Hakan Buskhe, CEO of SAAB, the Swedish aerospace and defence manufacturer, is bullish on India. SAAB wants to make India its biggest manufacturing hub, he tells ET’s Ketan Thakkar, Baiju Kalesh and Satish John in an interview. Buskhe shrugs off the recent setback of India settling for Dassault ’s Rafale fighter jets instead of SAAB’s Gripen . "I will not lose sleep over it," he says wondering if the last word on the multi-billion dollar order has been said. Edited excerpts:This is one of the best branding campaigns anyone has done. The ‘Make in India’ brand has started to become extremely strong around the globe. We get to read news about Make In India in a very good way, exploring and describing the skilled workforce and potential ahead for India’s future.That is business. Some you lose and some you win. I don’t know if they (Rafale’s maker Dassault) have won yet. Lets see. (Smiles). But I would rather talk about our products. It is a great need in India. You will, of course, have your own development plan for light combat aircraft. SAAB is the only company in the western world, Europe and North America that is building a new factory, building new submarines, new radars, etc. We are investing tonnes of money and we also do technology transfer.So, for me the question is not if we are able to sell our systems to India. We will have Indian products built in India, but that is something you can sell to the rest of the world. That is our idea and then in the end, it is up to your government to decide the need. We try to be a good partner. The decision is theirs. I don’t have sleepless nights due to the Rafale deal. We have had tremendous development in the last year, increased our orders four times around the world. We have registered good growth. We are long-term players. Seeing is believing, that is why we are building up capability in India.We are talking about missiles. We are the world’s leading supplier of missiles. Everything from ground base air defence systems to a range of other missiles. We have signed an agreement with the Kalyani Group for production and development of short-range, mid-short range missile programme and it may lead to other things.We are talking to everyone. We will try to keep and find more partners. India has many skilled companies. Hopefully, we will be able to come back with new partners.Missiles is one area where we could do more. We are discussing aviation, as we are already making aero structure parts. But, over time, we will develop more capabilities in aviation. My belief is that in 10 years India will be the biggest production and development base for SAAB