In a major milestone for military aviation in the country, the first squadron of home-grown Light Combat Aircraft Tejas was inducted into the IAF with two fighter planes joining the force here.
State-run HAL handed over the first two Tejas aircraft to the IAF, which makes up the first squadron named ‘Flying Daggers’, at a ceremony preceded by inter-faith prayers at the Aircraft System Testing Establishment.
A Tejas aircraft flown by Commanding Officer Group Captain Madhav Rangachari performed a sortie during the induction ceremony, attended by Air Marshal Jasbir Walia, Air Officer Commanding-in Chief, Southern Air Command and senior HAL executives.
The commissioning of the India-made fighter planes comes more than three decades after LCA went into development.
The aircraft was named ‘Tejas’ (meaning radiance in Sanskrit) by Atal Bihari Vajpayee as Prime Minister.
The squadron will be based in Bengaluru for the first two years before it is moved to Sulur in Tamil Nadu.
Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha, who on May 17 took his maiden flight in the Tejas, had given the thumbs up to the “desi” aircraft, terming it “good” for induction.
IAF, which plans to induct six aircraft this financial year and about eight in the next, has said Tejas will feature in its combat plans next year and would be deployed in forward bases also.
LCA will eventually replace the ageing fleet of MiG-21 planes.
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar had earlier this month said here “next year I think two MiG-21 squadrons are being decommissioned. This will go into initially replacing them.”
“LCAs are better than MiGs, which are old and parts are difficult to get,” he had said.
All squadrons of Tejas will be made up of 20 planes, including four in reserve.
According to the plan, 20 would be inducted under the ‘Initial Operational Clearance’ and another 20 later with Beyond Visual Range Missile (BVR) and certain other features.
IAF plans to induct over 80 aircraft with better specifications known as Tejas 1A.
The upgraded version of Tejas, with Active Electrically Scanned Array Radar, Unified Electronic Warfare Suite, mid-air refuelling capacity and advanced BVRs, will cost between Rs 275 crore and Rs 300 crore.
The idea for an indigenous fighter aircraft was conceptualised in the 1970s, but actual work on the aircraft project started only in the 1980s.
The first flight took place in January 2001 after the project ran into rough weather several times and came in for criticism over delays.