Posted on 06/02/2011 9:23:06 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
Decoding India's MMRCA Decision
Ashley J. Tellis
Force, June 3, 2011
India s rejection of the F-16IN Super Viper and the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet in its hotly contested medium multirole combat aircraft (MMRCA) competition has disappointed many in the United States. Because there were great expectations that New Delhi would leverage this fly-off to cement its strategic partnership with Washington particularly in the aftermath of the herculean American efforts to consummate the civilian nuclear cooperation agreement Indias selection of two European platforms, the Eurofighter and the Rafale, as the finalists for the multirole component of its air force led many American observers to conclude that the country had settled for an airplane, not a relationship.
Many analysts have explained Indias decision as an expression of concern over Americas reliability as an arms supplier, or representing dissatisfaction with potential transfers of key technologies, or even an attempt to distance itself from the United States. In a new article in Force, Carnegies Ashley J. Tellis concludes that these explanations are incorrect, and describes how Indias down-select decision was made entirely on technical grounds. The two-step procurement procedure adopted by the Indian Ministry of Defense precluded political, strategic, or financial considerations from intervening in any way. Though this process might not serve Indias larger national security interests in an age of limited resources and numerous threats, Indias decision does not represent a strategic setback for U.S.-Indian defense cooperation over the long term.
A new monograph from Ashley Tellis with tidbits on performance issues-
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/files/Decoding_Indias_MMRCA_Decision.pdf
The last paragraph from his previous thesis
No matter which way India leans in the MMRCA contest, keeping the
IAFs interests consistently front and center will ensure that its ultimate choice
will be the right one. A selection process that is transparent, speedy, and focused
on the right metrics will not only strengthen the IAFs combat capabilities, but
it will also earn the respect of all the competing vendors and their national
patrons. Some of them will be disappointed by Indias fi nal choice, but those,
alas, are the rules of the game.
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/files/dogfight.pdf
Ashley Tellis Ping
As for the relationship part, the simple question would be what relationship? India has already spent billions of Dollars on American equipment, and will spend billions more. Missing out on the M-MRCA deal will not break any relationship, and for the matter a lot of money is heading Boeings and Lockheeds way. Billions of it. Thus, the argument that India did not settle for a relationship is moot.
India made the best choice the Eurofighter and the Rafale were the best choices, and this will be seen more and more as time progresses (both in terms of aircraft development, as well as technology infusion into the Indian aerospace/defence/advanced sector). The F/A-18E/F would also have been a good choice all things being equal (and all things were obviously not equal). As for the F-16, I still maintain that the only aircraft that would have been a (far) worse choice was the MiG-35.
His latest piece goes against what he claimed in his ‘Dogfight’ thesis that heeding the IAF’s choice would be the best decision. Now he says that the Air Force was focussed solely on hot-rod performance!!
I actually just finished reading his report (my prior post had been based on his previous report. I have also noticed the change from his previous report, and to be honest his statement that the IAF was only after hot rod performance is not just disingenuous but silly. Who does he think he is fooling? The part about the 1.2 degree difference in sustained turn-rate is also quite infantile maybe he should touch on other areas like acceleration, the (in)ability for the F-18 to go (even) supersonic at certain altitudes (while the Typhoon, for instance, is capable of supercruise with an A2A loadout), instantaneous turn rates, etc. He also makes a big deal that the IAF may receive potentially effective weapons if they get approval, which is something he had raised in his prior piece when he doubted that weapons like the Meteor would be approved. Again, who does he think he is fooling the Meteor will be going to India, and furthermore as for being potentially effective the fact is it is 3 times as effective as the AMRAAM. Then there is the issue of a lack of AESA technology for the Eurocarnards, and their inability to perform in the BVR regime (as if they are only WVR hot rods). Amazing then that those planes would have BVR missiles like the Meteor, with a much longer range and kinematic envelop than the AMRAAM, if they are useless in BVR! Then there are the comments that even within WVR the American planes are more capable because of superior sensors and high off-bore missiles. Well, I guess the Europeans do not have helmet mounted sights and HOB missiles then, right? I guess missiles like the IRIS-T and the ASRAAM, every bit as advanced (and in some way more so) than the AIM-9X are not HOB missiles, huh? Simply put, Ashley is stretching things so far that the only reason I cannot call it lying is because it is too silly to be that.
Given the costs of the European platforms compared to the American platforms, and any added performance gained for that cost differential, I'd say it was just the opposite: India settled for a relationship, not an airplane.
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