40 milliards de dollars : la commande indienne de Rafale pulvérise tous les records du secteur de la défense.
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India reached a decisive milestone on Thursday, 12 February, towards the acquisition of 114 Rafale fighter jets. The Indian Defence Acquisition Council granted the Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) under the MRFA program, for an estimated
US$40 billion. This green light paves the way for commercial and technical negotiations between Paris and New Delhi, without yet constituting a firm contract for
Dassault Aviation. The announcement comes days before Emmanuel Macron’s visit to India, from February 17 to 19,
with the minimum objective of signing a framework agreement or a memorandum of understanding.
96 Rafale assembled in India, 18 delivered from France
The rate of indigenization would start at 30% for the first devices assembled locally, to exceed 60% at the end of the contract. Indian analysts consider this objective insufficient in view of the ambition of industrial sovereignty, some advocating for a minimum of 80% of local content. The previous one does not encourage optimism: during the first contract of 36 Rafale, the audits showed that
Dassault had partially revised downwards its initial promises of technology transfer and local fallout.
Limited technology transfers: New Delhi without access to source code
New Delhi will not have access to the source code of Rafale’s main electronic and electronic warfare systems. This restriction limits the Indian ability to integrate certain sensors or weapons alone without the support of Paris and its industrialists. The Indian government should this time demand quantified commitments in terms of jobs, local content and engineering transfer, with stricter follow-up than in the first contract.
The MRFA program replaces the former MMRCA tender of 126 aircraft, abandoned after years of blockages on industrial sharing and liability issues with
HAL. The choice of a government-to-government agreement is intended to avoid these bureaucratic pitfalls. Indian commentators, however, warn of a risk of prolonged dependence if engineering transfers remain limited to the assembly and manufacture of structures.
France buys Pinaka rocket launchers in return
France is seriously studying the multi-rocket launcher system Pinaka, developed by the Indian
DRDO, to contribute to the renewal of its LRM fleet. This choice questions some of the experts: the Pinaka remains less efficient than other systems available in terms of scope and precision.
Its 120 km ammunition is still in the development phase, while the French army evokes the needs of at least 150 km.
For several analysts, Pinaka’s interest is less due to its current performance than to its political value as a pledge given in New Delhi in a negotiation where India claims a direct industrial return on its major contracts. Paris emphasizes the fact that, unlike other suppliers, France does not condition its arms deliveries to extraterritorial sanctions regimes.