In a major boost to Indiaโs strategic air mobility, the Indian Air Force has inducted a leased Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker, restoring essential mid-air refuelling capacity at a time when its existing tanker fleet faces severe serviceability challenges.
The aircraft arrived at Agra Air Force Station, the IAFโs primary refuelling hub, under a wet-lease agreement with US-based Metrea Management, which provides the aircraft, crew, and maintenance support under FAA oversight.
Fills Critical Capability Gap
The KC-135โs arrival offers immediate relief as the IAFโs six Il-78MKI tankers continue to suffer from spares shortages and chronic downtime, leaving less than half the fleet operational at any given time. This has restricted the IAFโs ability to sustain transcontinental missions or long-range maritime patrols without multiple refuelling halts.
Joint Utility for IAF and Navy
The Stratotanker will also support Indian Navy long-range operations, providing a unified refuelling capability for both land and maritime missions.
Equipped with a flying boom system and optional hose-and-drogue pods, the KC-135 can refuel both Western-origin fighters like the Rafale and heavy aircraft such as the C-17 and P-8I, enhancing interoperability with NATO-standard platforms.
Decades of Procurement Delays
Indiaโs attempts to procure new refuellersโbeginning in 2007โhave repeatedly stalled due to cost concerns and procedural hurdles, despite the Airbus A330 MRTT and Boeing KC-46 Pegasus being shortlisted in separate rounds.
The wet-lease solution is seen as a pragmatic interim measure, helping the services evaluate Western refuelling systems while avoiding long procurement cycles.
Strategic Significance
Analysts believe the move signals a shift within the Ministry of Defence towards flexible acquisition models, including leasing and cross-service utilisation, to bridge urgent capability gaps while indigenous options evolve.
However, experts caution that a permanent refueller acquisition remains essential to modernise Indiaโs aerial refuelling fleet and support its expanding regional commitments.
