Indiainfo-icon on Thursday approved a $650 million purchase of six attack choppers from USinfo-icon aviation giant Boeing, officials said, as it boosts its military might amid border tensions with Chinainfo-icon and Pakistaninfo-icon.

The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC), which approves big-ticket purchases, gave the green light to acquire six additional Apache helicopters after 22 were bought as part of a $2.5 billion deal in 2015.

Two defence ministry sources told AFP that the deal was approved exclusively for the armyinfo-icon, without providing further details including a date for delivery.

"DAC approved procurement of six Apache helicopters along with associated equipment for the army totally about $650mn," an official told AFP by text message.

The initial batch of 22 Apaches -- equipped with Hellfire and Stinger missiles -- replaced the Indian Air Force's ageing fleet. Soon after the first Apache acquisition, the army put in a separate request for a fleet of at least 39, one of the officials told AFP.

It will be the first time the Indian army has received attack helicopters and it hopes to deploy the craft along India's high-altitude frontiers -- particularly its border in the east with regional rival China.

New Delhiinfo-icon and Beijing are locked in a tense impasse over a strategic Himalayan plateau where hundreds of Indian and Chinese soldiers have been squaring off against each other for more than three months.

India -- the worldinfo-icon's largest defence importer -- has been investing tens of billions in updating its Soviet-era military hardware to counter long-standing territorial disputes with its nuclear-armed neighbours.

India has signed several big-ticket defence deals since Prime Minister Narendra Modi stormed to power in 2014.

In April, it signed a military deal with Israelinfo-icon worth nearly $2bn which includes an advanced defence system of medium-range surface-to-air missiles, launchers and communications technologyinfo-icon. India has increasingly turned to the United Statesinfo-icon and Franceinfo-icon, rather than traditional ally Russiainfo-icon, for its military hardware in recent years.