First batch of Rafale jets enters Indian airspace, to land at Ambala airbase shortly
New Delhi/UNI: The first batch of five Rafale fighter jets has entered the Indian airspace and will land at the IAF Air Force Station in Ambala shortly on Wednesday.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s office said that the Rafales are escorted by two Sukhoi 30 MKIs.
Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria will receive the fleet at Ambala.
The five fighter aircraft, being flown by Indian Air Force (IAF) pilots, will arrive here after covering a distance of 7,000 km with air-to-air refueling and a single stop in the United Arab Emirates.
The aircraft will be officially inducted into the IAF in the second half of August.
A security blanket has been thrown around the air force station by the police, on the request of the IAF to prevent any photography and videography of the arrival of the aircraft.
Further, Section 144 has also been imposed in four villages close to the Ambala airbase.
India had bought 36 twin-engine fighter planes from Dassault Rafale for an estimated Rs 58,000 crore, through an inter-governmental agreement signed in 2016.
The Number 17 Golden Arrows squadron of the Indian Air Force has been resurrected in preparation for the induction.
The Golden Arrows were raised in 1951 and have been involved in a number of significant operations throughout their history, including the Kargil War.
But after the Air Force started to phase out the Mig-21, which were operated by the Golden Arrows, the squadron was disbanded in 2016.
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