In a major milestone in the country's military aviation, indigenous supersonic fighter aircraft LCA-Tejas today received the Initial Operational Clearance (IOC II), that takes it a step closer to its induction into IAF squadron.
Marking the event, Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal NAK Browne accepted the "Release to Service Document" at a function attended by Defence Minister A K Antony and senior officials of Defence Research and Development Organisation and defence major Hindustan Aeronautics Limited at HAL airport.
"It is a great day for India today...," Antony said in his speech after Tejas aircraft roared over the Bangalore skies, signalling the home grown fighter aircraft's another milestone in its long and arduous three-decades-long journey since the project was first cleared in 1983.
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After IOC II, which signifies Tejas is airworthy in different conditions, HAL will go ahead with the Series Production of multi-role fighter which will, however, have to cross several milestones before it receives the Final Operational Clearance (FOC).
With the IOC 11, the single engine, light weight and highly agile front line fighter can now be flown by regular IAF
pilots for officially undertaking flight evaluation trials in a significant development in the Rs 7,000 crore programme.
LCA, named Tejas by the then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee in 2003, had received the first initial operational clearance in January 2011 when IAF had expressed various reservations and sought modifications.