Dassault Aviation Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Eric Trappier (right) and Thales Executive Vice President, Defence Mission Systems, Pierre Eric Pommellet speak during a ceremony for the first two retrofitted Indian Air Force Mirage 2000 fighter jets at the Dassault Aviation flight test centre at the Istres air base in southern France, yesterday.

India took delivery yesterday of the first two refitted Mirage fighter jets out of a total 51 in the pipeline at a ceremony at the Istres airbase in southern France, as talks for more modern Rafales dragged on.
Signed in 2011 after five years of talks, the contract is worth €1.4bn to be shared by Thales and Dassault, according to an Indian defence ministry document cited by the French business website LaTribune.fr.
The deal involves the upgrades of the rest of the 51 jets to be carried out in Bengaluru by state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), Dassault’s Indian partner, under the Rafale contract.
“India is Dassault Aviation’s top export customer and the historical ties we have maintained with the Indian Air Force for 60 years continue to strengthen,” Dassault CEO Eric Trappier said.
India was Dassault’s first export client with the transfer of the Ouragon fighter jet in 1953.
“The Rafale is the next logical step,” said Trappier, referring to negotiations begun in January 2012 for the sale of 126 fighter planes worth $12bn.
The idea is for Dassault to supply 18 of the twin-engine multirole fighters later this year while the remaining 108 would be built by HAL under technology transfer agreements.
Trappier emphasised the importance of technology transfer agreements for New Delhi, which has a “Make in India” policy to spur the country’s manufacturing sector.
“I would like to go faster (but) it is an enormous contract,” he said. “As I have said before, I prefer we take our time now ... rather than have problems later.”
France signed in February its first export contract for the Rafale, which has been in service in the French military since 2001 and was used in the Western intervention in Libya.


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