After US Air Force chief, French Air Force chief flies Tejas

(Photo: Twitter/@IAF_MCC)


The chief of the French Air Force, General André Lanata, flew a sortie in a Tejas fighter aircraft from the Air Force Station Jodhpur on Wednesday, 7 February. General Lanata is the second head of any foreign military power in the world to have flown India’s indigenously developed fighter.

Four days ago, on 3 February, US Air Force chief General David L Goldfein became the first head of any foreign military power to fly a sortie in the Tejas.

General Lanata, who arrived in India on 4 February, took the rear seat of the two-seater fighter jet as it soared into the skies over the historic city in Rajasthan, which is at a distance of approximately 200 kilometers as the crow flies from the Pakistani border.

In a tweet, the Indian Air Force announced that the General, who is on a goodwill visit to India, flew the single-engine fighter. Air vice-Marshal AP Singh was the co-pilot of the fighter.

General Lanata, 56, has been the chief of staff of the French Air Force since 21 September 2015. He is a decorated fighter pilot who participated in Gulf War, the Bosnian War and the Kosovo War.

On 5 February, the chief of staff of the Indian Air Force, Air Chief Marshal BS Dhanoa met General Lanata and the French delegation in New Delhi.

 

(Photo: Twitter/@IAF_MCC)

 

The Tejas light combat aircraft is designed to enhance the Indian Air Force’s fighting capability and replace the existing squadrons of ageing MiG-21s and MiG-27s.

IAF inducted the Tejas in July 2016. In December 2017, the IAF issued a Request for Information (RFI) for 83 twin-engine Tejas MK-1A.

India will be receiving 36 Dassault Rafale fighter aircraft from France in the six years starting 2019.