Indonesia is in talks
to buy "nine or 10" Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets from Russia, an Indonesian defense ministry official said on Tuesday,
without giving a timeline for any deal.
Indonesian defense minister Ryamizard Ryacudu said in May the Southeast Asian
country would buy eight Russian Sukhoi Su-35 jets this year, but the planned
purchase has not materialized.
Rival Western companies are still trying
to wrest the deal to supply Indonesia with fighter
jets away from Russia's Sukhoi, two people familiar with the talks said, asking
not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.
The award has not been finalized and it is
seen as a test for efforts by Indonesian President
Joko "Jokowi" Widodo to enforce more transparency in big-ticket
deals, they said.
Hundreds of companies including Lockheed
Martin of the United States, Sweden's Saab and Indonesian
state weapons maker PT Pindad will be represented at an Indo Defense
exhibition, which will be held in Jakarta from Nov. 2 to Nov. 5.
The country's biggest annual defense show
will come weeks after Indonesian warplanes staged
large-scale exercises on the edge of a South China Sea area claimed by Beijing.
While Indonesia is
not part of the dispute over the South China Sea, it objects to China's
inclusion of waters around the Natuna Islands within its 'nine-dash line', a
demarcation line used by China to show its claims there.
Indonesia's total defense spending has risen 77 percent over the last four years to
108.7 trillion rupiah ($8.3 billion), though it is expected to dip to 108.0
trillion rupiah next year, according to official data.
Indonesia had signed a contract with Lockheed Martin for 24 F-16 jets, of which 14
had been delivered and 10 more expected by early 2018, the defense ministry's
Leonardi said. He declined to disclose the value of the deal.
Research firm IHS Markit predicts that Indonesia will spend more than $20 billion on
procurement between 2016 and 2025 -- the fifth fastest-growing defense budget
in the world -- and it will increasingly seek to diversify its suppliers.
South Korea, Russia and France are
expected to hold a combined market share of 53 percent between 2009 and 2018,
while the other half will be shared by about 30 countries, many with less than
one percent, IHS said.
Reuters
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