Opinion Why IAF Urgently Needs A 200-Strong Tejas Mk2 Fleet to Refill Dwindling Squadron Strength and Replacing Vintage Jaguar, Mirage, and MiGs

Why IAF Urgently Needs A 200-Strong Tejas Mk2 Fleet to Refill Dwindling Squadron Strength and Replacing Vintage Jaguar, Mirage, and MiGs


The Indian Air Force (IAF) is navigating a critical period of modernisation, facing the urgent task of replacing its ageing fleets of Jaguar, Mirage-2000, and MiG-29 fighter jets.

To maintain its combat edge, a growing consensus suggests that the current commitment to procure 120 indigenous Tejas Mk2 aircraft may be insufficient, with compelling strategic arguments favouring an expanded order of at least 200 units.

A primary concern for the IAF is its declining number of fighter squadrons. The force currently operates with approximately 31 squadrons, well below the 42 squadrons sanctioned by the government to effectively manage a potential two-front conflict.

The impending retirement of the Jaguar deep-penetration strike aircraft, along with the versatile Mirage-2000 and upgraded MiG-29 multi-role fighters, threatens to widen this gap significantly.

These aircraft have formed the core of India’s air power for decades, and their phase-out will leave a substantial void in the crucial medium-weight category.

The Tejas Mk2 has been developed specifically to fill this role. It is a major advancement over its predecessor, the Tejas Mk1A, designed as a more capable medium-weight fighter.

The Mk2 will be powered by the more powerful General Electric F414 engine, allowing it to carry a larger payload of weapons and fuel, significantly extending its range and combat capability.

Equipped with advanced systems like an indigenous Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar and an Infrared Search and Track (IRST) system, the aircraft is engineered to replace the capabilities of the retiring fleets.

This indigenous development is also central to India's Aatmanirbhar Bharat policy in national defence.

While the IAF is also pursuing the acquisition of 114 foreign jets under the Multi-Role Fighter Aircraft (MRFA) program, this process is subject to potential delays, cost escalations, and complex negotiations.

High-performance aircraft like the French Rafale, a strong contender in the MRFA, are expensive strategic assets. They are unlikely to be used as the everyday workhorses required for maintaining a high operational tempo.

The Tejas Mk2, being an indigenous and more cost-effective platform, is perfectly suited for this workhorse role, performing a wide range of missions in large numbers.

Official timelines indicate that the Tejas Mk2 could begin replacing Mirage-2000 and MiG-29 squadrons from the mid-2030s. However, the existing order of 120 aircraft will not be enough to replace the outgoing jets on a one-to-one basis.

Defence analysts and reports indicate that the IAF is considering increasing its order to 200 or even 250 aircraft to ensure its mid-tier combat fleet remains robust.

Ramping up production, possibly by involving private sector companies alongside the state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), will be critical to meeting these numbers in a timely manner.

Expanding the Tejas Mk2 fleet to 200 units would provide a range of strategic benefits. It would create greater fleet standardisation, simplifying training, maintenance, and logistics, which in turn reduces operational costs.

Most importantly, it would ensure India possesses a formidable and self-reliant air force, capable of safeguarding its skies without being overly dependent on foreign suppliers.

A strong, domestically produced Tejas Mk2 fleet would serve as the backbone of the IAF for decades to come, providing a stable foundation as more advanced, next-generation aircraft are inducted.
 
Perfect analysis. Perhaps if you include need for replacement of Hawk trainers too the induction of 250 plus Tejas Mk-2 is justified.
 
Tejas and all its successors Tejas Mk1A, Tejas Mk1As, Tejas Mk2, AMCA we have such increadible platforms that one day will come we wont have to look anywhere in the world. These are indeed best platforms we have developed with so much of hard efforts and dedication by our Indian scientists, engineers and all involved. Only and only hurdle for quick incorporation of these jets is the jet engine. Somehow if we will be able to crack the jet engine Kaveri that will be a real boost for these platforms. For Tejas the vulnerability is its engine that is coming from GE US, the delivery of these engins supply on continuous basis is very important and since from 2008 we have entered with GE some how we should be able to crack the deal for GE414 home production with agreed 80% ToT. Lets hope that meanwhile our Kaveri achieves 90+kN thrust to serve these both platforms and further.​
 
Absolutely, we need at-least 300-400 Tejas MK2.
Well, 400 would not be practical, but 250 to 300 should be the priority, and adding 200 Mk 1A, we will likely achieve 500+ indigenous aircrafts, totaling 28 squadrons of indigenous aircrafts.
 
First, try and deliver at least a dozen Mk1a per month before dreaming of hundreds of Mk2.

Enemy jets don't care if GE delayed deliveries of the jet engines. Why even write this nonsense about things 10 years in the future when they can't even meet deadlines that are one year in the future?
 
Expanding of Tejas MK2 with an indigenous engine would be ideal, unlike depending on the unreliable US GE-414, which was not even considered for the final round of selection for co-developing the AMCA engine. That tells the story. Though there are talks about signing the deal for local production under license with 80% ToT, GE has already hiked the cost by up to 50%. Secondly, for 20% of the critical hot core section, it again has to depend on the US. That means by the time it has no alternative for the GE-414 engine, inducting a large fleet of Tejas MK2 would again be exposed to US unreliable dependency. Not only a price hike, but again a delay in supplying 20% critical components, plus sanctions. A lifetime fighter jet requires 3.5 engines.
 
First, try and deliver at least a dozen Mk1a per month before dreaming of hundreds of Mk2.

Enemy jets don't care if GE delayed deliveries of the jet engines. Why even write this nonsense about things 10 years in the future when they can't even meet deadlines that are one year in the future?
Per month is impossible lol. They’re trying 24 each year and then GE’s engine supply issues strikes.
 
First, try and deliver at least a dozen Mk1a per month before dreaming of hundreds of Mk2.

Enemy jets don't care if GE delayed deliveries of the jet engines. Why even write this nonsense about things 10 years in the future when they can't even meet deadlines that are one year in the future?
Even China doesn't deliver a dozen total aircrafts per month 🤣🤣🤣🤣But HAL can't deliver even half a dozen in 2 years - that's the real issue.
 
Waiting for the first jet to come out which HAL is delaying again. Hope private players will also be involved so that a good eco-system can be made within the country.
Also finalise the deal for GE-414 soon so that it won't get delayed later on.
 
Even China doesn't deliver a dozen total aircrafts per month 🤣🤣🤣🤣But HAL can't deliver even half a dozen in 2 years - that's the real issue.
A mistake on my part. The US does manage to deliver over a dozen F-35s per month but they are an exception.

A dozen per year would be the bare minimum, but they can't even manage that. The entire purpose of indigenization is meant to be the elimination of bottlenecks, but all that's happened is we are understrength and still dependent on outside components for the Tejas

How is this any better than just buying foreign jets? We could have had 120 new jets by now, but instead they are still trying to justify lack of deliveries with arey Bhai sab kuch vassul hoega
 
Per month is impossible lol. They’re trying 24 each year and then GE’s engine supply issues strikes.
Why was the GE engine supply issue not foreseen? Why is this even an issue with an "indigenous jet"?

And the engine isn't the only issue, they have admitted this before too. Otherwise they would have many aircraft in an an almost complete state ready to just integrate the engine. But they won
 
I think India should open private assembly lines for the Tejas Mk2 so that overall production can reach 36 to 40 aircraft per year, allowing us to begin exports as well, since many countries are likely to show interest in the Tejas Mk2.

I believe that in the early 2030s, we can easily export the Mk2, but if we wait until the late 2030s, a 4.5-generation Tejas Mk2 may no longer be the first choice — even for countries like Armenia.

We should place an initial order of around 120 Mk2s and simultaneously work on integrating the 120 kN engine being developed for the AMCA into either the Mk2A or Mk3, in order to enhance performance and increase indigenous content.

Additionally, India should aim to integrate new technologies — such as photonic radars and AI-enabled avionics systems being developed for the AMCA — into the Mk2 (in mk2A or mk3)platform wherever feasible, to ensure it remains relevant, future-ready, and globally competitive.

Even after the AMCA becomes operational, India will continue to need a lower-cost, high-performance fighter platform like the Mk2 for numbers, exports, and varied mission roles. A Tejas Mk2 equipped with cutting-edge systems but offered at a more affordable price point will complement the AMCA and strengthen India's strategic depth in both domestic and international defense aviation Market.
 
IAF must procure at least 10 squadrons (180-200 jets) of Tejas MK2 in a single order from HAL to give them a 10-year production order, and the GE 414 order book must be expanded to 400-500 engines.

This business of smaller, split orders must stop.
 
India will definitely need to build and manufacture more Tejas MK2 jets because we have a massive gap and shortfall in the numbers of jets we actually need to have.
 
If IAF really wants MK2, then better replace GE414 engine with 177S Russian engines.otherwise MK2 with GE 414 will become available after 2035
 
A mistake on my part. The US does manage to deliver over a dozen F-35s per month but they are an exception.

A dozen per year would be the bare minimum, but they can't even manage that. The entire purpose of indigenization is meant to be the elimination of bottlenecks, but all that's happened is we are understrength and still dependent on outside components for the Tejas

How is this any better than just buying foreign jets? We could have had 120 new jets by now, but instead they are still trying to justify lack of deliveries with arey Bhai sab kuch vassul hoega
Forget a dozen a year. IAF got it's last FOC Tejas in August 2023. In the last 2 years, HAL has only confirmed delivery of 5 trainers, and there is a rumor that the remaining 3 have been delivered from the original order. So in total that becomes just 4 jets annually.

And agreed.
 
India need 378+ Tejas-II ( 126+ Tejas-Af-II, 126+ MWF,internal weapon bay variant and 126+ Twin engine ORCA ) !
 

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