US okays sale of Rs374 bn armed drones to India

Geek

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
481937_7293276_Drone_akhbar.jpg



The Trump administration has approved the sale of armed drones to India and has offered integrated air and missile defence systems aimed at helping the country boost its military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the strategically important Indo-Pacific region.

The approval-cum-offer from the US came in the aftermath of the February 14 Pulwama terrorist attack in which 40 Indian soldiers were killed. Another reason is the increasing militarisation and assertiveness of China in the Indo-Pacific region, reported international media. According to the officials, the Trump administration is ready to offer its best defence technologies to India. "The United States approved the sale of the armed drones to India. We have offered integrated air and missile defence technology to India," a senior White House official told news agency Press Trust of India (PTI). The US official, who spoke with news agency PTI on the condition of anonymity, did not reveal when the sale of the armed drones to India might take place.

During the June 2017 meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump, the US had agreed to sell surveillance version of the Guardian drones to India. India was the first non-treaty partner to be offered a Missile Technology Control Regime or MTCR Category-1 Unmanned Aerial System - the Sea Guardian UAS manufactured by General Atomics. While the deal is yet to see the light of day, the US in recent months informed New Delhi about its decision to sell armed version of the Guardian drones. "The ball is now in India's court," a defence industry source told news agency PTI. The deal, if it happens, could be in the range of over $2.5 billion, the industry source told PTI.

Close on the heels of armed drones, which will have its implications in South Asia and Indo-Pacific region, the US has also offered its integrated defence missile capabilities to India. While officials are tight-lipped about it, the offer is said to be about two of its latest systems: Terminal High Altitude Area Defence system (THAAD), which is highly effective when used against long-range ballistic missiles and Patriot Missile defence system.

India, which has already signed an agreement with Russia to purchase S-400 missile defence system, is yet to respond to the American offer. The American offer, which came of its own, is currently being studied in New Delhi, reported PTI. "We want India to have our best technology, and we want to see India improve its defence capabilities so that it can be a net provider of security in the broader Indo-Pacific region," the senior White House official, told PTI. In a fact sheet on "US Security Cooperation with India" issued this week, the US State Department joined the White House in trying to help strengthen its defence capabilities mainly due to the Indo-Pacific region. "India plays a vital role in the US vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific," said the fact sheet issued by the Bureau of Political Military Affairs of the State Department. Towards this end, in 2016, the US designated India as a Major Defence Partner.

Commensurate with this designation, India was granted Strategic Trade Authorisation tier 1 status last year, which allows India to receive license-free access to a wide range of military and dual-use technologies that are regulated by the Department of Commerce, it said. With a Communications, Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) and other enabling agreements now in place, US-India defence trade cooperation continues to expand, it said. Some of the recent top defence sales to India include: MH-60R Seahawk helicopters (USD 2.6 billion), Apache helicopters (USD 2.3 billion), P-8I maritime patrol aircraft (USD 3 billion), and M777 howitzers (USD 737 million), reported Press Trust of India.

The State Department is also pushing for Lockheed Martin F-21 and Boeing F-18/A - two state-of-the-art fighter aircraft that India is currently evaluating. "These platforms provide critical opportunities to enhance India's military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the Indo-Pacific region," the US State Department fact sheet said. "We are now reaching agreements that we did not have before that allow us to consider sales that were incomprehensible five years ago," a senior State Department official told a group of reporters last week. The choices that are made now will establish the framework for the future, the official said. "We certainly have the ambitions for the broadest possible, deepest possible military relationship with India," the official told news agency PTI, requesting anonymity.


واشنگٹن: امریکی انتظامیہ نے بھارت کو مسلح ڈرونز کی فروخت کی منظوری دے دی۔

امریکا نے مسلح ڈرونز کے ساتھ ساتھ نے بھارت کو فضائی اور میزائل دفاعی نظام کی فروخت کی بھی پیشکش کی ہے۔

امریکی حکام کے مطابق ٹرمپ انتظامیہ بھارت کو اپنی بہترین دفاعی ٹیکنالوجی پیش کرنے کیلئے تیار ہے، بھارتی میڈیا کا کہنا ہے کہ معاہدہ طے پایا تو اس کی مالیت 2 ارب 50 کروڑ امریکی ڈالر ہوگی۔

مسلح ڈرونز کی فروخت کب ہوگی یہ واضح نہیں کیا گیا تاہم یہ معاہدہ پونے چار کھرب پاکستانی روپے کا ہوگا۔

مودی اور ٹرمپ کے درمیان جون 2017 میں بھارت کو نگرانی کرنے والے ’گارڈین ڈرونز‘ کی فروخت پر اتفاق ہوا تھا۔

دوسری جانب بھارت کاروس سے ایس 400 دفاعی میزائل نظام کی خریداری کا معاہدہ طے پا چکا ہے، بھارت نے امریکی پیشکش کا ابھی تک جواب نہیں دیا ہے۔

 
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kingQ

Minister (2k+ posts)
Yeah I saw this news a while ago. India has always been a very important country for the West including America. Americans were against partition of India in 1947 and for a few years since independence they didn't have diplomatic relations with us until Liaquat Ali Khan paid a visit to the Super Power.
Compelled by increasing military and geographic ambitions of China, India has finally agreed to become the 'Israel of South Asia' or just another Slut of the US. Obviously a bad news for Pakistan, but it doesn't mean India can threaten our existence. We will survive and keep India under pressure.
 

kingQ

Minister (2k+ posts)
Only a democratic nuclear Pakistan is a guarantee that Pakistan will survive. Civilian supremacy should be the goa, because fat assed Punjabi generals don't have skills and foresight. They just superficially see things and are always ready to act like sluts of superpowers for haram money.
Democracy and democracy alone will grant diplomatic strength to this country with which it will negotiate with the world for peace.
 

kingQ

Minister (2k+ posts)
Musharraf and other slutty generals kept licking American asses with a hope to get 'armed drones'. Now see, that Americans themselves are offering these to Indians along with air and missile defence system. Now who will you bow and worship as your world gods? Chinese? So are you going to rely on 3rd grade 'made in China' stuff?
The secular, desi, sharabi adulterous generals have doomed this country. They don't believe in Allah, they believed in America in the past and now they believe in China, filthy mushrikeen.
 

Young_Blood

Minister (2k+ posts)
Musharraf ko kis ne kaha tha k sirf aik telephone per Bush k neachey lait janay ko? mard ka bacha hota to aankho mein aankhein daal k baat karta, aur agar letna he tha to bohat kuj lay ker lait sakta tha magar uss kaminay ne to pakistan ka soda bohat sastay mein keeya, aur jitney mein keeya uss se 10 gunah ziada ka maali loss kerwaya aur jaani alag jis ke koi qeemat nahi,,
 

bhutt-dari

Senator (1k+ posts)
Yeah I saw this news a while ago. India has always been a very important country for the West including America. Americans were against partition of India in 1947 and for a few years since independence they didn't have diplomatic relations with us until Liaquat Ali Khan paid a visit to the Super Power.
Compelled by increasing military and geographic ambitions of China, India has finally agreed to become the 'Israel of South Asia' or just another Slut of the US. Obviously a bad news for Pakistan, but it doesn't mean India can threaten our existence. We will survive and keep India under pressure.
useless and meaningless comments.
 

AdamA

Senator (1k+ posts)
War is heading our way, 2021-2023 when India will be fully tooled up. In the meantime, we have 12-18 months to fix the economy. China will not come to our aid.
 

insouciant

Minister (2k+ posts)
Pin my comment. By 2021, India will be hit by its worst economic crash! All the indicators are pointing to it!

War is heading our way, 2021-2023 when India will be fully tooled up. In the meantime, we have 12-18 months to fix the economy. China will not come to our aid.
 

insouciant

Minister (2k+ posts)
Are they going to be Alien Proof? ? ? ?

481937_7293276_Drone_akhbar.jpg



The Trump administration has approved the sale of armed drones to India and has offered integrated air and missile defence systems aimed at helping the country boost its military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the strategically important Indo-Pacific region.

The approval-cum-offer from the US came in the aftermath of the February 14 Pulwama terrorist attack in which 40 Indian soldiers were killed. Another reason is the increasing militarisation and assertiveness of China in the Indo-Pacific region, reported international media. According to the officials, the Trump administration is ready to offer its best defence technologies to India. "The United States approved the sale of the armed drones to India. We have offered integrated air and missile defence technology to India," a senior White House official told news agency Press Trust of India (PTI). The US official, who spoke with news agency PTI on the condition of anonymity, did not reveal when the sale of the armed drones to India might take place.

During the June 2017 meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump, the US had agreed to sell surveillance version of the Guardian drones to India. India was the first non-treaty partner to be offered a Missile Technology Control Regime or MTCR Category-1 Unmanned Aerial System - the Sea Guardian UAS manufactured by General Atomics. While the deal is yet to see the light of day, the US in recent months informed New Delhi about its decision to sell armed version of the Guardian drones. "The ball is now in India's court," a defence industry source told news agency PTI. The deal, if it happens, could be in the range of over $2.5 billion, the industry source told PTI.

Close on the heels of armed drones, which will have its implications in South Asia and Indo-Pacific region, the US has also offered its integrated defence missile capabilities to India. While officials are tight-lipped about it, the offer is said to be about two of its latest systems: Terminal High Altitude Area Defence system (THAAD), which is highly effective when used against long-range ballistic missiles and Patriot Missile defence system.

India, which has already signed an agreement with Russia to purchase S-400 missile defence system, is yet to respond to the American offer. The American offer, which came of its own, is currently being studied in New Delhi, reported PTI. "We want India to have our best technology, and we want to see India improve its defence capabilities so that it can be a net provider of security in the broader Indo-Pacific region," the senior White House official, told PTI. In a fact sheet on "US Security Cooperation with India" issued this week, the US State Department joined the White House in trying to help strengthen its defence capabilities mainly due to the Indo-Pacific region. "India plays a vital role in the US vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific," said the fact sheet issued by the Bureau of Political Military Affairs of the State Department. Towards this end, in 2016, the US designated India as a Major Defence Partner.

Commensurate with this designation, India was granted Strategic Trade Authorisation tier 1 status last year, which allows India to receive license-free access to a wide range of military and dual-use technologies that are regulated by the Department of Commerce, it said. With a Communications, Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) and other enabling agreements now in place, US-India defence trade cooperation continues to expand, it said. Some of the recent top defence sales to India include: MH-60R Seahawk helicopters (USD 2.6 billion), Apache helicopters (USD 2.3 billion), P-8I maritime patrol aircraft (USD 3 billion), and M777 howitzers (USD 737 million), reported Press Trust of India.

The State Department is also pushing for Lockheed Martin F-21 and Boeing F-18/A - two state-of-the-art fighter aircraft that India is currently evaluating. "These platforms provide critical opportunities to enhance India's military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the Indo-Pacific region," the US State Department fact sheet said. "We are now reaching agreements that we did not have before that allow us to consider sales that were incomprehensible five years ago," a senior State Department official told a group of reporters last week. The choices that are made now will establish the framework for the future, the official said. "We certainly have the ambitions for the broadest possible, deepest possible military relationship with India," the official told news agency PTI, requesting anonymity.

 

Sonya Khan

Minister (2k+ posts)
Phew..... say their pilots and the families.....no more flying coffins.... BTW why don’t the Indian pilots just enmass crash those coffins by design....nobody is going to find out anyway and blame them......
 

kakamuna420

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
auqat hai india ki
They lost the an-32 plane and now offered 5 lac as gift for somebody who finds it.
5 lacs is people rent for a month
 

babulal

MPA (400+ posts)
481937_7293276_Drone_akhbar.jpg



The Trump administration has approved the sale of armed drones to India and has offered integrated air and missile defence systems aimed at helping the country boost its military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the strategically important Indo-Pacific region.

The approval-cum-offer from the US came in the aftermath of the February 14 Pulwama terrorist attack in which 40 Indian soldiers were killed. Another reason is the increasing militarisation and assertiveness of China in the Indo-Pacific region, reported international media. According to the officials, the Trump administration is ready to offer its best defence technologies to India. "The United States approved the sale of the armed drones to India. We have offered integrated air and missile defence technology to India," a senior White House official told news agency Press Trust of India (PTI). The US official, who spoke with news agency PTI on the condition of anonymity, did not reveal when the sale of the armed drones to India might take place.

During the June 2017 meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump, the US had agreed to sell surveillance version of the Guardian drones to India. India was the first non-treaty partner to be offered a Missile Technology Control Regime or MTCR Category-1 Unmanned Aerial System - the Sea Guardian UAS manufactured by General Atomics. While the deal is yet to see the light of day, the US in recent months informed New Delhi about its decision to sell armed version of the Guardian drones. "The ball is now in India's court," a defence industry source told news agency PTI. The deal, if it happens, could be in the range of over $2.5 billion, the industry source told PTI.

Close on the heels of armed drones, which will have its implications in South Asia and Indo-Pacific region, the US has also offered its integrated defence missile capabilities to India. While officials are tight-lipped about it, the offer is said to be about two of its latest systems: Terminal High Altitude Area Defence system (THAAD), which is highly effective when used against long-range ballistic missiles and Patriot Missile defence system.

India, which has already signed an agreement with Russia to purchase S-400 missile defence system, is yet to respond to the American offer. The American offer, which came of its own, is currently being studied in New Delhi, reported PTI. "We want India to have our best technology, and we want to see India improve its defence capabilities so that it can be a net provider of security in the broader Indo-Pacific region," the senior White House official, told PTI. In a fact sheet on "US Security Cooperation with India" issued this week, the US State Department joined the White House in trying to help strengthen its defence capabilities mainly due to the Indo-Pacific region. "India plays a vital role in the US vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific," said the fact sheet issued by the Bureau of Political Military Affairs of the State Department. Towards this end, in 2016, the US designated India as a Major Defence Partner.

Commensurate with this designation, India was granted Strategic Trade Authorisation tier 1 status last year, which allows India to receive license-free access to a wide range of military and dual-use technologies that are regulated by the Department of Commerce, it said. With a Communications, Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) and other enabling agreements now in place, US-India defence trade cooperation continues to expand, it said. Some of the recent top defence sales to India include: MH-60R Seahawk helicopters (USD 2.6 billion), Apache helicopters (USD 2.3 billion), P-8I maritime patrol aircraft (USD 3 billion), and M777 howitzers (USD 737 million), reported Press Trust of India.

The State Department is also pushing for Lockheed Martin F-21 and Boeing F-18/A - two state-of-the-art fighter aircraft that India is currently evaluating. "These platforms provide critical opportunities to enhance India's military capabilities and protect shared security interests in the Indo-Pacific region," the US State Department fact sheet said. "We are now reaching agreements that we did not have before that allow us to consider sales that were incomprehensible five years ago," a senior State Department official told a group of reporters last week. The choices that are made now will establish the framework for the future, the official said. "We certainly have the ambitions for the broadest possible, deepest possible military relationship with India," the official told news agency PTI, requesting anonymity.


good , now it wiil be used for killing terrorists
?
 

asifA1

Minister (2k+ posts)
The difference between Pakistan & India is
Pakistan makes its own indigenous Burraq Drones while
India places whole lump sum orders from foreign country.

The professionalism of using & operating any equipment goes to vivedly show the February 26-27 incidents usage & experience in expertise in warfare technologies. You have to build your own drones in order to completely understand them to fly them superior tactics.
 
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