Russia is exploring possibilities of exporting its latest Sukhoi Su-57 stealth fighter to India and is keen to cooperate with India in sharing the fifth-generation fighter jet technology with India, Interfax quoted Russian minister of industry and trade Denis Manturov as saying.

The twin-engine multi-role fifth-generation air superiority and attack fighter Su-57 is the latest supersonic stealth jet in the world and several countries would be interested in having the lethal aircraft in their arsenal, he told Interfax.

Since the Indian Air Force (IAF) already flies over 250 Sukhoi Su-30MKIs, a 4++ generation fighter, Russia is interested in selling the Sukhoi Su-57 stealth fighter also to India.

"Confidence in the supplier is one of the key factors when it comes to purchasing weaponry of this kind" and India was the biggest market for Russian defence products and could be interested in the Sukhoi Su-57 jet, formerly known as Prospective Airborne Complex of Frontline Aviation (PAK FA or T-50), Manturov said.

United Aircraft Corporation (UAC), the makers of Su-57, will soon get the clearance to export the fighter, according to Russia's ROSTEC defence industrial holding company's international co-operation and regional policy director Viktor Kladov.

The export version of the fighter will be called Su-57E.

Kladov told a press conference at the 2019 Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition in Malaysia's Langkawi that Rostec and UAC have submitted "all the necessary documentation" required for the approval to export the Su-57E to the Russian government and President Vladimir Putin is likely to give his consent soon.

Once the export clearance is obtained, Russia plans to officially unveil that Su-57E during the November 2019 Dubai Air Show. Klodov was confident that Su-57 will generate a lot of interest in several countries, including India and China as the air forces of both these countries already fly different versions of the Sukhoi fighters.

He also dismissed the apprehension that the threat of US Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) will dissuade the potential Su-57E buyers.

Some Russian Su-57s had taken part in combat training missions in Syria in February 2018. According to Russian defence officials, the Su-57s were deployed in war-torn Syria to "undergo real-world testing" and "combat training".