Location: Air Headquarters, New Delhi
Date: 09 January 1972 — 10:00 Hours
--
The war had ended, but the clarity it brought had created a different kind of pressure.
During the conflict, decisions had been imdiate, reactive, and bound to the rhythm of the battlefield. Now, in peace, those sa decisions had to stretch across years—and the consequences carried far more weight.
Inside Air Headquarters, the room reflected that shift.
The operational maps were gone. In their place were production schedules, deploynt charts, and long-term projections that no longer dealt with survival—but dominance.
At the head of the table sat Pratap Chandra Lal.
He did not waste ti.
"We've completed the post-war review," Lal said, his tone steady. "Across all commands, the conclusions are aligned."
To his right sat the Vice Chief. Further down, operations and logistics heads. At the far end of the table sat Aditya Shergill.
"The S-27 has changed how we fight," Lal continued. "Engagent range, response ti, pilot confidence. We are no longer reacting—we are deciding."
A file was pushed forward.
"We intend to build on that, governnt has given permission for this order."
Aditya opened it.
"Ten squadrons," Lal said. "Initial planning window—three years,I have heard you are going to start full production after 6 months,so I know ti is tight but situation is like that in world."
The projections were detailed. Squadron rotations, forward deploynts, maintenance cycles. It was not optimism—it was intent backed by experience.
Aditya closed the file.
"That is one hundred and eighty aircraft," he said.
"Approximately," the Vice Chief replied. "We are not expanding blindly. We are preserving advantage."
Another officer added, more bluntly,
"The advantage will not last. Others are already studying it, Soviets are studying dogfighting, Aricans are working on sothing called F-15."
The room fell into a brief silence—not hesitation, but calculation.
Aditya rested the file on the table.
"We can build them," he said.
A slight shift of relief moved across a few faces.
Then he added,
"But not in three years."
The relief disappeared just as quickly.
Lal's expression did not change.
"Then how long?"
"Five," Aditya said. "For full delivery of all one hundred and eighty aircraft—without compromise."
The number settled into the room.
Not rejection.Adjustnt.
"Why?" Lal asked.
Aditya leaned forward slightly.
"The limitation isn't design," he said. "It's material."
He let that sit for a mont before continuing.
"The S-27 relies on titanium in specific areas—engine sections, high-stress structural points, thermal zones. Without that, you don't get the sa aircraft."
One of the logistics officers spoke,
"We have titanium. Coastal deposits—Odisha, Kerala. This isn't new, Recently you have started production, right?."
Aditya nodded.
"That's correct," he said. "We've always had the ore."
Then, more quietly,
"What we never had was the ability to turn it into what we need."
A few officers shifted slightly.
Aditya continued, keeping his tone simple.
"Titanium doesn't co out of the ground as tal. It's locked inside sand—ilnite, rutile. That sand has to be separated, chemically treated, converted into a usable form, and then reduced into tal at very high temperatures."
He paused.
"And at every step, you lose material. You lose ti."
The Vice Chief frowned slightly.
"So we expand processing,if you have taken first step then next steps would be faster ,right?."
"We are expanding," Aditya replied.
A brief pause.
"But this isn't steel. You can't just build another furnace and double output."
That landed harder than expected.
"In our current system," Aditya continued, "for every unit of usable titanium, multiple units are consud during processing. Until that improves, scaling production ans scaling inefficiency."
The room grew quiet again.
The sa logistics officer spoke again, more cautiously this ti.
"We can import to bridge the gap."
Aditya looked at him directly.
"For basic material, yes."
Then he shook his head slightly.
"For what the S-27 requires? No."
The officer didn't respond.
Aditya continued, his voice steady.
"The United States and the Soviet Union control high-grade titanium processing. Not the ore—the process."
He tapped the file lightly.
"They don't export that capability freely. Not in a way that allows another country to build advanced aircraft at scale."
The implication was clear.
This was not just an industrial limitation.
It was a controlled barrier.
Lal leaned back slightly.
"What happens if we proceed anyway?" he asked.
Aditya answered without hesitation.
"You will get aircraft.
But they will not be the sa aircraft."
No one asked for clarification.
They understood.
Lower-grade substitutions. Reduced tolerance. Higher risk under stress.
Numbers would increase.
Reliability would not.
One of the operations officers spoke, more firmly now.
"We cannot plan air defense around industrial limitations. The next war will not wait for your factories."
"And compromised aircraft won't win it,," Aditya replied.
The tension settled into the room—not loud, not confrontational, but firm.
Two truths.
Both difficult to ignore.
Lal broke it cleanly.
"Then tell us what is possible."
Aditya nodded once.
"Four squadrons within the original tiline," he said. "Fully built to specification,S-27 is world best holand Defence Aircraft Right Now,China and pakistan are nowhere close to becoming threat to India in Air,So It is enough For now."
He continued,
"The rest follow as production stabilizes. Five-year horizon for complete delivery,Also Last 6 Squadrons would be with so upgrades."
The Vice Chief asked,
"And until then?"
Aditya answered imdiately.
"We change how we deploy."
That drew attention.
"We treat these aircraft as priority assets. Limited numbers, maximum impact."
The Deputy Chief spoke slowly,
"Force concentration."
"Yes."
"Fewer aircraft," another officer added, "but higher certainty, Sounds good...for now."
Aditya nodded.
"That is the trade-off."
Silence returned—but this ti it was different.
Not resistance.
Evaluation.
After a long mont, Lal spoke.
"We proceed with phased expansion," he said. "Four squadrons on priority. Full fleet within five years."
He paused, then added,
"If the situation changes, we revisit."
Aditya inclined his head.
"Understood."
The eting should have ended there.
But Lal's gaze remained on the file for a mont longer.
Then he spoke again.
"This constraint—does it affect only the Air Force?"
Aditya understood the question imdiately.
"No," he said.
A few heads turned.
"The Navy faces the sa limitation," he continued. "Possibly worse."
That drew full attention again.
"Our current carrier aircraft are outdated," Aditya said. "Range is limited. Payload is restricted. They cannot match modern air defense environnts."
One of the officers asked,
"And your solution?"
Aditya didn't hesitate.
"Shergill Aerodynamics has already begun preliminary work on a naval aircraft,S-22 Makara."
The room sharpened.
"Carrier-capable. Reinforced structure. Optimized for short takeoff and arrested landing."
The Vice Chief frowned slightly.
"And you plan to build that… alongside this?"
"Yes,Its necessary."
A brief pause.
"But not at the sa speed."
That answer, more than anything else, clarified the situation.
This was not a single bottleneck.
It was an entire ecosystem catching up to ambition.
---
The eting ended without ceremony.
Chairs moved. Files closed. No one lingered.
Nothing had been resolved easily.
But everything had been defined.
---
Outside, the winter air carried a deceptive calm.
Inside, the conclusion was already reshaping the future.
India did not lack resources.
Its coasts held the raw material. Its industry had begun the process.
But turning that potential into power—into aircraft, engines, fleets—would take ti.
And ti was the one thing strategy never fully controlled.
For the first ti, the expansion of Indian air power was no longer limited by vision or doctrine.
It was limited by what its industry could sustain.
And until that changed—
Every squadron in the sky would depend on what could be forged on the ground.
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