Former Defence Minister A K Antony also demanded making public the inter-governmental agreement with France. He wondered how India would bridge the gap with respect to China and Pakistan by acquiring just 36 aircraft when the original plan was for 126.
Addressing a press conference along with party spokesman Manish Tewari at the AICC headquarters, Antony lamented that the idea of 'Make in India' which was there in the original plan has also "gone" in the present deal.
"Is it enough to meet operational requirement of the IAF which has a sanctioned strength of 42 squadrons and.... At present there are just 32 squadrons?", Antony asked. A squadron has generally 18 aircraft.
Suggesting that more aircraft were necessary for the operational requirement of the IAF, he said, otherwise, by 2022 the squadron available with IAF would be reduced to 25.
"I don't want to comment on the present price before I know the exact details. Government must publish the details of the final contract," Antony said
Antony wanted to know from the government how it would
equip the Air Force with more aircraft at a time when Pakistan is building its air strength.
The former Defence Minister said that during UPA rule, he received complaints from many quarters, even from former Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha, on the price issue because of the fact that the concept of life cycle cost has been introduced.
Tewari said government needs to tell in deail what is the "fine print" of the contract which has been negotiated and what was the "fine print" of the contract which UPA Government was negotiating when it left office in 2014.
Tewari sought to know whether it is true that when the UPA left, the non-negotiated price of the Rafale was in the range of Rs 715 crore per sircraft and what has been negotiated today for the 36 Aircrafts in a fly-away condition is Rs 1600 crore per aircraft which is 123 per cent escalation?
He wanted to know whether the inter-governmental agreement which has been negotiated and the commercial contract which has been signed either do not have an 'Options Clause' or have a 'Part Options Clause?'.
Not having an options clause means after the delivery of the 36 aircraft, if India wants to procure more Rafales, it will have to negotiate the price afresh with the company.
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