn't have second strike capability so Pakistan will make sure in its first and ONLY strike that we will max damage your ENTIRE country.... else if your respond.. we hardly care.. we are more concerned about to remove India @ max in our first strike.. nbody think about fucking 72 shits...
You have suicidal tendencies mate!
 
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NEW DELHI:

The S-400 Triumf air defence system deal, inked by India and Russia Friday notwithstanding the US pressure of sanctions, can engage up to 36 targets at a time and simultaneously launch 72 missiles.

The long and medium range air defense missile system, which Air Force Chief B S Dhanoa said will provide a much needed "booster" to the Air Force, is designed to destroy air attacks, including stealth aircraft and any other aerial targets.

"The sides welcomed the conclusion of the contract for the supply of the S-400 Long Range Surface to Air Missile System to India," a joint statement released after the delegation level talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladmir Putin said.

The delivery of the missile systems, tipped to be over $5 billion, will start 24 months from the signing of the contract.

Acquiring the missile system will help repulse the air attacks by India's adversaries, especially Pakistan and China.

The signing of the deal assumes significance as China, too, has signed a deal with Russia to procure the same missile system.

"This is the most lethal weapons system in the world and it provides four different types of layered air defence," Air Vice-Marshal (retd) Manmohan Bahadur told PTI.

However, the deal comes under the purview of Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), which targets Russia, Iran, and North Korea.

India has conveyed to the US its necessity to procure this air defence missile system.

In 1999, the system was demonstrated for the first time at the Kapustin Yar practice range (the Astrakhan Region) to then defence minister Igor Sergeyev. The trials of the most advanced air defense missile system were carried out in the 2000s.

The missile system has been in service since April 2007.

The S-400 is based on the S-300PMU2 air defense missile complex.

The air defence missile system comprises a combat control post, a three-coordinate jam-resistant phased array radar to detect aerial targets, six-eight air defence missile complexes (with up to 12 transporter-launchers, and also a multi-functional four-coordinate illumination and detection radar), a technical support system, a missile transporting vehicles and a training simulator, experts said.

The S-400 system can also additionally include an all-altitude radar (detector) and movable towers for an antenna post, they said.

COMMENT
The target detection range of this system is up to 600 kilometres and its tactical ballistic missile destruction range varies from five kilometres to 60 kilometres.


https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/s-4...ssia-can-launch-72-missiles-at-one-go-1927534
If i were an indian my comment would have been
" Hmka ik system ik war me pakistan ka 70 ka 70 ghatak larako vimaan eef solah gira skta ha "
Seriously with 72 missiles they can hit our 70+ F-16s . Given that if they were simultaneously in the air ever.
 
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If India can actually pull that off, I think it will earn respect from the entire world, except the US.
India is also going ahead with Iranian oil

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

That is a sh!tty Indian source. Let's wait and hear from the Americans themselves.

If true, the Americans are the biggest cvnts alive. LOL at their fake sanction threats.

US on India's S-400 Deal: CAATSA Not Intended to Damage Allies' Capabilities. The source is sputniknews with an official release statement from US Embassy
https://sputniknews.com/asia/201810051068633309-india-s400-deal-us-sanctions/

Americans wont say anything yet but they are showing it already, look at the rupee



foreign Embassies always say things in favor of host country
Embassies aren't your typical corrupt media outlets to blabber whatever crap they want to especially when they're dealing with adversaries. They don't send out an official statement without prior approval from their home state
 
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Going by posts in this thread, am pretty sure burnol will stand ineffective if India tries and gets Patriot system as well..
 
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