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India set to buy 300 aircraft from Russia

Canada to evacuate UAE base: minister
Ottawa (AFP) Oct 11, 2010 - An aviation row has forced Canada to vacate a military base in the United Arab Emirates along key supply routes to Afghanistan, Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay said Monday. "At this point, we will abide by the wishes of the Emirates, and that is that we will be leaving the base," MacKay was quoted by Canadian media as telling reporters in Kandahar, Afghanistan after negotiations failed to expand the number of flights between the two countries. "We are going through the various options that are before us right now, and we'll continue to do our mission here in Afghanistan primarily and we'll find other ways to support this mission through other hubs within the region." At stake was a military base near Dubai known as Camp Mirage.

On Sunday, the UAE's ambassador to Canada Mohammed Abdullah al-Ghafli said the Emirates was "disappointed" that protracted negotiations over the past five years floundered. "The fact that this has not come about undoubtedly affects the bilateral relationship," the ambassador was quoted as saying by the official WAM news agency. The evacuation orders came after the Canadian government balked at the UAE's demands for more landing rights for its national carriers, Emirates Airlines and Etihad Airways. "We'll always act in Canada's best interest," MacKay added, after thanking the UAE for its past support of Canada's military operations in the country. "And one thing I know about the Canadian forces, they're very adaptable. They have alternative plans, they have contingency plans." About 27,000 Canadians live in the United Arab Emirates, one of Canada's biggest economic partners in the Middle East with bilateral trade valued at about 1.5 billion dollars per year, according to UAE officials.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (UPI) Oct 12, 2010
India has announced plans purchase as many as 300 combat aircraft from Russia in a joint agreement including the development and production of the aircraft.

Speaking to reporters during a news conference, Indian Defense Minister AK Antony said Russia would supply as many as 300 fifth-generation fighter aircraft and about 45 multi-role transport planes.

India will receive 250-300 advanced fighter jets, Antony said. "These are the two major projects for the next 10 years which will be a shining example of Indian-Russian cooperation," he said.

He said the project along with a venture agreed to earlier this year to jointly develop a multi-role transport aircraft would become the flagship of Indian-Russian collaboration programs.

"Some technical formalities between the governments is [still] needed and I am sure we will be able to complete [the agreement] very soon ... within a few months," Antony said at the news conference.

Details of the joint development of the fifth-generation aircraft program weren't announced but are widely expected to be similar to the transport aircraft program, local media in Russia suggested.

The fifth-generation fighter planes, the St. Petersburg Times reported, will be produced by Russia's Sukhoi and India's National Aerospace Laboratories. A Russian-drafted contract has been submitted for India's approval.

"It is too early to talk about the price of the deals," Konstantin Makiyenko, deputy director of the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, told the newspaper.

The contracts that are being prepared will be signed in December during Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's planned visit to India.

Experts have suggested that each fighter aircraft could be worth in excess of $100 million.

Defense News quoted Indian Defense Production Secretary R.K. Singh saying the cost of the program would be worked in stages.

"At present a $300 million preliminary design contract for the FGFA program is currently under the (Indian) government's consideration," Singh said.

The multi-role transport aircraft deal was signed last month between Hindustan Aeronautic Ltd. and Russia's United Aircraft Corp. and Rosoboronexport. The project is estimated at a value of $645 million.

Bent on bolstering its military might, India has recently boosted its defense ties with Russia. In a related agreement, officials in Moscow say they are waiting for clearance from New Delhi to supply the country with 22 attack helicopters and 15 heavy lift helicopters.

"As soon as we get the contract we will provide them," Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said after talks with Antony.

India plans to mothball its mainstay MiG-21 Soviet-era fighter jets, dubbed "flying coffins" because of their dismal safety record.

India is in the process of acquiring 270 Sukhoi jets worth $12 billion. It is also set to award a contract for 126 fighter planes as part of a separate $12 billion deal for which six global aeronautical giants are competing.



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NATO to deliberate 21st century fighting machine
Brussels (AFP) Oct 12, 2010
NATO foreign and defence ministers huddle Thursday to shape the alliance's strategy for the next decade but Germany and France are at odds over the vision for missile defence and nuclear weapons. The ministers will hold a rare joint meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels to discuss a draft of the alliance's new "strategic concept" at a time it is fighting in Afghanistan and facing budget c ... read more







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