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The Real Reason India Wants 114 More Rafales Has Its Neighbour Worried Defence Uncut Podcast

Recent reports indicating that the Indian Air Force (IAF) is urging the Government of India to initiate talks for an additional 114 Dassault Rafale fighters signal a potential paradigm shift in the country’s defence procurement strategy. This move, if it materializes, would represent a decisive step towards fleet consolidation, leveraging existing investments to create a more efficient and formidable air arm. 

In the latest episode of the Defence Uncut podcast, the Quwa team analyzed why this development is less about a simple platform-vs-platform matchup and more about a systemic challenge that could force the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) to fundamentally rethink its approach to air warfare.

This potential procurement is widely interpreted as the IAF’s preference to steer its Multi-Role Fighter Aircraft (MRFA) requirement towards a sole-source acquisition of the Rafale, bypassing a lengthy competitive process and avoiding “distractions” like potential bids for the F-35 or Su-57. 

The logic is technically and fiscally sound: India has already made significant investments in establishing the operational and maintenance overhead for the Rafale, and expanding the fleet would be the most cost-efficient way to bolster its squadron strength.

A Shift Towards Consolidation

The IAF’s push for more Rafales marks a departure from its historical procurement patterns, which often resulted in a logistically challenging mix of aircraft from diverse suppliers. 

As the podcast panel noted, government priorities aimed at maintaining diplomatic ties with multiple global powers – e.g., Russia, Europe, and the United States – often constrained military decision-making, leading to a fleet that was difficult to integrate into a single, cohesive network-centric architecture.

This new approach suggests the IAF is embracing the model used by many Western air forces: standardizing on a few core platforms to maximize efficiency, training, and interoperability. 

The vision appears to be a “high-low mix” centered on the 4.5+ generation Rafale as the high-end asset and the indigenous Tejas Light Combat Aircraft as the workhorse, supplemented by the upgraded Su-30MKI fleet in heavy strike and specialized roles. 

This consolidation would allow experienced Rafale aircrews to form the nucleus of new squadrons, standardize training protocols, and create a more focused and potent fighting force.

Listen to the full episode on YouTube or your favorite podcast platform.

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The Industrial Underpinning: India’s Overlooked Advantage

A crucial point often overlooked in regional military analysis is the strength and scale of India’s domestic defence industry. As the podcast highlighted, India’s ability to induct platforms in large numbers is not merely a function of its larger budget, but its capacity to leverage local manufacturing to maximize the value of its expenditure.

A stark comparison was drawn between India’s Su-30MKI program and Pakistan’s JF-17 project. India manufactures approximately 80% of the Su-30MKI’s airframe and 54% of its complex AL-31FP engine indigenously. This is a level of industrial depth Pakistan has not achieved with the JF-17, where over half the airframe is produced locally but often from imported raw materials. 

This indigenous capability allows India to build platforms at scale, control the integration of avionics and weapons, and reduce long-term sustainment costs. Should the deal for 114 Rafales proceed under a “Made in India” framework, it is estimated that 50-60% of the aircraft could be built locally, further deepening this industrial advantage.

This industrial reality is what underpins India’s ability to plan for fleets of hundreds of aircraft, while Pakistan’s fiscal and industrial constraints limit it to smaller, often piecemeal acquisitions that create logistical overheads without achieving sufficient combat mass.

Implications for the PAF: A Systemic, Not a Platform, Challenge

For the Pakistan Air Force, the IAF’s potential Rafale consolidation is a “worrying sign”. 

The threat is not simply the addition of 114 advanced fighters, but the emergence of a more efficiently managed, well-trained, and deeply networked adversary that can finally bring its numerical superiority to bear effectively. For years, the PAF has relied on superior training and network-centric integration as force multipliers to counter the IAF’s quantitative edge.

A consolidated IAF threatens to erode that qualitative advantage.

The discussion emphasized that responding with a tit-for-tat platform acquisition is a flawed approach. Pakistan’s pursuit of the J-35 stealth fighter, for example, should be understood not as a direct answer to the Rafale, but as an effort to fill a long-standing and historically denied capability gap for a credible deep-strike platform.

An IAF equipped with nearly 200 Rafales and hundreds of Tejas fighters, backed by a modernized Su-30MKI fleet, would force the PAF to “rethink Air Warfare at a very fundamental level”. 

Unable to compete on a fighter-for-fighter basis, Pakistan’s approach must shift. The imperative would be to invest heavily in its own defensive net, i.e., bolstering numbers of JF-17s equipped with modern AESA radars and long-range missiles, and inducting a scalable, new-generation Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM) system to raise the cost of enemy intrusion. 

Offensively, the focus would need to lean further into asymmetric capabilities, including unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs), loitering munitions, and ground-based long-range rocket artillery to penetrate and degrade India’s enhanced defensive and offensive systems.

Listen to the Full Discussion

If you have any questions, comments, or news topic suggestions you would like to hear us discuss, then send us an email at podcast@quwa.org.