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India Approves 114 French Rafale Fighter Jets to Counter China-Pakistan Threats.


India’s Defence Acquisition Council has approved the next step toward a potential 114-aircraft Rafale fighter purchase under its MRFA program, a deal valued at roughly $40 billion. If finalized, the agreement would dramatically expand India’s frontline combat fleet while strengthening defense industrial ties with France and altering the balance of airpower in Asia.

India has taken a decisive procedural step toward what could become its largest-ever Western fighter acquisition, setting the Rafale on course for a 114-jet expansion that would reshape the Indian Air Force’s frontline combat inventory and deepen New Delhi’s industrial bargaining power with Paris. On February 12, 2026, the Defence Acquisition Council, chaired by Defence Minister Rajnath Sing,h granted Acceptance of Necessity for a Multi Role Fighter Aircraft requirement identified as “MRFA {Rafale}”, alongside associated combat missiles and a high-altitude pseudo-satellite program. In its official communication, the Indian Ministry of Defence presented the move as an operational answer to air-dominance requirements across the spectrum of conflict and, just as importantly, signaled an industrial red line by stating that the majority of the MRFA fleet is to be manufactured in India.
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Rafale multirole fighter featuring RBE2 AESA radar, SPECTRA electronic warfare suite, and wide weapons load including Meteor BVR and SCALP deep-strike missiles, combining air-superiority, precision strike, and survivable penetration with Mach 1.8 performance and 14 hardpoints (Picture source: Indian Air Force).

Rafale multirole fighter featuring RBE2 AESA radar, SPECTRA electronic warfare suite, and wide weapons load including Meteor BVR and SCALP deep-strike missiles, combining air-superiority, precision strike, and survivable penetration with Mach 1.8 performance and 14 hardpoints (Picture source: Indian Air Force).


While the ministry’s note does not spell out the aircraft count, multiple converging reports in the last 48 hours link the AoN to the long-running 114-fighter MRFA plan, with an overall modernization package assessed at roughly 3.6 trillion rupees, about $40 billion. The step marks India moving closer to buying 114 Rafales, but AoN is an early gate. It authorizes the acquisition process, not the final signature, and it opens the path to detailed negotiations on pricing, weapons, training, and sustainment. That sequencing matters, because MRFA has historically been derailed not by capability debates but by industrial terms, liability clauses, and the inevitable tug-of-war over where value is created.

The contract story is inseparable from India’s earlier Rafale decisions. New Delhi’s first Rafale pathway was the MMRCA competition, which selected Rafale for negotiations in 2012 before collapsing amid disputes over responsibilities and guarantees for aircraft that would have been built in India. India then pivoted in April 2015 to an emergency buy, culminating in a 2016 government-to-government agreement for 36 aircraft delivered on schedule in 2022, a timeline Dassault itself highlights as a key credibility marker with Indian decision-makers. In parallel, India has already doubled down at sea. On April 28, 2025, India signed a $7.4 billion deal for 26 Rafale variants for the Navy, with deliveries planned by 2030, and with added equipment for the Air Force’s existing fleet.

The Rafale being positioned for MRFA is not just more of the same but a mature, continuously upgraded combat system that is between legacy fourth-generation fleets and the cost and political strings that often come with fifth-generation options. Dassault’s published performance data captures why air forces treat Rafale as a true swing-role platform. It offers 14 store stations, up to 9.5 tonnes of external load, a maximum take-off weight of 24.5 tonnes, plus 9 g maneuver limits, a Mach 1.8 top speed, and a 50,000 ft service ceiling. It is built to carry fuel and weapons without compromising its handling, and to convert quickly from air-to-air to strike and back again, the operational rhythm India prizes for two-front planning.

The Rafale’s tactical value comes from how sensors, electronic warfare, and weapons are fused into a single kill chain that reduces pilot workload while accelerating decision tempo. The RBE2 AESA radar is designed for long-range detection and multi-target tracking, compatible with Meteor-class beyond-visual-range engagement ranges. On survivability, Rafale’s fully integrated SPECTRA electronic warfare suite combines threat warning, geolocation, and countermeasures management rather than relying on separate pods. In practice, that architecture supports India’s two decisive mission sets: penetrating strike with stand-off weapons against defended targets, and air-superiority patrols where the first detection, first shot, and first kill dynamic is unforgiving.

Weapons integration is where Rafale repeatedly beats competitors on real-world deliverability instead of brochure promises. The Rafale F3-R standard introduced Meteor into operational service with the AESA radar pairing that defines its beyond-visual-range edge, and the broader Rafale ecosystem includes SCALP deep-strike cruise missiles and precision-guided AASM-class munitions. For India, the attraction is not only the weapons themselves but the platform’s certification history and the political reliability of access to them under crisis pressure. The Indian Air Force’s squadron shortage has become acute, with strength hovering around 29 squadrons against a sanctioned 42, and delays in domestic Tejas Mk-1A deliveries adding urgency. MRFA is therefore being framed in New Delhi as a capability stabilizer: a high-end aircraft already in Indian service, with a weapons and maintenance ecosystem India has paid to stand up.

That strategic logic also explains why Rafale is still attractive even after the harsh lessons of recent combat. The May 2025 India-Pakistan crisis generated competing claims over air losses and highlighted the evolving threat posed by modern long-range missiles and networked air defenses. Far from discrediting Rafale, the episode sharpened the Indian requirement for better electronic warfare, stronger connectivity, and more robust stand-off strike stocks, all areas where the newer Rafale F4 roadmap is centered on incremental but operationally meaningful upgrades. It is a reminder that MRFA is not simply about buying airframes, but about buying an upgradeable combat system with a credible path to stay relevant in a fast-moving contest with China and Pakistan.

Industrial involvement will decide whether 114 becomes a historic contract or another stalled file. The Ministry of Defence has already put a marker down by stating that most MRFA aircraft will be manufactured in India, and French reporting indicates New Delhi is pressing for large-scale local build, with claims that at least 90 jets could be produced domestically and that India wants greater authority to integrate indigenous systems and weapons on locally built aircraft. The enabling infrastructure is already emerging. Dassault and Tata Advanced Systems have signed agreements to manufacture Rafale fuselage sections in Hyderabad, with production envisaged for 2028, the first time major Rafale structural elements would be made outside France. Paris is also signaling flexibility beyond aerospace, with discussion of broader counter-partnerships that could include French interest in Indian defense programs, a classic play in big-ticket fighter diplomacy.

Rafale’s export footprint helps explain India’s confidence that this aircraft will remain supported and upgraded for decades. Dassault has accumulated firm orders from France plus eight export customers that include Egypt, India, Qatar, Greece, Croatia, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, and Serbia, and deliveries are now flowing to new operators as Southeast Asia and Europe modernize under mounting strategic pressure. What makes Rafale competitive against Western rivals is the package: a mature multirole jet with sovereign-friendly political terms, credible technology transfer options, and a combat-proven upgrade path that can be tailored without the heavy export restrictions that sometimes shadow US-origin solutions. For India, that translates into a hard-nosed conclusion: Rafale is the fastest route to restoring squadron mass while building an indigenous industrial base around a platform that can fight tonight and evolve tomorrow.


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