City
Epaper

Biden administration notifies Congress of sale of drones to India

By IANS | Updated: February 1, 2024 21:25 IST

Washington, Feb 1 The Joe Biden administration notified the US Congress on Thursday of the proposed sale of ...

Open in App

Washington, Feb 1 The Joe Biden administration notified the US Congress on Thursday of the proposed sale of 31 MQ-9B HALE armed drones, clearing a period of informal review that had raised concerns of the deal being in some kind of jeopardy.

Congress now has 30 days to either greenlight the deal by doing nothing, or reject it through a congressional vote. There is no attempt to put a “hold” on it yet, but as a person familiar with the development said, “The clock starts now.”

The notification by the US State Department’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency has come amidst reports that some lawmakers had tried to link the deal’s clearance to India’s wholehearted cooperation with a US investigation into allegations that an Indian businessman Nikhil Gupta, tried to arrange a murder-for-hire hit on a US-based Khalistani activist. Gupta is in custody of Czech authorities in Prague on an extradition request from the US.

The $3 billion deal was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Joe Biden in June 2023 along with joint production of GE jet engines in India. There were a slew of other announcements, but these two were clearly the most significant. The Sea Guardian deal, especially, had been in the making for several years with talks starting during President Donald Trump’s administration.

Of the 31 MQ-9B UAVs, 15 Sea Guardians are meant for the Indian Navy, and eight each for the Indian Air Force and Indian Army. India is currently using two of these armed drones in a company-owned, company-operated lease agreement. These drones are being used by the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium and Japan.

India is buying these drones in a government-to-government deal through a process called Foreign Military Sale (FMS), which must be cleared by congress after a statutory period of 15, 30 or 45 days, as the case may be depending on the size of the sale and the purchasing country. In this instance, congress has 30 days.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUN marks second World Meditation Day with focus on inner peace, global harmony

Other SportsSix Indians impress at US Kids Indian Championship

Other SportsUS Kids Indian Championship: Nihal, Drona, Bainsla among boys and Naaysha, Aanya in girls shine

BusinessDr. Gautam Das founder of Daradia: The Pain Clinic, Kolkata Conferred Dr. M. J. Joshi - IMA Bhushan Award at MULTICON 2025

Other SportsCooley’s tenure as fast bowling coach at BCCI CoE ends, no clarity yet on filling vacant post

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan: Baloch National Movement accuses state of targeting families seeking justice for missing persons

InternationalSecurity heightened at Parliament building, key locations across Dhaka ahead of Hadi funeral

InternationalISI's Dhaka Cell plots Bangladesh chaos, eyes West Bengal and Northeast India

InternationalSeven arrested over Hindu youth's lynching, says Bangladesh interim govt

InternationalBangladesh: Seven arrested over lynching of Hindu youth in Mymensingh