NEW DELHI: The Modi government has sounded the death knell for the deadlocked $20 billion MMRCA (medium multi-role combat aircraft) project to acquire 126 fighters, which was dubbed the “mother of all defence deals” around the globe after competition for it was launched by the previous UPA regime in 2007.Defence minister Manohar Parrikar on Monday also made it clear that if India goes in for additional French Rafale fighters , after the outright purchase of 36 jets decided during the Modi-Hollande summit in Paris last Friday, it will also be through government-to-government deals.The stalled final negotiations for the MMRCA project, in which Rafale emerged the winner in January 2012 after a hotly-contested open global competition, had envisaged the induction of 126 fighters — the first 18 through direct acquisition from France, with the rest to be made by Hindustan Aeronautics in India after transfer of technology.Even though Parrikar did not utter the words “scrap” or “cancel” in connection with the MMRCA project, he used enough analogies to stress exactly that. “A car cannot travel on two roads at the same time. The other road (MMRCA) had a lot of problems,” Parrikar said.But the minister did not specify how many additional Rafales would be acquired after the first 36 Rafales are inducted directly from France, which itself is likely to take well over two years. But the number now will certainly not be as much as 126 fighters, with Parrikar holding it would “financially be a very steep slope to climb”.But he added that “all options are being kept open”, including the ‘Make in India’ component for additional Rafales if required. Holding that “nitty-gritties” are not worked out at the PM-level, he said India and France would now hold discussions on the future course of action. “The fine print of what has been agreed (in the Modi-Hollande summit) is not with me yet,” he said.Concurrently, the Modi government is also trying to improve the serviceability of the 272 Sukhoi-30MKIs contracted from Russia for over $12 billion. It is just 55% for the 200 Sukhois inducted till now. The DRDO-HAL combine is also being pushed for faster induction of 120 indigenous Tejas light combat aircraft. “The gap can be filled,” said Parrikar.“PM Modi has taken a bold decision (to bypass the stalled MMRCA project). Instead of going through the RFP (request for proposal or global tender) route, where there was lot of confusion and chaos, it has been decided to go for the G2G route. My personal opinion is that in certain areas of defence, especially of strategic (non-nuclear) equipment, the G2G route is much better,” he added.The final negotiations for the MMRCA project with French aviation major Dassault had stalled for over an year now due to the company’s continuing refusal to take “full responsibility” for the 108 jets to be made by HAL as well as a stiff hike in their production costs here, as reported earlier by TOI.Prime Minister Narendra Modi (2nd from left) and French president Francois Hollande (3rd from right) during their meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, on April 10, 2015. (AFP photo)“It had gone into a loop or a vortex. A decision had to be taken to break the vortex since IAF’s operational requirement (the force is down to just 34 fighter squadrons) was becoming steeper day-by day. The qualitative selection (of Rafale in the MMRCA contest) was already done,” said Parrikar.The minister, in fact, pointed to the Defence Trade and Technology Initiative between India and the US to stress that the G2G route was much better in acquiring high-end military hardware. India, incidentally, has inked deals worth over $6 billion with the US for 12 C-130J Super Hercules and 10 C-17 Globemaster-III aircraft without any open tender or competition.