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US puts Lockheed off Tejas flight path
Ajai Shukla / New Delhi September 28, 2009, 0:18 IST

Déjà vu for the US giant, as queries land at the eleventh hour.

The US government is, for the second time, squeezing American aerospace giant Lockheed Martin out of an important contract related to India’s Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA).

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Business Standard learns that Lockheed Martin, selected in June as a consultant for developing the Naval version of the Tejas, was given 90 days to obtain the clearances it needed from the US government. But now, with time running out, Washington has sent Lockheed Martin a list of questions about what assistance the company will provide.

Senior officials from Bangalore-based Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), which manages the Tejas programme, say they will not delay the naval version any longer. ADA has recommended to the Ministry of Defence that another consultant be chosen. It has put forward the names of France’s Dassault Aviation, and European consortium EADS.

For Lockheed Martin, this is déjà vu. In 1993, it was selected to partner ADA in developing the Tejas’ high-tech flight control system (FCS). But after India’s nuclear tests in 1998, Washington ordered the company to terminate the partnership. India eventually went it alone, developing the world class FCS that is on the Tejas today.

Lockheed Martin is still fighting to salvage the situation. The company told Business Standard, “We are continuing our dialogue with the Aeronautical Development Agency and the US Department of Defense and are hopeful we will be able provide the consultancy desired by ADA on the Naval LCA.”

But the decision now lies in the hands of V K Saraswat, scientific advisor to the defence minister.

Lockheed Martin’s current situation replicates that of Boeing, which was front-runner for the air force Tejas consultancy. But earlier this year, after the US government failed to grant Boeing a clearance (called Technical Assistance Agreement) in time, the defence ministry awarded EADS the contract. The European consortium obtained the sanctions in time and is now working with ADA.

Foreign consultancy has been sought by ADA to introduce the Tejas into service without further delay. The air force Tejas, a single-seat, single-engine fighter, is at an advanced stage of testing. The naval Tejas, being developed around the twin-seater air force trainer, will take to the skies by mid-2010. But it will fly off an aircraft only in 2014, after getting a new, more powerful, engine. That is about when the Indigenous Aircraft Carrier, being built in Kochi, will join the Indian Navy.

The immediate challenges before the naval Tejas — which the consultant will help to resolve — include strengthening the undercarriage to absorb the high impact of landing on aircraft carrier decks, fitting an arrestor hook at the tail of the aircraft to bring it to a quick halt after landing, and adding a flap on the front edge of the wings to slow the landing speed by almost 150 kmph.

In addition, the naval Tejas needs a fuel dump system, in case of an emergency just after take-off. The take-off weight of a Tejas, with full weapons load and fuel, is 12.5 tonnes. But for landing back on an aircraft carrier, it must be less than 9.5 tonnes. In an emergency, 2 tonnes of weapons and external fuel tanks will be instantly shed, but a system must be built in for jettisoning another tonne of fuel from the fighter’s wing tanks.

None of the US Navy’s most successful carrier-borne aircraft — the F-4 Phantom, the F-14 Tomcat and the F/A-18 Hornet — was built by Lockheed Martin. Despite that, ADA believes Lockheed Martin’s experience in designing the futuristic F-35 Lightning Joint Strike Fighter qualifies it as a consultant.

“All the earlier US navy aircraft had two engines, giving them the weight and strength to support a tail hook,” explained P S Subramaniam, the director of ADA. “But Lockheed Martin has designed the F-35 Lightning, which is a single-engine fighter with a tail hook.”

Dassault’s Rafale fighter and EADS’s Eurofighter Typhoon are both twin-engine aircraft.

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ranvir
We need to stop all defense ties and purchases with the US. They were never our allies. So screw them and their love partner Pakistan.
Reply
adi
therefore we cannot rely on US for any arms purchase. I hope Indian defence planners keep this in mind.
Reply
dev
The order of LCA(N)by the navy has obviously rung alarm bells in the Dept. of Defense,USA as they do not wish to lose sale of their own aircraft. Why help India develop their own aircraft& close sales for the next 40 years!!The LCA(N)MK1 should be brought into service as a SHORE BASED fighter to protect our VAs & VPs along the coasts and island territories.MK2 can be inducted after full TOT from sources established by 2015.
Reply
Dee
If govt allows our private companies like BEL, LNT, BHEL, MNM & so on to freely develop the defence systems & aircrafts, they can compete the world. They can develop their own designs & technology & test them. Govt. should remove all the hurdles & create the necessary infrastructure for private companies to develop the superior products. LNT can be next to lockheed martin, if govt. gives full support. Thanks
Reply
  Reply by prateek:
I totally agree with you and list of private players is quite long which can develop these systems at ease like TATA, Mahindras etc
Singh
Keep away from the U.S It will only lead to trouble at a later stage. How can they forget the sanctions and delay of the LCA due to it. How can they forget the seizing of flight control software and related things by the U.S. Indian planners are acting stupid.
Reply
  Reply by adi:
i totally agree.
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