Indian Air Force (IAF) planning is even more lamentable, with just 36 fighter squadrons today against an authorised requirement of 39.5 squadrons. Worse, in 2015, eight squadrons of MiG-21s and MiG-27s are due to retire, to be replaced by only four squadrons of Sukhoi-30MKIs and a single squadron of Tejas LCAs. In 2017, another six squadrons of MiG-21s will retire, creating a fresh crisis. The Tejas LCA, now on the cusp of completion, would be a cheap and capable replacement; instead, the IAF has lobbied relentlessly for expensive foreign aircraft. Consider: the cost of 126 Rafales is some $18 billion; 250 Indo-Russian fifth-generation fighters will cost $30-35 billion; and 100-odd Sukhoi-30MKIs will cost $10 billion. Add another $10 billion for C-17 Globemaster III, C-130J Super Hercules and replacing the Avro; $3-4 billion for trainers; and $10-15 billion for the light, utility and combat helicopters currently being procured. That takes the IAF's aircraft purchases to at least $81-92 billion over the next 10-15 years. This wish list is an unaffordable fantasy given the IAF's modernisation budget is $5.7 billion this year. The defence ministry should have warned the IAF against costly foreign procurement. Instead, there are pro forma statements, like "whatever our brave soldiers need for defending the country will be made available."
Tokenism also suffuses the unnecessary announcement about strengthening the China border by raising a new strike corps and several tank brigades. Instead of tackling the key weakness on the border - poor roads that prevent the army from moving - the government has thrown Rs 70,000 crore at the problem. But a strike corps is useful only if it can deploy rapidly. During peacetime, pro forma statements can paper over the void, and the titanic mis-spending of lakhs of crores. But when the rubber hits the road, as it did in 1962, capability alone will matter.