On the eve of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s US visit, the 
Pentagon has offered to jointly develop or manufacture 34 
state-of-the-art weapon systems and technologies with India including 
the Javelin anti-tank missile and the Scorpion mutation bomb.
The deal for the Javelin, an infra-red guided missile with a 
range of nearly 5km that has been used in Afghanistan and Iraq, will 
include full transfer of technology. It features software that allows 
the missile to seek, track and destroy tanks. Earlier, India had been 
considering the purchase of Javelins worth $4billion.
According to the South Block officials, Bharat Dynamics Limited will 
be involved in the co-production of the Javelin and will also co-develop
 the next generation of the missile. The offer to build and develop the 
missile jointly was first made by President Barack Obama to Modi in a 
letter in July.
The Americans have also offered co-production of 
Textron-manufactured micro-observers or unattended ground sensors for 
deployment on the border, and co-development of the Scorpion, a bomb 
that has in-built sensors that allow command centres to accurately 
target enemy convoys.
Another weapon that has been offered for co-production is the 120mm canon gun made by ATK.
It is also understood that after a long delay, India is all set to 
acquire 24 Apache Longbow attack helicopters and 16 Chinook heavy lift 
helicopters under the foreign military sales route that involves 
government-to-government sale.
Indian and US diplomatic sources said that the Pentagon offers came 
during the September 22-25 meeting in Washington between a four-member 
Indian team led by defence production 
secretary G Mohan Kumar and US 
under secretary for acquisition and technologies Frank Kendall.
Modi will renew the 10-year-old bilateral defence framework for five 
more years during his visit and defence minister Arun Jaitley is 
expected to meet his US counterpart Chuck Hagel on October 8 after the 
IMF-World Bank meetings on the previous two days. The meeting between 
Jaitley and Hagel is expected to be attended by Gen Martin Dempsey, 
Chairman, joint chiefs of staff committee and commerce secretary Penny 
Priztker.


 
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