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India’s strategy for upgrading its combat aircraft fleet heavily prioritizes advanced, twin-engine jets such as the upcoming Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) and, hypothetically, foreign platforms like theRafale, Su-57 and F-35.
While these heavy fighters deliver long-range dominance, exceptional survivability, and deep-strike power, their procurement exposes a critical vulnerability.
Currently, the Indian Air Force (IAF) is grappling with a severe shortage of combat aircraft, fielding roughly 29 to 31 squadrons against a sanctioned minimum of 42.5.
Twin-engine platforms, including the current Rafale fleet, are notoriously expensive to acquire and sustain, often demanding upwards of $30,000 per flight hour.
Relying exclusively on these premium, heavy-duty aircraft could severely bottleneck the IAF's ability to quickly restore its squadron numbers, leaving a potential gap in lower-tier stealth operations where quantity is just as crucial as quality.
To address this operational shortfall, defence strategists are increasingly pointing toward a single-engine, fifth-generation fighter—unofficially dubbed the "Mini-AMCA."
Envisioned as a 20-ton stealth jet sitting squarely between the 4.5-generation Tejas Mk2 and the heavier AMCA, this concept provides an ideal balance of cost-effectiveness, scalability, and modern survivability.
By taking over essential point defence and air superiority duties, a fleet of these lighter stealth fighters would allow the IAF to reserve its expensive twin-engine assets for complex, high-risk missions such as strategic strikes and the suppression of enemy air defences (SEAD).
The feasibility of this lightweight stealth fighter rests entirely on securing a capable powerplant.
At present, the domestically manufactured GE F-414 engine, which generates around 98 kN of thrust, is perfectly suited for the Tejas Mk2 but lacks the raw power needed for a 20-ton fifth-generation fighter to achieve supercruise and extreme agility.
However, a major technological breakthrough is on the horizon. The Indian government is advancing a joint venture between the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and France's Safran to co-develop a new 110–120 kN class high-thrust engine.
Originally intended for the AMCA Mk2, this advanced engine could serve as the perfect catalyst for a single-engine stealth platform, delivering the precise thrust-to-weight ratio required for true fifth-generation performance.
In combat scenarios, a single-engine stealth jet would act as a perfect companion to the AMCA rather than a competitor.
While the twin-engine AMCA is engineered with a massive payload capacity for extended missions, a lighter counterpart would excel in airspace denial, rapid reaction alerts, and high-frequency sorties.
Its internal weapons bay would be capable of housing two to four beyond-visual-range (BVR) missiles—more than enough firepower for standard air defence operations while preserving its stealth profile.
Most importantly, the combination of lower fuel consumption and simpler maintenance routines would drastically reduce lifecycle costs.
This financial flexibility could allow the IAF to procure these jets in vast quantities, potentially acquiring upwards of 150 units without breaking the defence budget.
Beyond domestic requirements, this single-engine platform holds immense potential for the global export market.
Numerous nations desire modern stealth combat capabilities but cannot afford premium Western platforms like the F-35, or they wish to avoid the geopolitical complications tied to Russian or American hardware.
A cost-effective, Indian-made stealth fighter could dominate this unfulfilled niche, performing a role similar to the F-16 during the fourth-generation era.
Exporting such an aircraft would not only boost India's defence manufacturing sector but also forge stronger strategic alliances across Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
Despite the clear benefits, India has yet to officially launch a "Mini-AMCA" program. This hesitation stems from an already saturated domestic aerospace pipeline.
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) and the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) are currently heavily invested in delivering the Tejas Mk1A, developing the Tejas Mk2, creating the Twin Engine Deck Based Fighter (TEDBF) for the Navy, and managing the core AMCA project—which recently received a ₹15,000 crore clearance from the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) in March 2024 to begin prototype development.
Initiating an entirely new, clean-sheet fighter design could overburden engineering teams and risk cascading delays across all vital defence programs.
Additionally, there are concerns about the aircraft overlapping with the medium-weight role currently assigned to the non-stealth Tejas Mk2.
To bypass these logistical hurdles, the most pragmatic strategy is to develop the single-engine stealth jet directly from the existing AMCA framework.
By borrowing the AMCA’s established design architecture, sensor fusion technology, avionics suite, and stealth geometries, Indian engineers could create a scaled-down variant alongside the maturation of the new DRDO-Safran engine.
This derivative approach would drastically slash research and development costs, minimize technical risks, and guarantee parts commonality across the IAF's future fleet.
Ultimately, a derivative "Mini-AMCA" would serve as India's accessible answer to the F-35—a highly adaptable, mass-produced stealth fighter that bridges the critical void between legacy aircraft and top-tier heavy combat jets.