(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump said the US would offer the F-35 warplane to India as part of a bigger commitment to deepen defense ties.
The US will increase sales of military hardware to India by “many billions of dollars,” Trump said at a joint White House press conference alongside Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday evening. “We’re also paving the way to ultimately provide India with the F-35 stealth fighters,” the president said.
Any such move would be a long way off and could face serious obstacles given that India already has deep defense ties with Russia, and the US has been loathe to sell the F-35 to countries where its technology might be stolen by adversaries.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump jointly address a press conference following the bilateral meeting
A sale would also be complicated by India’s decision in 2018 to buy Russia’s S400 missile defense system. The US had previously scrapped F-35 co-production with Turkey after that country decided to buy the S400 over fears Russia would learn too much about the plane’s technology. Still, it amounts to the latest US salvo to weaken the country’s close military ties with Russia. Successive American presidents including Trump in his first term promised more weapons contracts.
“In our meeting today, the prime minister and I reaffirmed that strong cooperation among the United States, India, Australia and Japan, and it’s crucial really, to maintaining peace and prosperity tranquility, even, in the Indo Pacific,” Trump said.
His announcement also suggests continued confidence in the costliest American weapons system, manufactured by Lockheed Martin Corp., which has been derided by Elon Musk, the world’s richest person and a close Trump adviser. “Some idiots are still building manned fighter jets like the F-35” in an age of drones, he said.
USAF F-35A passes in front of a Russian Su-57 fifth-generation fighter on the tarmac at Aero India 2025. Pic credit: Aatish Pillai
Then-Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall defended the aircraft. “The F-35 isn’t going away” as it’s “a state of the art system that’s continuously being upgraded,” Kendall said during an Air Force Association webcast. “There’s a reason so many countries are buying the F-35,” he said of its 19 international customers. “There is no alternative to that in the near term. We should continue to buy it.”
The Modi government has intensified defense ties with the US as it proceeds with a 10-year, $250 billion military modernization. Last year, the US approved the sale of nearly $4 billion in attack drones, Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs to India, as the Biden administration looks to chip away at the country’s long-time defense ties with Russia.
Well, there it is. The F-35 offer is finally, officially on the table.
@Nilgiri @TR_123456
The US will increase sales of military hardware to India by “many billions of dollars,” Trump said at a joint White House press conference alongside Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday evening. “We’re also paving the way to ultimately provide India with the F-35 stealth fighters,” the president said.
Any such move would be a long way off and could face serious obstacles given that India already has deep defense ties with Russia, and the US has been loathe to sell the F-35 to countries where its technology might be stolen by adversaries.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump jointly address a press conference following the bilateral meeting
A sale would also be complicated by India’s decision in 2018 to buy Russia’s S400 missile defense system. The US had previously scrapped F-35 co-production with Turkey after that country decided to buy the S400 over fears Russia would learn too much about the plane’s technology. Still, it amounts to the latest US salvo to weaken the country’s close military ties with Russia. Successive American presidents including Trump in his first term promised more weapons contracts.
“In our meeting today, the prime minister and I reaffirmed that strong cooperation among the United States, India, Australia and Japan, and it’s crucial really, to maintaining peace and prosperity tranquility, even, in the Indo Pacific,” Trump said.
His announcement also suggests continued confidence in the costliest American weapons system, manufactured by Lockheed Martin Corp., which has been derided by Elon Musk, the world’s richest person and a close Trump adviser. “Some idiots are still building manned fighter jets like the F-35” in an age of drones, he said.
USAF F-35A passes in front of a Russian Su-57 fifth-generation fighter on the tarmac at Aero India 2025. Pic credit: Aatish Pillai
Then-Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall defended the aircraft. “The F-35 isn’t going away” as it’s “a state of the art system that’s continuously being upgraded,” Kendall said during an Air Force Association webcast. “There’s a reason so many countries are buying the F-35,” he said of its 19 international customers. “There is no alternative to that in the near term. We should continue to buy it.”
The Modi government has intensified defense ties with the US as it proceeds with a 10-year, $250 billion military modernization. Last year, the US approved the sale of nearly $4 billion in attack drones, Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs to India, as the Biden administration looks to chip away at the country’s long-time defense ties with Russia.
Well, there it is. The F-35 offer is finally, officially on the table.
@Nilgiri @TR_123456