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India seeks proposals for fifth generation combat jets: report

India has sought initial proposals to locally manufacture a fifth-generation combat ​aircraft from three short-listed bidders, news agency ANI ‌reported on Wednesday, citing defence officials.

The bidders are Tata Advanced Systems, and joint ventures between Larsen and ​Toubro-Bharat Electronics and Bharat Forge-BEML — all of them ​Indian companies.

India approved a programme to build the stealth ⁠fighter jets and invited interest for the same from defence ​firms last year, weeks after a fierce military conflict ​with nuclear-armed foe Pakistan.

The programme is critical to boost the strength of the Indian Air Force, whose fleet of mostly Russian ​aircraft has shrunk to below 30 squadrons in ​recent months, compared to the approved strength of 42.

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The push aligns ‌with ⁠Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s larger ambition to ramp up local manufacturing and boost its military might to take on threats from both Pakistan and China.

Washington has pitched its ​advanced F-35 jet to ​India and ⁠Russia has countered that by offering its own fifth-generation Su-57. India has maintained a ​distance from both offers.

New Delhi has long ​relied on ⁠importing machinery and weapons for its armed forces, but a recent push by Modi has helped boost domestic ⁠manufacturing.

India’s ​defence production hit a record high of ​1.54 trillion rupees ($16.09 billion) in the financial year ended March 2025.

In February 2026, India gave initial clearance for a 3.6tr-rupee ($40b) boost to the country’s armed forces, including procurement of more Rafale fighter jets for the air force and Boeing P-8I reconnaissance aircraft for the navy.

The air force’s fighter squadron strength has shrunk to 29 in recent months, well below the 42 it had earlier. Its workhorse MiG-21 was retired in September and other early variants of the MiG-29, the Anglo-French Jaguar and the French Mirage 2000 are also set to end service in the coming years.Latest News, Breaking News & Top News Stories | The Express TribuneReutersRead More

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