{"id":56587,"date":"2019-02-13T16:05:36","date_gmt":"2019-02-13T10:35:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnlive.com\/?p=56587"},"modified":"2019-02-14T11:00:44","modified_gmt":"2019-02-14T05:30:44","slug":"rafale-deal-cag-report-along-expected-lines-price-raises-questions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/apnlive.com\/india-news\/rafale-deal-cag-report-along-expected-lines-price-raises-questions\/","title":{"rendered":"Rafale deal: CAG report along expected lines on price, but raises other questions"},"content":{"rendered":"

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]The report of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) on Rafale deal tabled on the last day of the Budget Session in the Parliament today (Wednesday Feb 13), while contradicting Modi government\u2019s claim of the reworked contract price being 9% lower than the previous deal negotiated by the UPA government, said it was 2.8% cheaper.<\/p>\n

The audit does not go into the unanswered question of what was the need for cancelling the old deal envisaging transfer of technology and working out a new deal. If the UPA government had been slow in finalising the deal, as Modi government alleges, it could have speeded up the negotiations and sealed it in a matter of months instead of taking another over year-and-a-half after Prime Minister Narendra Modi<\/a>\u2019s surprise announcement in Paris.<\/p>\n

There is also a question about the claim of faster delivery of the fighter aircraft in the renegotiated deal. A report in The Times of India (TOI) said the CAG report<\/a> says that in the 2007 offer, 18 aircraft were to be delivered by 50th month of signing the contract. The next 18 were to be licensed produced in HAL and to be delivered from 49 to 72 months of the contract signing.<\/p>\n

However, in the 2016 contract, the first 18 aircraft would be delivered between 36 to 53 months after signing of IGA and the remaining 18 to be delivered by 67 months, the CAG says, according to the TOI report.<\/p>\n