Aircraft deal: IAF fears bid losers may complain to CVC
February 10th, 2011 - 4:43 pm ICT by IANS
Bangalore, Feb 10 (IANS) India is just about a month or two away from deciding the winner of the $10.4-billion contract for 126 combat aircraft, but the Indian Air Force (IAF) is afraid the losers among the six bidders for the deal might derail the process of quick acquisition by knocking on the corruption watchdog’s doors.The purchase process, which is at a very mature stage, is all set for the cost negotiation stage that will be decided in a week or two and the final winner for signing the contract would be decided by September, Air Chief Marshal P.V. Naik told a press conference here Thursday at the AeroIndia show at Yelahanka air base.
“But some dissatisfied vendor among those not chosen for cost negotiations may put a spoke in the wheel and derail the process by going to the central vigilance commissioner with complaints leading to a delay, though we want to quickly sign the contract,” Naik said.
American aerospace majors Boeing and Lockheed Martin, Russian MiG-RAC, Swedish Saab, French Dassault and European consortium EADS are in the race for the deal whose tender was issued in August 2007.
The IAF completed the flight and weapons evaluation of the six contending aircraft F-16, F/A-18, MiG-35, Gripen, Rafale and Eurofighter Typoon last year and submitted its report to the defence ministry, which is studying the capabilities of all the planes.
When the cost negotiation stage is reached, the government is expected to call only one of the six companies for talks, thereby signalling that the other five firms are out of contention.
Asked about the delay in finalising the winner for the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) deal, whereas the IAF had carried out a quick and smooth flight and weapons evaluation, Naik said since the six aircraft were evaluated on 600 technical points, there were several queries and counter-queries from the defence ministry requiring a lot of education.
Defence Minister A.K. Antony said Wednesday that there would be no political interference in the MMRCA deal and that the winner would be chosen on merits and capabilities of the competing aircraft.
Antony said that the government would not be prejudiced against or in favour of any country but would go by the evaluation report of the IAF.
- Price talks for 126 jets to begin this month: IAF chief - Mar 10, 2011
- $10.4-billion aircraft contract in next fiscal: Antony - Feb 09, 2011
- No politics in deciding combat plane winner: Antony - Nov 11, 2011
- EADS, Dassault asked to extend combat jet bids till December - Apr 28, 2011
- The twists and turns of India's biggest defence deal - Jan 31, 2012
- Missing file no big deal: IAF chief - Jan 11, 2011
- New planes' induction will reduce air crashes: Antony - Feb 05, 2011
- Timeline for India's combat jet deal - Apr 28, 2011
- Another six months for 126 combat planes deal: Antony - Feb 17, 2012
- Defence ministry panel to consider combat jet deal next month - Sep 22, 2011
- India to pick combat fighter by mid-December - Nov 18, 2011
- IAF to seal combat plane deal in November - Oct 08, 2011
- The $10bn jet fighter deal: IAF went by the rule book - May 01, 2011
- India set to decide major military aircraft deals - Jun 16, 2011
- France's Dassault wins India's $10.4bn warplane deal (Intro Roundup) - Jan 31, 2012
Tags: air chief marshal, aircraft deal, american aerospace, combat aircraft, dassault, defence minister, defence ministry, eads, eurofighter typoon, european consortium, indian air force, lockheed martin, mature stage, naik, negotiation stage, rafale, september air, six companies, smooth flight, spoke in the wheel