[The affidavit, the petitioners' copy, is available here: <
https://barandbench.com/rafale-centre-dassault-offset-partner-supreme-court/rafale-deal-repy-by-centre/?fbclid=IwAR2up7JOzD6T2SPDreQuNPLUO66Cf4g5nmqOLBArQJXtN8mlZMsNalptZw0
>.

Some highlights:

Para 23:
DAC approval for acquisition of 36 fly-away aircrafts was obtained on May
13 2015.
That is subsequent to April 10 2015, the day the Indian Prime Minister
announced the decision to purchase in Paris.
So, on what authority was the decision made???
It's also not indicated when the process for obtaining the mandatory
approval was initiated.
A big gap.
That suggests, only suggests, subsequent to April 10 2015.

Para 26:
The proposal for procurement of 36 aircrafts would be presented to the DAC
on Aug. 28 - Sept. 1 2015 and, again, on Jan. 11 2016 and July 14 2016.
The INT report was signed and finalised on July 21 2016.
Para 27:
INT report was submitted on Aug. 4 2016.
The proposal was placed before the CCS on Aug. 24 2016.
The CCS was approval was accorded, the same day.
The IGA was signed on Sept. 23 2016, by the two Defence Ministers.

Para 13:
In (stark) contrast, in principle approval for procurement of 126 fighter
jets was given by the Defence Minister in June 2001. (On what basis not
indicated.)
SQRs - in essence user requirements, were prepared on June 8 2006.
The DAC granted Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) on June 29 2007 - it took
more than a year, for procurement of 126 Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft
(MMRCA), including 18 direct flyaway aircrafts, equivalent to one squadron.
108 to be manufactured by the HAL, under license of manufacture, over 11
years.
Bids for 126 aircraft were issued on Aug. 28 2007.

***So, as it appears, that all the necessary procedures for for purchasing
36 flyyaway aircrafts, instead of 126 including 18 flyaway, were initiated
and only after the decision made by the Prime Minister having been
announced in Paris on April 10 2015.
It was a fait accompli.
The whole process of due diligence was reduced to a farce, a mere
formality.***

For the time taken to complete the "process", a clue is provided here: 'As
Supreme Court vets Rafale decisions, focus likely on bureaucratic shuffle
too' at  <
https://m.economictimes.com/news/defence/as-supreme-court-vets-rafale-decisions-focus-likely-on-bureaucratic-shuffle-too/amp_articleshow/66532042.cms?fbclid=IwAR0AkAy_SXKmrcuCYT3I9hR9v58_1hdRuGSk_3nJGBEFQ4mTOoyZBKXLML
>.
Some bureaucratic resistance.

《As first reported by ET, three members of the Indian Negotiating Team
recorded concerns over pricing, cost of India-specific enhancements as well
as the non-consideration of a discounted offer by the only other competitor.
All the concerns raised were ultimately escalated to the Cabinet Committee
on Security where the final decision was made at the highest level. The
Rafale deal was signed on September 23, 2016.
In 2017, Nagaraj – who was until then a Secretary equivalent was elevated
to Special Secretary rank. Verma, who had recorded dissent on the Rafale
deal was moved to the Delhi Development Authority.
Few months later, in December 2017, the government appointed Nagaraj as
member of the UPSC.》
(Ref.: 'As Supreme Court vets Rafale decisions, focus likely on
bureaucratic shuffle too'
<
https://m.economictimes.com/news/defence/as-supreme-court-vets-rafale-decisions-focus-likely-on-bureaucratic-shuffle-too/amp_articleshow/66532042.cms?fbclid=IwAR0AkAy_SXKmrcuCYT3I9hR9v58_1hdRuGSk_3nJGBEFQ4mTOoyZBKXLML
>.)

***To reiterate, there's no indication, whatever, how the decision that
Modi would announce on April 10 2015, in Paris, had been arrived at.
Only how that decision would (supposedly) be "regularised" post facto.
That's the very essence.***

<<The Modi government is yet to disclose when the Indian Air Force (IAF)
sent the request to revise the numbers of then 95% completed negotiation
with Dassault Aviation for 126 Rafales and reduced it to 36? When did the
administrative branch of Ministry of Defence (MoD) decide that the number
should be only 36, not 126?

In Para 14 of the government’s reply, the timeline of the process followed
by the previous Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government for the
procurement of 126 MMRCA has been given. The details are mentioned right
from submission of proposals from the six vendors on April 28, 2008, to the
commencement of contract negotiations with Dassault in February 2012 .
However, the reply has not mentioned a single word on how Modi concluded
that the number of aircraft needed by IAF was only 36. And it is silent on
who advised the PM on this, what was the process followed to ascertain the
number of aircraft needed by IAF, and which are the committees that
approved such a decision.>>

(Excerpted from sl.no. I. below.)]

I/II.
https://www.newsclick.in/rafale-deal-govts-reply-sc-reads-more-cover-pm-modis-culpability?fbclid=IwAR0TSjKQ6PFOQKQ5Ddv_mBPPDylzsG2CV_HlOWB8i0XiKN1GYXC6GQTVqlY

Rafale Deal: Govt’s Reply to SC Reads More Like a Cover-up for PM Modi’s
Culpability
The 16-page reply is silent on many questions but what raises more doubts
is that it is undated and unsigned, with the Centre not disclosing who the
submitting authority is.
Ravi Nair  13 Nov 2018

Rafale
The Narendra Modi government’s 16-page reply on Monday to the Supreme Court
on a petition seeking details of the process followed to buy 36 Rafale
aircraft from France, raises more questions than it answers. It certainly
sheds no light on why the country is paying a massive amount from the
national exchequer for this deal.

The Modi government’s reply to the petitioners -- former Union Ministers
Arun Shourie and Yashwant Sinha and senior lawyer Prashant Bhushan --
seems more an attempt to cover up the role of the Prime Minister and due to
his intervention, the violations to the procedures done by other Ministries
as well.

What raises more doubts is the fact that the reply is undated and unsigned,
and the Centre has not disclosed who the authority submitting the reply to
the court is.

The controversial government-to-government procurement announcement made by
PM Modi in Paris on April 10, 2015 had raised a number of questions. The
details of the process followed by the government in its reply, do not
answer any of those questions.

In its reply to the Supreme Court, the government has clarified that it
followed the Inter Government Agreement (IGA) route mentioned in Defence
Procurement Procedure, 2013 (DPP 2013) for purchase of 36 Rafale aircraft.

The acquisition process involves 11 process functions: services qualitative
requirements (SQRs); acceptance of necessity (AoN);  solicitation of
offers; evaluation of technical offers by the Technical Evaluation
Committee (TEC); field evaluation; staff evaluation; oversight by the
Technical Oversight Committee (TOC) for acquisitions above Rs 300 crore;
commercial negotiations by the Contract Negotiation Committee (CNC);
.approval of the Competent Financial Authority (CFA); award of contract
/supply order (SO); and contract administration and post-contract
management.

Incidentally, para 8 of the reply on page 3 notes the decision-making
process mentioned in para 71 of DPP 2013. Curiously, it has omitted the
pre-conditions under which an IGA route is to be adopted.

When Was The SQR Re-Submitted?

In its reply, the government has said that it followed the complete
procedures mentioned above because these were all done earlier in the
selection process of the MMRCA (Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft) deal for
126 aircraft.

However, once the SQR is raised, any amendment has to be done prior to
submitting it for AoN and in extreme cases (unforeseen situations), the
case should be re-submitted for revalidation.

Para 17 of DPP 2013 “Waiver of SQR Parameters” elaborates this: “SQR would
invariably be finalized prior to seeking AoN for the scheme. A copy of SQRs
duly approved by the respective SHQ authorities would be submitted along
with the ‘Statement of Case’ for seeking AoN. No amendment of SQR is
permissible thereafter. In an unforeseen situation, where an amendment to
SQR becomes necessary after accord of AoN, the case should be resubmitted
for revalidation of AoN earlier accorded.”

This raises another interesting question. When did the Modi government
re-submit the SQR for revalidation? Or, was that even done at all? The
government did not mention anything about it in the submitted papers to the
court.

As per norms, the Service Head Quarters (SHQ) should prepare a statement of
case in a certain format to seek the AoN. The DPP elaborates the chain of
approvals needed:

“The Statement of Case would be signed with date by the Head of the
respective User/Plans Directorate/equivalent of the Services. Four copies
of the Statement of Case would be prepared, justifying the procurement
proposal. One copy each would be forwarded to DDP, DRDO, MoD (Fin) and
Administrative Branch of MoD. The statement of case would include the total
quantities required, the break up based on five years plans and the
quantity that is required to be procured in next two years. The quantity
vetting would be recommended by the Administrative Branch in consultation
with MoD (Fin). The quantities duly vetted along with other comments on the
proposal, would be sent back to the SHQ by DOD and MoD (Fin). DRDO and DDP
will also forward their comments to Service HQ, who would then compile all
the comments and give their final views. The statement of case, along with
all the comments, would then be forwarded to HQ IDS which would examine
aspects of interoperability and commonality of equipment for the three
Services. The statement of case would then be placed for consideration of
the categorisation committee” (Emphasis added).

When Did IAF Send Request For Fewer Numbers of Rafales?

The Modi government is yet to disclose when the Indian Air Force (IAF) sent
the request to revise the numbers of then 95% completed negotiation with
Dassault Aviation for 126 Rafales and reduced it to 36? When did the
administrative branch of Ministry of Defence (MoD) decide that the number
should be only 36, not 126?

In Para 14 of the government’s reply, the timeline of the process followed
by the previous Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government for the
procurement of 126 MMRCA has been given. The details are mentioned right
from submission of proposals from the six vendors on April 28, 2008, to the
commencement of contract negotiations with Dassault in February 2012 .
However, the reply has not mentioned a single word on how Modi concluded
that the number of aircraft needed by IAF was only 36. And it is silent on
who advised the PM on this, what was the process followed to ascertain the
number of aircraft needed by IAF, and which are the committees that
approved such a decision.

Blaming Anthony and HAL

Para 15 of the reply says that then Defence Minister A K Antony asked the
MoD for re-evaluation of the approach and methodology adopted by the CNC to
determine the lowest bidder and to “ascertain that it is reasonable,
appropriate and as per the laid down procedure.”

Para 16 says: “In addition to the above the contract negotiation could not
conclude mainly due to unresolved issues related to 108 aircraft to be
manufactured in India. These issues pertained to lack of common
understanding between HAL and Dassault Aviation on following: 1) Man-Hours
that would be required to produce the aircraft  in India: HAL required 2.7
times higher Man-Hours compared to the French side for the manufacture of
the Rafale aircraft in India. 2) Dassault Aviation as the seller has
required to undertake necessary contractual obligation for 126 aircraft (18
direct fly-away and 108 manufactured in India) as per RFP requirements.
Issues related to contractual obligation and responsibility for 108
aircraft manufactured in India could not be resolved.”

And in Para 17, the government has said that the above mentioned issues
remain unresolved and that is what caused the price escalation.

Para 16's beginning of "In addition to the above" regarding the inability
to conclude negotiations with Dassault Aviation makes it appear that Antony
is also being blamed for not concluding the negotiations during his tenure
and asking for a re-check of the process before final approval.

The Modi government blaming public sector Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL)
for not being able to conclude the agreement is specious because of the
following reasons:

(i) In March 2014,  at the time of UPA government, it was reported that the
problem between HAL and Dassault on the final product manufactured by HAL
had been resolved and both the companies were signing a work share
agreement in which HAL was responsible for 70% of the work and the rest was
to be done by Dassault.

(ii) The then HAL chief went on record saying the same and dared the
current Defence Minister to put out the file that he had submitted along
with the work share agreement signed between HAL and Dassault.

(iii) Eric Trappier, Chairman and CEO of Dassault Aviation, in the second
week of March 2015, confirmed that they had reached a consensus with HAL on
the work share and guarantee-related issues and signed an agreement to that
effect.

Regarding the price escalation claim, on February 19, 2015, on the
sidelines of the Aero India Show in Bengaluru – less than two months prior
to Modi’s announcement from France --  Trappier told reporters that the
price Dassault quoted in the RFP never changed. He reiterated the same
claim in October this year in an interview to an Indian TV channel and a
newspaper. In this interview, Trappier said due to a weak euro against the
dollar, the price of Rafale was now actually lower than in 2012.

Hence, the government’s claims of cost escalation due to the delay in
signing the agreement is an attempt to cover up its own misdeeds. Trappier
also said Dassault was happy to work with HAL with whom it had a long-
standing work relationship.Hence, the Modi government’s claim of Dassault’s
unwillingness to work with HAL as one reason for the failure of the RFP
negotiation, also falls flat.

The RFP Puzzle

In para 18, the government has said that because of the reasons mentioned
in para 16 and 17, the negotiations reached a “stalemate”, which forced it
to start the RFP withdrawal process in March 2015, before eventually
withdrawing it in June the same year.

This is another false claim, as on March 25, 2015, Trappier was almost
certain to close the deal for 126 Rafale with India “very soon”, a claim he
repeated on many occasions in March 2015. If Dassault was almost certain to
close the deal without any problem, what went wrong from the Indian side?
The government needs to explain this in detail.

Para 19 speaks of how India’s “adversaries” went ahead and added more than
400 aircraft, including fifth generation fighter jets. This further
weakened India’s position. But the government still hasn’t explained how
reducing the number of aircraft from 126 to 36 would help the country in
facing this imbalance? Also, why did it cancel India’s joint venture with
Russia in developing the fifth generation fighter jet programme after
spending millions of dollars from the exchequer?

On June 3, 2014, Mail Online India – a Daily Mail (UK) publication –
reported quoting MoD sources: “The contract negotiations were spearheaded
by four sub-committees that dealt with off-set, transfer of technology,
technical issues and costs.  Three sub-committees — on off-set, transfer of
technology and technical issues like maintenance — have been wound up,
meaning a major part of the negotiations are over. It will take at least
three months from now for discussions on costs to be completed.” Compare
this with Trappier’s claim of “negotiations 95% completed”, and the Modi
government’s decision to withdraw from the 95% negotiated RFP becomes even
more puzzling.

In para 26, the government has admitted that the decision to procure 36
Rafale, which in normal circumstances would have been taken after the
approval from Defence Acquisition Committee (DAC), was put up in front of
DAC on August 28, 2015 --  four-and-a-half months after Modi’s announcement
of the government-to-government arrangement. And it further admits that the
government started the negotiations with France three months prior to the
submission of the case to DAC. This makes violation of the rule book even
more serious.

In the same para, the Modi government has claimed that in August 2016, the
negotiations were completed with better terms on pricing, maintenance and
delivery compared with the aborted RFP negotiations. But, Business
Standard, which accessed the original RFP submitted by Dassault, pointed
out that Modi’s 36 Rafale deal was actually 40% costlier in comparison,
without any change in the maintenance, weaponry, training, availability of
spare parts and serviceability, performance enhancements and India-specific
changes wanted by IAF. So, when the Modi government says they got a better
deal in terms of pricing, it must asked – better pricing for whom?
Certainly, not for the country!

Who Authorised Modi to Take a Decision?

In para 27, the reply has admitted that the government put up the case for
the Cabinet Committee on Security’s (CCS) approval only on August 24,  2016
– which was 16 months after Modi’s announcement from France. The deal was
put up to the Ministry of Finance for the first time only then.

These claims make it more obvious that the PM took a unilateral call by
announcing a deal in which spending of tens of thousands of crores of
rupees from the exchequer is involved. The government is yet to answer who
authorised Modi to take such a decision?

A report published in The Indian Express, based on a note accessed from the
Law Ministry on March 14, 2016, deepens the mystery behind Modi’s decision.
It pointed out that, unlike the set norms, the Modi government agreed to
pay huge amounts of public money as advance without getting any actual
delivery. And, in violation of the guidelines, it agreed on France
submitting a comfort letter signed by the French PM against the advance
instead of a sovereign guarantee by France. The report quoted a senior Law
Ministry official on this: “...liability of Paris in case of any shortfall
in implementation of the deal, being heavily loaded in favour of the
French. While many senior government functionaries, including those in the
Ministry of Defence, have favoured out-of-box thinking to take the deal
forward, when we examined the draft Inter-Governmental Agreement (IGA) and
the draft Supply Protocols, we were left wondering as to how India could
agree to all the stipulations suggested by the French side. In our opinion,
the two documents were not drafted with the interest of the Government of
India in mind. Many suggestions have been forwarded. But it is for the
Prime Minister’s Office and the Defence Ministry to take a final view.”

Even though it is an Inter Government Agreement (IGA), the report pointed
out, “in case of material breach by French companies of their obligations
under the Supply Protocols, the Indian side would first take recourse to
legal route against the companies without involving the French government.”

Another clause is the seat of arbitration, which is Geneva in the IGA. This
again is in violation of the DPP 2013, Appendix H to schedule 1, para 2.5,
which states: “The Arbitration Tribunal shall have its seat in New Delhi or
such other place in India as may be decided by the arbitrator”. Further,
para 2.6 says “The Arbitration Proceedings shall be conducted in India
under the Indian Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 and the award of
such Arbitration Tribunal shall be enforceable in Indian Courts only.”

Another report updated by The Economic Times as late as July 14 this year,
confirms that the government overlooked serious red-flags from the Law
Ministry. Why did a government, led by a party which evokes nationalism and
love for the Armed Forces on a daily basis, violate such norms? This needs
to be explained.

In para 29, the government has said that it did not violate any protocol on
offset. That falsehood was exposed by Newsclick in a two part series last
month. (Part 1 & Part 2). A more detailed version of the policy violations
done by government can be read here.

While detailing the procedures followed by the government on the Offset
Obligations, para 6 of the reply has said: “However as per the extent
provisions of the DPP, if the vendor is unable to provide the details of
IOP (Indian Offset Partner) at the time of submission of offset proposal
prior to offset contract he is permitted to provide the details of their
IOPs either at the time of seeking offset credits, or one year prior to
discharge of offset obligation.”

Interestingly, this clause was not there in DPP 2013 and was added only on
August 5, 2015 – four months after Modi’s announcement of the deal from
France. Further, it is childish to state that Dassault was not able to
identify its IOP by that time. A Dassault press release said they formed a
JV with Reliance Aerostructure Ltd – an Anil Ambani group company – in
April 2015 itself. And The Caravan magazine published that a RTI reply from
government said that the JV agreement between Dassault and Reliance
Aerostructure Limited was signed on the same day of the signing of the IGA
between India and France!

Hiding Behind the ‘Secrecy Clause’

The government’s argument for non-disclosure of commercial details citing
the secrecy agreement signed between India and France in 2008 sounds
similarly childish. A copy of the agreement accessed by Newsclick clearly
says that secrecy must be kept only on issues which have implications for
national security. Revealing the commercial aspect of a defence deal won’t
affect national security in any way.

In a nutshell, the Modi government’s reply to the petitioners looks more
like an amateurish attempt to cover up the PM’s role in violations of
procedures for defence procurement.

At the end of the day, it is public money and India is still a democracy.
The government is, therefore,  answerable to the people.

II.
AA. Was the Hon'be Court Misled by the IAF Top Brass?

How do the following two match up!!!?
Has the Hon'ble Supreme Court been misled???

l. <<02:30 pm: Deputy Chief of Air staff, Air Marshal V R Chaudhari and two
other officers from Indian Air Force told Supreme Court that Sukhoi 30s was
the latest to be inducted which is a 3.5 generation aircraft and added that
they do not have 4th or 5th generation aircraft. The court then said that
"it means ***there has been no induction of aircrafts since 1985***
[emphasis added]".
"India needed 4 plus generation fighters that is why the Rafale jet was
selected," they added.>>
(Ref.: <
http://www.asianage.com/india/all-india/141118/sc-begins-rafale-hearing-govt-report-reveals-serious-fraud-says-petitioner.html
>.)

ll. A. <<The Sukhoi Su-30MKI[a] (NATO reporting name: Flanker-H) is a
twinjet multirole air superiority fighter developed by Russia's Sukhoi and
built under licence by India's Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) for the
Indian Air Force (IAF). A variant of the Sukhoi Su-30, it is a heavy,
all-weather, long-range fighter.
Development of the variant started after India signed a deal with Russia in
2000 to manufacture 140 Su-30 fighter jets.[3] ***The first Russian-made
Su-30MKI variant was accepted into the Indian Air Force in 2002,[4] while
the first indigenously assembled Su-30MKI entered service with the IAF in
2004.[5] The IAF had 240 Su-30MKIs in service as of October 2017.[6] The
Su-30MKI is expected to form the backbone of the Indian Air Force's fighter
fleet to 2020 and beyond.[7]*** [Emphasis added.]
(Ref.: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhoi_Su-30MKI>.)

II. B. <<***What India is doing right now is to have a very potent and
lethal base of fourth generation fighters. In the future Su-30mki (270),
Hal Tejas(100+) will form this base.*** [Emphasis added.] The Rafale(36)
will replace the Mirage 2000 for some specialized roles. Then we will have
the fifth generation lineup in the form of HAL/SUKHOI FGFA(200) and HAL
AMCA and other aircrafts for ground attack role. This new mix will give IAF
the much required core strength which is missing as of now. We have around
250 Mig-21 as our base in service, which are seriously outdated by modern
standards.>>
(Ref.: <
https://www.quora.com/Why-is-India-buying-fourth-generation-fighter-planes-whilst-fifth-generation-ones-exist
>.)

***So, while the Supreme Court has inferred on the basis of the depositions
of the IAF officers, specially made available for the occasion, that "there
has been no induction of aircrafts (in the IAF fleet) since 1985" (ref. I.
above); other sources indicate that the Su-30MKI is being inducted since
2002 and by October 2017 there were 240 such aircrafts (ref. II. A. above)
and these are 4th generation fighter planes (ref. II. B. above).***

So, how's that???

***The issue, here, is not of factual accuracy or otherwise, per se.
The issue is whether the Court was misled by people, specially summoned for
the occasion, who should know.***

BB.
LOL!

This is the one who, the senior-most law officer handpicked by and
representing the regime, had argued in the SC that the Aadhaar data is safe
as it is stored surrounded by a 13' high and 5' high wall!
A dangerous pack of jokers!

<<If Rafale had been there during the Kargil war, we could have avoided
huge casualties as the fighter jet is capable of hitting targets from 60
km, Mr Venugopal told the bench.

But when ***Chief Justice Gogoi reminded the attorney general that the
Kargil war happened in 1999-2000, while the Rafale process began in 2014***
[emphasis added], Mr Venugopal said he meant "hypothetically".>>

(Ref.: <
https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/rafale-case-centre-opposes-supreme-court-reviewing-deal-says-it-is-for-experts-to-do-it-1947131?fbclid=IwAR2lt0lpi-N8-JboizevA4_3GWUdxAL2rXIF3Ip4K_goZd1yNOJ4fKtAHH0
>.)

CC.
《Meanwhile, Attorney General KK Venugopal demanded that the petitioners
identify the person who told them details of the deal’s pricing
technicalities. “How did he [Bhushan] get it?” Venugopal asked. “It is
supposed to be a secret. He should disclose his source.”

Bhushan said he procured the information from a 2008 book and the
information had been disclosed twice in Parliament. “If it is a matter of
national security, then the government has compromised national security
twice by disclosing it in Parliament,” he added.》

(Ref.: <
https://scroll.in/latest/902089/rafale-deal-pricing-details-need-not-be-discussed-now-says-supreme-court?fbclid=IwAR0ZciLfT43rbtQgTK39XGjGTyEUu7apm0L8Nj7X1Q91m748KPpGe2Oe3dw
>.)

DD.
<<Rafale Jet Deal Case: Centre tells the Supreme Court that there is no
sovereign guarantee from French government on delivery of 36 Rafale jets
but there is a letter of comfort from the French Prime Minister.>>

(Ref.: <
https://twitter.com/ANI/status/1062636748411428865?fbclid=IwAR3yqfEZQfAMduDsstxeYGvIHeN4rU6AKvKiRnaG7CuA3q6YQ-dEgKKzYrI
>.)

Then, what the IGA is all about!!!?
Just a sly trick to sidestep bidding?

EE.
<<Rafale Jet Deal Case: Supreme Court asks Additional Secretary Defence as
to why the offset guidelines were changed in 2015. What about country's
interest? What if the offset partner doesn't do any production?>>

(Ref.: <
https://twitter.com/ANI/status/1062634209196556293?fbclid=IwAR0EFZ4H_OFlLGj83Lvd41zRuXcwwzcgcj30afjdD0cCiHAMCwUtHsBS74M
>.)

Relevant:

<<[5] Was the Defence Procurement Procedure 2013 amended with retrospective
effect on August 5, 2015, in order to absolve the ministry of defence from
pre-vetting the India off-set partner in a transaction of this nature?>>

(Ref.: <
https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/congress-has-5-questions-on-rafale-deal/cid/1675165?fbclid=IwAR3oIVqO0pT3GPEjZvWFInHFPHNasy5oL64_gZY1RLMmZe1ozENgSkboTO8
>.)


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