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India Will Purchase 4 More US Maritime Surveillance Aircraft ( Source- The Diplomat / Author- Ankit Panda)

Boeing P8I of The Indian Navy ( Source- Wikimedia Commons / Credits- Indian Navy)
Source- The Diplomat

Author- Ankit Panda

On Wednesday, the Indian Defense Ministry announced that it had cleared $4.74 billion for the purchase of new military equipment, including four long-range military patrol aircraft from the United States. Specifically, India will purchase four additional Boeing P-8I Poseidon surveillance aircraft, among the most advanced maritime intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft currently available. India placed an order for eight P-8I aircraft in 2009—the latest order is four an additional four units.

The P-8I is an export variant of the P-8A Poseidon, designed for the needs of the Indian Navy. Notably, it features a Telephonics APS-143 OceanEye aft radar and magnetic anomaly detector not present on the original P-8A. The Indian Navy has a total of eight P-8Is on order and deliveries began in December 2012. So far, as of this order, seven P-8I aircraft have been delivered to the Indian Navy. With the delivery of the eighth expected later this year and the new approval, the Indian Navy will operate a total of 12 P-8I aircraft in the future.

India was Boeing’s first international buyer for the P-8I, and the order of an additional four units has been expected for some time. Operationally, the Indian Navy’s interest in bolstering its maritime ISR and anti-submarine warfare (ASW)
Indian navy officers working in Indian navy P8I Poseidon
( Source- Wikimedia Commons / Credits- Indian Navy)
capabilities with a broader P-8I is understandable, given recent forays into the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) by Chinese submarines, including People’s Liberation Army Navy Type 039 Song- and Type 093 Shang-class submarines over the past year (a development confirmed by the U.S. Defense Department in its 2015 report on China’s military).

According to a report by Agence France-Presse, India’s Defense Acquisition Council, the government body in charge of approving large defense purchases, approved an order for 428 air defense artillery guns late on Tuesday. ”The council has cleared proposals relating mainly to purchase of air defence guns and long-range patrol aircraft for the navy,” the official told AFP.

The deal could add ballast to burgeoning U.S.-India defense ties. Indian Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar and U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter renewed the U.S.-India defense cooperation framework agreement, originally signed in 2005, for another decade in May 2015. The United States has emerged as India’s top arms supplier, supplanting Russia, which has traditionally held that distinction.

About the author- Ankit Panda is a foreign affairs analyst, writer, and editor with expertise in international relations, political economy, international security, and crisis diplomacy. He has been an editor at The Diplomat since 2013. His analysis and reports have been widely cited and reprinted, including in the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, the Washington Post, Reuters blogs, Foreign Policy, the National Interest, International Business Times, Lowy Interpreter, Newsweek, RealClearWorld, RealClearDefense, Slate, the Daily Dish, the Daily Beast, Business Insider, and Vice, among others. His articles have been translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Urdu, Thai, and Russian. Panda has additionally provided expert commentary for the BBC, Voice of America, SiriusXM radio, and CCTV, among others. He hosts and produces a popular podcast on geopolitics for The Diplomat. Panda’s work as a policy researcher has been presented to the European Union, the United States Department of State, the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Defense, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, among others. His work is widely cited by academics and think-tank researchers. He maintains involvement in track-two exchanges in North America, Europe, India, and Japan. He has lived or worked in India, Belgium, Jordan, France, Malaysia, the United States, Sweden, and Japan, and traveled extensively.

To read the original articel @ The Diplomat, click here

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