On February 15, media
reports began surfacing that a contract for Indonesia to buy fighter jets from
Russia had been signed. The finalization of the deal, which has been talked
about for years between the two longtime defense partners, would constitute a
boost for Indonesia’s air force capabilities even amid the significant
challenges that remain.
As I have
noted before, Russia and Indonesia have long had a defense relationship, and
Moscow today still remains Jakarta’s largest military supplier. Both sides have
also been mulling several deals as well as broader advances in defense
cooperation recently, looking at not just purchases but also more ambitious
areas like technology transfers and joint development and production despite
challenges therein).
One of
those deals that has been in the works for years is Russia’s sale of Su-35
fighter jets to Indonesia. Though Indonesia’s Defense Minister Ryamizard
Ryacudu had officially announced that Indonesia had made a decision to buy the
Russian aircraft back in 2015, since then, details of the allegedly impending
deal have repeatedly changed and there had been no official confirmation of
advances into 2018.
This
month, we saw some advances on this front. First, last week, Mikhail Petukhov,
the deputy director of Russia’s Federal Service for Military and Technical
Cooperation who had headed Russia’s delegation to the 2018 Singapore Airshow,
told TASS that Russia and Indonesia would shortly agree on technical
details of a contract for delivery of the fighter jets to Indonesia.
Then,
this week, on February 15, local media reports confirmed that both countries
had finally arrived at a contract. Several Indonesian outlets cited Totok
Sugiharto, the head of public communications of the Indonesian Armed Forces
(TNI) as confirming that the signing had already taken place on February 14,
even though no official press release was issued.
Few
details of the contract were revealed in the reports. But the reports cited
that the contract was for a total of 11 full combat Su-35 aircraft, and that
the plan was for the jets to begin to arrive starting in October later this
year.
Should
the agreement move forward as planned, it would be a much-needed boost for
Indonesia’s capabilities. As I have been noting in these pages, Indonesia has
long been looking to replac”.
It would
also be in line with recent efforts to accelerate the military procurement
process in Indonesia, which also has been a longstanding issue. As Air Force
Chief of Staff Yuyu Sutisna told reporters, the inking of the contract would be
a tangible demonstration of the efforts underway by Indonesia to accomplish
this.
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