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India mulls
missile-shield work with US
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Lockheed Martin Corp, the Pentagon’s No. 1 supplier, has been
told India may be ready to look into possible U.S.-Indian collaboration
on ballistic missile defense, a top company official said Wednesday. “I
would not be surprised if over the next couple of months we begin to
have some exploratory discussions with various members of the government
and with Indian industry,” Richard Kirkland, Lockheed Martin’s top
executive on South Asia, said in a telephone interview with reporters.
Indian missile-defense cooperation with the United States could
complicate relations with China, Russia and Pakistan. Until now, India’s
policy has been to develop its missile shield domestically, closing a
potential multibillion-dollar market to Boeing Co, Lockheed, Raytheon Co
and Northrop Grumman Corp — the biggest players in the emerging ground,
air, sea and space based U.S. missile defense system. But this may be
changing in line with a “watershed” Indian decision made formal last
week to buy Lockheed’s C-130J military transport aircraft, Kirkland said
in a telephone interview. India signed a deal with the United States on
Jan. 31 to buy six C-130Js worth about $1 billion, a shift from its
previous heavy reliance on Russian transport planes. “This kind of puts
us in a new environment,” James Clad, deputy assistant U.S. secretary of
defense for South and Southeast Asia, said in an interview Tuesday of
the C-130J deal. “With this sale, India is telling us it’s ready to buy
top-quality U.S. equipment on its merits.” More than 50 U.S. companies
doing defense-related work are now represented in India, which is
shaping up to be one of the world’s biggest arms importers, Clad said.
The United States has been eager to boost strategic ties with India as a
precaution against China’s growing military power. Nicholas Burns, the
No. 3 U.S. State Department official, wrote in the November/December
issue of the journal Foreign Affairs that that in reaching out to India,
the United States was betting on democracy and market economics rather
than “despotism and state planning,” an apparent swipe at
communist-ruled China.
Nathan Hughes, military analyst for Statfor, a private intelligence firm
specialized in geopolitics and security, said any major expansion of
U.S.-Indian strategic ties would anger archrival Pakistan; Russia, long
a key military supplier; and China. “The United States has lots of
things India wants. Russia still provides the defense equipment that
India needs,” he said. “India just can’t turn on a dime.” Kirkland said
bolstering India’s missile defenses could be done relatively quickly by
“blending in”, for instance, mobile radar and other sensors or command
and control elements. Washington already has held technical talks with
New Delhi on missile-defense capabilities such as Lockheed/Raytheon
Patriot Advanced Capability-3 antimissile batteries, said Richard Lehner,
a spokesman for the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency. Indian embassy
officials did not respond to a request for comment.
Kirkland said he was “extraordinarily bullish” on Lockheed Martin’s
chances to win India’s potential $10.2 billion market for 126 multirole
fighter jets. He called it “the largest single competitive fighter
purchase that has been around for 30 years” since a combined European
F-16 purchase in the mid 1970s. Lockheed is tailoring an F-16 Fighting
Falcon proposal to meet Indian requirements, including an advanced radar
known as active electronically scanned array, he said. Proposals are due
March 3. Also in the race are Boeing, which is offering its F/A-18 Super
Hornet, Russia’s MiG-35, France’s Dassault Rafale, Sweden’s Saab KAS-39
Gripen and the Eurofighter Typhoon, made by a consortium of British,
German, Italian and Spanish companies. Retired Air Force Lt. Gen.
Jeffrey Kohler, until August the Pentagon’s top arms-sale official,
said. |