[The requirement nosedived over a period of just 2 days!?

The Foreign Secretary briefed the press on April 8 2015 (ref.: <
https://www.mea.gov.in/Speeches-Statements.htm?dtl/25044/Transcript+of+Media+Briefing+by+Foreign+Secretary+on+Prime+Ministers+forthcoming+visits+to+France+Germany+and+Canada+8+April+2015>),
 
with no knowledge of any impending change.
 
Modi announced the change on April 10 2015, in Paris.
How this drastic cut, from 126 to 36, was determined, with even the Defence 
Minister being completely kept in the dark!?
(Ref.: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2udl1EHdZ2s>, 0:18 - 0:26 mins. The 
keyword is "probably", also highly helpul is the way it was delivered, on 
April 14 (?) 2010, (four days) after the announcement.)

《Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on said Saturday the number of fighter 
jets required by the Air Force changes from time to time, and the situation 
was different in 2001 when India decided to purchase 126 aircraft.
One of the questions raised by the Congress about the Rafale deal is why 
the Narendra Modi government decided to buy only 36 aircraft instead of 126 
as planned originally.》

Also look up: 'CAG Findings On Rafale Quality Requirements & SC Verdict' at 
<
https://www.livelaw.in/columns/cag-findings-on-rafale-quality-questions-on-sc-verdict-142971
>.]

https://www.news18.com/news/india/sitharamans-rafale-defence-number-of-fighter-jets-needed-by-air-force-changes-from-time-to-time-2046557.html?fbclid=IwAR3sF3DKpGiO0Sp1zI6wM3h-OkiHioTIqpga60E4teGz6ytpyLWsHb5AYFI

Sitharaman’s Rafale Defence: Number of Fighter Jets Needed by Air Force 
Changes from Time to Time
Sitharaman said neither she nor her predecessors Arun Jaitley and Manohar 
Parrikar had any doubts about the PM's decisions on Rafale or or any other 
defence deal.

PTIUpdated:February 23, 2019, 11:12 PM IST

Sitharaman’s Rafale Defence: Number of Fighter Jets Needed by Air Force 
Changes from Time to Time File photo of defence minister Nirmala 
Sitharaman. (Image: PTI)
 
Ahmedabad: Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on said Saturday the number 
of fighter jets required by the Air Force changes from time to time, and 
the situation was different in 2001 when India decided to purchase 126 
aircraft.

One of the questions raised by the Congress about the Rafale deal is why 
the Narendra Modi government decided to buy only 36 aircraft instead of 126 
as planned originally.

Sitharaman was answering queries after delivering a lecture on 'India's 
National Security and Importance of Rafale Deal' here.

Asked about the number of fighter jets required by the Air Force, she said, 
"When the decision of procurement of 126 fighter jets was arrived at in 
2001, the requirement of the Air Force was higher. Now after 20 years the 
situation has changed."

"Now you have UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles or drones), so in a situation 
of war are we required to send a trained pilot in a fighter plane inside 
the enemy borders? So requirements change from time to time.

"In the UPA deal, they were just procuring 18 Rafale in a fly-away 
condition, but we are procuring 36 in fly-away condition, delivery of which 
will start form September. For the rest that have to be manufactured we 
have issued a request for information (RFI)," she said.

"We have given the contract to HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd) for 83 light 
combat fighter aircraft. Sukhois are being manufactured in India," she said.

Asked if she had any doubts about the Rafale deal, Sitharaman said neither 
she nor her predecessors Arun Jaitley and Manohar Parrikar had any doubts 
about the PM's decisions on Rafale or or any other defence deal.

Under the UPA, defence procurement declined as "national security was not a 
priority but somebody else's financial security was a priority," the 
minister claimed, alleging that a "middleman (dalal) culture" prevailed 
then.

On Congress president Rahul Gandhi's allegation that the current Rafale 
deal benefits industrialist Anil Ambani, Sitharaman said the government had 
no control over which firm was chosen for the offset.

"As per the offset clause...the company (to which) we give defence contract 
has to invest or procure 50 per cent of deal amount from India. The 
government has no control over with whom they do it.

"In case of Rafale, the manufacturing company Dassault Aviation has not 
come to the Indian government so far on who will be the offset partner. So 
it would be premature for me to comment on who is the offset partner until 
the company informs the government," she said.

Asked what was going to be the response of the Army to the February 14 
Pulwama terror attack in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed, the defence 
minister refused to give any reply. 

Reliance Group has denied the allegations relating to the deal under which 
France's Dassault is supplying the fighter jets and has entered into a 
joint venture with a Anil Ambani-led group firm to meet its offset 
requirement of the contract.

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