Let me give you a scenario:
India joins the FCAS. gives dassault the full freedom of design as long as it meets certain expectations. Dassault is then expected to share the blue prints and allow India to manufacture the jet on home soil. If we do go for the FCAS its going to be a minimum 150+ order if not 250+ since by the time the FCAS is available india would have the economy to support massive orders. How much would india need to contribute in terms of $$$ and how long would it take for dassault to deliver the first operationally capable jet. For good measure lets assume 2028-2029 start of partnership.
A possible Franco-Indian FCAS partnership – a realistic perspective
Your scenario is not unrealistic, provided one essential condition is met from the outset:
Dassault must retain full system design authority, with India being a true strategic partner rather than a co-manager of specifications.
If this principle is accepted, a Franco-Indian FCAS becomes technically and politically viable.
1. Nature of the program
What you describe would not be a continuation of the current European SCAF/FCAS framework.
It would be
a new bilateral program, centred on:
- Dassault Aviation as prime contractor and system architect
- India as a full financial, industrial and operational partner
- Large production volumes ensuring long-term viability
This distinction is critical.
2. Development cost and Indian contribution
For a piloted sixth-generation fighter (excluding heavy loyal wingmen in the first phase), a realistic development cost would be in the range of
€20–25 billion.
Given the scale of Indian requirements (150–250 aircraft), an
Indian contribution of €10–15 billion, spread over 10–12 years, would be both reasonable and sustainable.
This would place India not as a customer, but as a co-owner of the program.
Such figures are modest compared to the long-term costs of fragmented procurement or dependence on foreign systems with limited sovereignty.
3. Timeline
Assuming a partnership initiated in
2028–2029, a realistic schedule would be:
- 2030: architecture definition and design freeze
- 2032–2033: first prototype flight
- 2035–2036: initial operational capability
- Post-2036: full-rate production and upgrades
This timeline is ambitious but credible, particularly given Dassault’s track record with Rafale.
4. Industrial participation and technology sharing
If India grants Dassault design freedom, France would be in a position to offer
much deeper industrial access than any US-led program:
- Local manufacturing and final assembly in India
- Full depot-level maintenance
- Modular avionics and open mission architecture
- Significant access to software and system interfaces
Certain highly sensitive technologies would remain protected, but the level of sovereignty would be
far superior to F-35-type arrangements.
5. Engine and propulsion
A 120 kN-class engine is indeed the correct target.
A Safran-led propulsion program, building on M88/T-REX experience, could integrate Indian industrial participation and align naturally with AMCA engine development efforts.
This would not replace AMCA; it would
accelerate India’s propulsion maturity.
6. Strategic logic
For India, this path offers:
- Strategic autonomy
- Industrial depth
- Long-term fleet coherence
- Freedom of operational doctrine
For France and Dassault, it provides:
- Stable funding
- Large production volumes
- Preservation of design sovereignty
- A trusted strategic partner
In short, this would be a partnership of equals in
intent, even if not identical in responsibilities.
7. Final thought
Such a program would require political courage on both sides.
But in a world where alliances are increasingly transactional,
a Franco-Indian FCAS would be one of the few truly sovereign airpower projects possible.
If both sides are willing to think long-term rather than program-by-program, the scenario you describe is not only possible — it may be one of the most rational options available.