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Pentagon
chief in India as fighter jet deal nears
Foreign Desk Report
NEW DELHI—US Defense Secretary Robert Gates arrived in New Delhi on
Tuesday to pursue closer strategic ties with India after a breakthrough
aircraft deal the Pentagon thinks could usher in a new era of defence
cooperation. Gates’ visit to India, the world’s second-fastest growing
major economy, also reflects the interest of both the United States and
India to counterbalance the rise of China, defence officials said.
In meetings with Indian officials over two days, Gates will make a sales
pitch for U.S. defence manufacturers competing against international
rivals for a fighter jet contract potentially worth $10.2 billion. “One
of the messages the defence secretary will be bringing with him is, when
you purchase from the U.S. you’re getting not only the best product in
the world but you have the best support system, the best maintenance
package over the life of the product,” the official said.
“You also have companies that operate with integrity, which is different
than what India has seen with other partners in the world. We offer the
full package.” After decades of pro-Soviet ties, India has moved closer
to Washington in recent years, with new arms sales and joint military
exercises. Millions of Indians also are turning to the United States for
education, jobs and consumer goods.
Earlier this month, India agreed to buy six Lockheed Martin Corp C-130J
military transport planes worth about $1 billion — a deal that marked a
major shift in weapons-buying policy by India, which has relied heavily
on Russian arms and transport aircraft. India now wants to buy 126
multi-role fighter jets, and U.S. manufacturers Lockheed and Boeing Co.
are competing for the contract.
Also in the race are 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. Gates’ visit to New
Delhi comes a week before India’s March 3 deadline for bids. “One of the
things that has been the most, one of the most, significant changes
since I came back to government, in an interval of 15 years or so, has
been the significantly improved relationship between the United States
and India,” Gates said.
“And I want to see what we can do to not only strengthen that but
perhaps expand it in other ways,” he told reporters ahead of his visit.
India is fast becoming one of the world’s biggest arms importers.
Lockheed, the Pentagon’s No. 1 supplier by sales, has said India could
be the largest defence market in Asia with $20 billion in contracts over
the next decade.
U.S. defence officials, however, denied a report that India wanted the
United States to give it the USS Kitty Hawk aircraft carrier in exchange
for New Delhi’s agreement to purchase American F-18 fighters. “Squash
it,” one senior official, speaking en route to New Delhi, said of the
report. “I will fall on my sword, I will hurl myself out of this
airplane if there is any truth to this stupid story.”
The focus on arms sales comes despite an impasse over a controversial
civil nuclear deal seen by many as the centrepiece of India’s strategic
relationship with Washington. |