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India’s AMCA, Japan’s FX Next-Gen Fighter Jets Are Coming Up To Challenge The Mighty Dragon

Last month, the Indian PM Narendra Modi and Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida met on the sidelines of the Quad summit and pledged to strengthen bilateral security and military cooperation, with a special focus on defense manufacturing.

Just two days after the bilateral meeting, it was revealed that Japan has planned to allow the export of fighter jets, missiles, and other weapons to 12 countries, including India to bolster regional deterrence against an aggressive and expansionist China.

This turnaround has given rise to speculations that Japan might invite India to the development of its sixth-generation fighter jet program, the ‘F-X’ which is set to replace the outgoing F-2 fighters of the Japanese Air Self Defense Force (JASDF).

With Chinese aggression against Taiwan on the rise, and Japan on potential Chinese radar, a next-generation fighter program has assumed significance.

Japan has been seeking out international collaborators for its ambitious next-generation fighter jet. Last month, Japan’s Sankei News reported that Tokyo was in talks with British aviation Defense Major BAE Systems to collaborate on F-X fighter development.




FX-Japan
File Image: FX-Japan

However, any Japanese plans for India to join the sixth-generation fighter jet program might not particularly be easy to get through, given that India is focusing on its Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) program and streamlining its resources for its development.

Earlier, Britain had said that it would collaborate with India on new fighter aircraft technology and provide an open general export license to India. The move, potentially aimed at weaning India off reliance on Russian technology, was interpreted as an invitation for India to join the Tempest program, as previously reported by EurAsian Times.




File Image: Tempest BAE Systems

Meanwhile, India is committed to its indigenous fifth-generation fighter jet ‘AMCA’, a symbol of its flagship Atmanirbhar Bharat scheme. In March this year, India’s Defense Research and Development Organisation  (DRDO) announced the figurative “metal cutting” for the prototype of the AMCA.

Given that backdrop, it would be worth examining if a potential collaboration on the next-generation fighter jet between Japan and India could become a tangible possibility, in the face of a regional power imbalance that squarely favors China. Currently, China is the only country in Asia to have an indigenous fifth-gen fighter.

Will Indo-Japanese Partnership Extend To F-X?

The next-generation F-3 or F-X is Japan’s first domestically developed stealth fighter jet and will replace the Mitsubishi F-2. It will be a twin-engine fighter capable of mounting six internal weapons. As previously reported by The EurAsian Times, the fighter jet will complement the lighter F-35 jets.

Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) is responsible for building the next-generation fighter jet F-X. The prototype is set to be ready by 2024, with the first flight scheduled for 2028.

It is expected to become operational by 2035. Meanwhile, a very similar time frame has been planned for India’s ambitious Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) fighter.

Japan plans to develop a next-generation air superiority fighter to replace its 97 F16-derived F2 fighters, as well as some of its aging F-15s, by 2030.

On the other, the Indian  AMCA is envisioned as a twin-engine stealth aircraft with an internal weapons bay and diverter-less supersonic intake, which has been produced for the first time and for which the design is now complete.

It will be a 25-tonne aircraft with an internal payload of 1,500 kg and an exterior payload of 5,500 kg in addition to 6,500 kg of internal fuel.

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