US Air Force Chief Flies 'Made-In-India' Tejas Aircraft In Jodhpur


US Chief of Air Staff Gen David Goldfein flew the Tejas from the Jodhpur Air Force Station

US Air Force chief is a command pilot with 4,200 flying hours. Singapore defence minister flew the Tejas last November. Tejas fighter shows promise as far more capable than MiG-27 and MiG-21

General David L Goldfein, Chief of Staff of US Air Force flew India's indigenous light combat aircraft, the Tejas, this morning, in a special flight that took off from the Jodhpur Air Force Station that signals the soaring ties between the two air forces.

General Goldfein was accompanied by Air Vice Marshal AP Singh as co-pilot during the sortie, defence officials said.

The top ranking US military officer had reached India on Thursday on an official visit to deepen relations. "There is already a strong relationship between our two air forces and I'm looking forward to making it stronger," he wrote in a Facebook post shortly after being welcomed at Air Headquarters in the national capital. 

He also referred to the IAF's acquisition of the C-17 Globemaster transport aircraft that is capable of lifting tanks to the border with China and Pakistan. "The IAF operates the second largest C-17 fleet in the world and continues to mature their fleet operation to support regional mobility needs," the US Air Force Chief said.

For the Tejas that is being inducted in the Air Force, it is also seen as the biggest endorsement of the fighter that has been in the making for more than three decades.

Severely criticised for delays in its development, the Tejas fighter has belatedly shown promise as a jet far more capable than the MiG-27 and the MiG-21, legacy fighters which the Indian Air Force is in the process of retiring.

In December last year, the government paved the way for the manufacture of 83 indigenous Tejas Mk-1A Light Combat aircraft by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited. The deal is likely to be worth close to 60,000 crores and would be among the largest ever deals the government has sanctioned for the domestic arms sector, a huge boost for the government's 'Make in India' defence manufacturing program.

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