India chooses Israel over US for $525m missile deal: defence sources
India has chosen to buy anti-tank guided missiles from Israel, rejecting a rival U.S. offer, as the right-wing government clears projects worth $13.1 billion to modernise its ageing military, official sources said Oct. 26.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government will buy 8,356 Spike missiles and 321 launchers from Israel in a deal worth 32 billion rupees ($525 million), defence ministry sources told AFP.
The government is moving to speed up long-delayed defence orders and bolster its military. The Israeli deal comes after recent firing along India's border with nuclear-armed rival Pakistan and tensions with giant neighbour China.
The procurement deals, worth 800 billion rupees ($13.1 billion) in total, were cleared at a meeting of India's Defence Acquisition Council, headed by Defence Minister Arun Jaitley, on Oct. 25.
"It (the council) has cleared a deal for Spikes," a defence ministry official, who asked not to be named, told AFP.
"It's a fire and forget kind of missile," the official said, referring to the fact the missile locks onto targets before firing.
"You can say there was a rival bid from the U.S. for its Javelin missiles," the official said, adding that India's army trialled the Spike missiles "successfully last year."
India, the world's biggest arms importer, is in the midst of a $100-billion defence upgrade programme and cleared proposals worth nearly $3.5 billion in June.
Nationalist leader Modi, who stormed to power at elections in May, has said India must build up its military might to the point that no other country "dare cast an evil eye" on the South Asian nation.
A series of corruption scandals under the previous government had brought defence procurement to a near...
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