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Creating the most dangerous fighter in South Asia: major enhancements to India’s Su-30 MKI by 2025

Kailash Kumar

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Creating the Most Dangerous Fighter in South Asia: Major Enhancements to India’s Su-30MKI by 2025

October-10th-2019

The Su-30MKI Flanker currently forms the mainstay of the Indian Air Force’s combat fleet, with 11 of the service’s 27 fighter squadrons comprised of the aircraft and additional squadrons planned. The aircraft represents a significant enhancement over the original Su-27 Flanker, the Soviet Air Force’s most capable air superiority fighter which was designed to be able to counter all platforms in service in the Western Bloc at the time, and integrated new capabilities from its modern sensors, more powerful thrust vectoring capable engines and high composite airframe. The platform inherited the Su-27’s advanced air to air combat capabilities, but was capable of deploying a new generation of munitions and electronic warfare systems and had an avionics suite which not only made it more capable in an air superiority role - but also well suited to strike and maritime strike roles. Depending on its configuration, the Su-30MKI thus emerged as a truly multirole aircraft which excelled in all roles it was allocated - from a bomber using the SPICE 2000, a ship hunter or strike fighter using the BrahMos, an AWACS hunter using the K-100 or an air superiority fighter using the R-27ER and R-77.

While the Su-30MKI is already considered the most capable fighter in South Asia by a considerable margin, and the only fighter in the Indian fleet capable of going head to head with modern Chinese jets such as the J-11B and J-16, the design is set to be enhanced considerably with the integration of new weapons and technologies. The aircraft has been highlighted repeatedly as a possible replacement to India’s ageing Jaguar attack jets, and with the Indian Air Force planning to significantly expand its combat fleet from 32 to 42 squadrons production of more units under licence is seen as an effective means of doing so. Although a next generation replacement for the Su-30MKI is likely to begin to be ordered by the end of the 2020s - the Russian Su-57 fighter or a jointly manufactured twin seat derivative - the extent of India’s fighter modernisation plans and the advanced capabilities of the Flanker means that the country will likely retain it in service in upgraded form for several decades to come. An assessment of the upgrades and new munitions set to be integrated onto the Su-30MKI gives some indication as to its future capabilities.

article_5d9e0a2d3e1705_14878488.png

Indian Air Force Su-30MKI Heavyweight Fighter

Irbis-E ‘Stealth Hunter’ Radar
The Indian Air Force is reportedly planning to equip the Su-30 with the Irbis-E ‘stealth hunter’ radar - a platform developed for the newer Su-35 air superiority fighters. The Su-35 is a later derivative of the Flanker design which first entered service in 2014, and has a number of advantages over the Su-30MKI including a lower radar cross section, superior thrust vectoring capabilities, more powerful engines, a lighter composite airframe and a far more capable radar designed specifically to counter stealth fighters such as the American F-22 and Chinese J-20. Russian sources differ on the Irbis-E’s ability to lock onto stealth jets, with some claiming it can do so at 58km ranges while others place the range at 90km. With India fielding Flankers in their hundreds, should multiple fighters deploying Irbis-E radars share data from their sensors they will have an extremely high level of situational awareness few other fighter units can match - allowing them to seek and destroy adversaries including stealth fighters at long ranges. The radar will also better allow the fighters to make use of extreme range munitions such as the R-37M, and is more resistant to jamming by its potential targets.

Saturn AL-41FS
Another major technology from the Su-35 which Russia has offered to integrate onto older Flanker derivatives, the Saturn AL-41FS engine is considerably more powerful than the AL-31FP currently used by Indian Flankers. The engine benefits from advanced high and low-pressure turbines, a new digital control system, superior thrust vectoring nozzles and a longer lifespan. While thrust vectoring systems alone will improve the Flanker’s manoeuvrability substantially, the aircraft’s thrust/weight ratio will also improve with the new engines putting out 32,000 lbf of thrust with afterburner compared to just 27,700 lbf from the AL-31FP. New engines will not only increase the fighter’s endurance, but also make it more survivable and better suited to carrying heavier weapons payloads. Licence production of the AL-41FS in India is reportedly on offer should the country select the Su-35 as the winner of the MMRCA competition for a new Indian fighter.

article_5d9e0a6ec71d23_83997168.jpg

Saturn AL-41FS Engines

R-37M
While the R-77 and the ER, ET and EA variants of the R-27 provide Indian Flankers with air to air engagement ranges of 110km and 130km respectively, the Indian Air Force has expressed an interest in acquiring more modern and longer ranged munitions for its fighters. The deployment of the PL-15 by China and possible future sale to Pakistan, a missile with a 200km range, and possible future deployment of the PL-21, PL-12D and PL-XX which are estimated to have similar or longer ranges, means that Indian Flankers could find themselves at a range disadvantage in standoff engagements. The R-37M was developed to equip the Su-35 and Su-57 next generation fighters of the Russian Air Force, but with the Irbis-E integrated onto the Su-30MKI it should be able to make full use of this missile's capabilities. The missile is one of just two classes of hypersonic air to air missile in production anywhere in the world, and ensures a short response time even for faraway targets due to its formidable speed of Mach 6. With a 400km engagement range, the missile will be able to engage most targets at four times their engagement range (the PL-12 and AIM-120 both have a range of around 100km). Their range and speed makes these missiles a far more effective ‘AWACS killer’ than the older K-100 the Indian Air Force currently deploys, and unlike this platform the R-37M is also highly viable against manoeuvrable fighter sized targets. While the capabilities of America’s upcoming AIM-260 and China’s PL-XX air to air missiles remain unknown, at present no missile can match the R-37's combination of speed and range.

article_5d9e0a8b753c91_71126512.jpg

R-37M Hypersonic Air to Air Missile


article_5d9e0c6ef29d54_82110039.jpg

R-77 Air to Air Missile

K-77
A second class of air to air missile likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI, the K-77 retains a shorter range of little over 190km but benefits from a number of unique technologies. The first missile to use an active phased array antenna guidance system, the missile's radar is capable of detecting fighters in a 360 degree arc - rather than 90-120 degrees as is common for other air to air missile types. This makes the missile almost impossible to evade even for the most manoeuvrable enemy fighters - Chinese Su-35 and J-10C jets included. Combined with a very long range, this makes the K-77 a unique and unparalleled asset - one which will make the Su-30MKI extremely lethal in beyond visual range engagements.

K-74M, AIM-132 and K-MD
While the beyond visual range capabilities of the Su-30MKI are being seriously enhanced, to complement improvements to the fighter’s manoeuvrability new short ranged air to air missiles are likely to be acquired. The first if these is the K-74M, an enhancement of the R-73 with an expanded ±75° off boresight, a longer range, and fully digital and re-programmable systems. The second is the AIM-132 ASRAAM, a British equivalent to the AIM-9 sidewinder and the Russian R-73. Although its benefits over the other two platforms are minimal, it will provide Indian Flankers with greater diversity in their short range armaments which will present greater challenges for adversaries to counter. A third class of next generation missile, the K-MD, is currently under development and is likely to be available for export by the mid 2020s. The platform is a clean sheet design intended to meet the Russian Air Force’s needs in the 21’st century, and is expected to be considerably more capable than any short ranged air to air missile currently in service.

article_5d9e0b997762e1_60619372.jpg

K-74M Air to Air Missile

BrahMos
While Indian Su-30MKI fighters have deployed BrahMos cruise missiles for testing, large scale deployments have yet to take place. This could change particularly as India phases its Jaguar attack jets and MiG-27 strike fighters out of service and a new Su-30 squadrons are pressed into a strike role. The Mach 3 missile is reportedly capable of tearing warships in half with the sheer force of its impact, and is extremely difficult to intercept due to its high speed and manoeuvrability. With India and Russia reportedly jointly developing a more capable variant of the BrahMos capable of surpassing Mach 5, such missiles are also likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI when they become available. Russia has tested similar hypersonic missile technologies successfully in the past, and their sale to India for an air launched platform is likely to be on offer by the mid 2020s.

Even after receiving its first French Rafale fighter, a lighter lower performance jet set to be acquired in small numbers, the Su-30MKI remains by far the most capable fighter in the Indian fleet. Unless the Su-35 is selected as the victor of the MMRCA competition, providing India with a second more modern Flanker derivative, the Su-30MKI will remain India's most capable fighter for the foreseeable future. Once upgraded with new air to air missile technologies, sensors and engines the fighter will be able to hold its own against all manner of high end adversaries including fifth generation fighters such as the Project AZM jet despite its lack of stealth capabilities - particularly considering the vast numerical advantages the Indian Flanker will enjoy and the sheer scale on which it is set to be acquired.

article_5d9e0be9924941_74778350.jpg

Su-30MKI Launches BrahMos Cruise Missile

https://militarywatchmagazine.com/a...ajor-enhancements-to-india-s-su-30mki-by-2025
 
. .
N
Creating the Most Dangerous Fighter in South Asia: Major Enhancements to India’s Su-30MKI by 2025

October-10th-2019

The Su-30MKI Flanker currently forms the mainstay of the Indian Air Force’s combat fleet, with 11 of the service’s 27 fighter squadrons comprised of the aircraft and additional squadrons planned. The aircraft represents a significant enhancement over the original Su-27 Flanker, the Soviet Air Force’s most capable air superiority fighter which was designed to be able to counter all platforms in service in the Western Bloc at the time, and integrated new capabilities from its modern sensors, more powerful thrust vectoring capable engines and high composite airframe. The platform inherited the Su-27’s advanced air to air combat capabilities, but was capable of deploying a new generation of munitions and electronic warfare systems and had an avionics suite which not only made it more capable in an air superiority role - but also well suited to strike and maritime strike roles. Depending on its configuration, the Su-30MKI thus emerged as a truly multirole aircraft which excelled in all roles it was allocated - from a bomber using the SPICE 2000, a ship hunter or strike fighter using the BrahMos, an AWACS hunter using the K-100 or an air superiority fighter using the R-27ER and R-77.

While the Su-30MKI is already considered the most capable fighter in South Asia by a considerable margin, and the only fighter in the Indian fleet capable of going head to head with modern Chinese jets such as the J-11B and J-16, the design is set to be enhanced considerably with the integration of new weapons and technologies. The aircraft has been highlighted repeatedly as a possible replacement to India’s ageing Jaguar attack jets, and with the Indian Air Force planning to significantly expand its combat fleet from 32 to 42 squadrons production of more units under licence is seen as an effective means of doing so. Although a next generation replacement for the Su-30MKI is likely to begin to be ordered by the end of the 2020s - the Russian Su-57 fighter or a jointly manufactured twin seat derivative - the extent of India’s fighter modernisation plans and the advanced capabilities of the Flanker means that the country will likely retain it in service in upgraded form for several decades to come. An assessment of the upgrades and new munitions set to be integrated onto the Su-30MKI gives some indication as to its future capabilities.

article_5d9e0a2d3e1705_14878488.png

Indian Air Force Su-30MKI Heavyweight Fighter

Irbis-E ‘Stealth Hunter’ Radar
The Indian Air Force is reportedly planning to equip the Su-30 with the Irbis-E ‘stealth hunter’ radar - a platform developed for the newer Su-35 air superiority fighters. The Su-35 is a later derivative of the Flanker design which first entered service in 2014, and has a number of advantages over the Su-30MKI including a lower radar cross section, superior thrust vectoring capabilities, more powerful engines, a lighter composite airframe and a far more capable radar designed specifically to counter stealth fighters such as the American F-22 and Chinese J-20. Russian sources differ on the Irbis-E’s ability to lock onto stealth jets, with some claiming it can do so at 58km ranges while others place the range at 90km. With India fielding Flankers in their hundreds, should multiple fighters deploying Irbis-E radars share data from their sensors they will have an extremely high level of situational awareness few other fighter units can match - allowing them to seek and destroy adversaries including stealth fighters at long ranges. The radar will also better allow the fighters to make use of extreme range munitions such as the R-37M, and is more resistant to jamming by its potential targets.

Saturn AL-41FS
Another major technology from the Su-35 which Russia has offered to integrate onto older Flanker derivatives, the Saturn AL-41FS engine is considerably more powerful than the AL-31FP currently used by Indian Flankers. The engine benefits from advanced high and low-pressure turbines, a new digital control system, superior thrust vectoring nozzles and a longer lifespan. While thrust vectoring systems alone will improve the Flanker’s manoeuvrability substantially, the aircraft’s thrust/weight ratio will also improve with the new engines putting out 32,000 lbf of thrust with afterburner compared to just 27,700 lbf from the AL-31FP. New engines will not only increase the fighter’s endurance, but also make it more survivable and better suited to carrying heavier weapons payloads. Licence production of the AL-41FS in India is reportedly on offer should the country select the Su-35 as the winner of the MMRCA competition for a new Indian fighter.

article_5d9e0a6ec71d23_83997168.jpg

Saturn AL-41FS Engines

R-37M
While the R-77 and the ER, ET and EA variants of the R-27 provide Indian Flankers with air to air engagement ranges of 110km and 130km respectively, the Indian Air Force has expressed an interest in acquiring more modern and longer ranged munitions for its fighters. The deployment of the PL-15 by China and possible future sale to Pakistan, a missile with a 200km range, and possible future deployment of the PL-21, PL-12D and PL-XX which are estimated to have similar or longer ranges, means that Indian Flankers could find themselves at a range disadvantage in standoff engagements. The R-37M was developed to equip the Su-35 and Su-57 next generation fighters of the Russian Air Force, but with the Irbis-E integrated onto the Su-30MKI it should be able to make full use of this missile's capabilities. The missile is one of just two classes of hypersonic air to air missile in production anywhere in the world, and ensures a short response time even for faraway targets due to its formidable speed of Mach 6. With a 400km engagement range, the missile will be able to engage most targets at four times their engagement range (the PL-12 and AIM-120 both have a range of around 100km). Their range and speed makes these missiles a far more effective ‘AWACS killer’ than the older K-100 the Indian Air Force currently deploys, and unlike this platform the R-37M is also highly viable against manoeuvrable fighter sized targets. While the capabilities of America’s upcoming AIM-260 and China’s PL-XX air to air missiles remain unknown, at present no missile can match the R-37's combination of speed and range.

article_5d9e0a8b753c91_71126512.jpg

R-37M Hypersonic Air to Air Missile


article_5d9e0c6ef29d54_82110039.jpg

R-77 Air to Air Missile

K-77
A second class of air to air missile likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI, the K-77 retains a shorter range of little over 190km but benefits from a number of unique technologies. The first missile to use an active phased array antenna guidance system, the missile's radar is capable of detecting fighters in a 360 degree arc - rather than 90-120 degrees as is common for other air to air missile types. This makes the missile almost impossible to evade even for the most manoeuvrable enemy fighters - Chinese Su-35 and J-10C jets included. Combined with a very long range, this makes the K-77 a unique and unparalleled asset - one which will make the Su-30MKI extremely lethal in beyond visual range engagements.

K-74M, AIM-132 and K-MD
While the beyond visual range capabilities of the Su-30MKI are being seriously enhanced, to complement improvements to the fighter’s manoeuvrability new short ranged air to air missiles are likely to be acquired. The first if these is the K-74M, an enhancement of the R-73 with an expanded ±75° off boresight, a longer range, and fully digital and re-programmable systems. The second is the AIM-132 ASRAAM, a British equivalent to the AIM-9 sidewinder and the Russian R-73. Although its benefits over the other two platforms are minimal, it will provide Indian Flankers with greater diversity in their short range armaments which will present greater challenges for adversaries to counter. A third class of next generation missile, the K-MD, is currently under development and is likely to be available for export by the mid 2020s. The platform is a clean sheet design intended to meet the Russian Air Force’s needs in the 21’st century, and is expected to be considerably more capable than any short ranged air to air missile currently in service.

article_5d9e0b997762e1_60619372.jpg

K-74M Air to Air Missile

BrahMos
While Indian Su-30MKI fighters have deployed BrahMos cruise missiles for testing, large scale deployments have yet to take place. This could change particularly as India phases its Jaguar attack jets and MiG-27 strike fighters out of service and a new Su-30 squadrons are pressed into a strike role. The Mach 3 missile is reportedly capable of tearing warships in half with the sheer force of its impact, and is extremely difficult to intercept due to its high speed and manoeuvrability. With India and Russia reportedly jointly developing a more capable variant of the BrahMos capable of surpassing Mach 5, such missiles are also likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI when they become available. Russia has tested similar hypersonic missile technologies successfully in the past, and their sale to India for an air launched platform is likely to be on offer by the mid 2020s.

Even after receiving its first French Rafale fighter, a lighter lower performance jet set to be acquired in small numbers, the Su-30MKI remains by far the most capable fighter in the Indian fleet. Unless the Su-35 is selected as the victor of the MMRCA competition, providing India with a second more modern Flanker derivative, the Su-30MKI will remain India's most capable fighter for the foreseeable future. Once upgraded with new air to air missile technologies, sensors and engines the fighter will be able to hold its own against all manner of high end adversaries including fifth generation fighters such as the Project AZM jet despite its lack of stealth capabilities - particularly considering the vast numerical advantages the Indian Flanker will enjoy and the sheer scale on which it is set to be acquired.

article_5d9e0be9924941_74778350.jpg

Su-30MKI Launches BrahMos Cruise Missile

https://militarywatchmagazine.com/a...ajor-enhancements-to-india-s-su-30mki-by-2025
Not this crap again
 
. .
The article forgot to mention about AAMRAAM dodging. Just out this world technology.

I hope IAF uses this to find the blackbox of Mi17 chopper they shotdown on 27th Feb 2019
 
. . . .
Creating the Most Dangerous Fighter in South Asia: Major Enhancements to India’s Su-30MKI by 2025

October-10th-2019

The Su-30MKI Flanker currently forms the mainstay of the Indian Air Force’s combat fleet, with 11 of the service’s 27 fighter squadrons comprised of the aircraft and additional squadrons planned. The aircraft represents a significant enhancement over the original Su-27 Flanker, the Soviet Air Force’s most capable air superiority fighter which was designed to be able to counter all platforms in service in the Western Bloc at the time, and integrated new capabilities from its modern sensors, more powerful thrust vectoring capable engines and high composite airframe. The platform inherited the Su-27’s advanced air to air combat capabilities, but was capable of deploying a new generation of munitions and electronic warfare systems and had an avionics suite which not only made it more capable in an air superiority role - but also well suited to strike and maritime strike roles. Depending on its configuration, the Su-30MKI thus emerged as a truly multirole aircraft which excelled in all roles it was allocated - from a bomber using the SPICE 2000, a ship hunter or strike fighter using the BrahMos, an AWACS hunter using the K-100 or an air superiority fighter using the R-27ER and R-77.

While the Su-30MKI is already considered the most capable fighter in South Asia by a considerable margin, and the only fighter in the Indian fleet capable of going head to head with modern Chinese jets such as the J-11B and J-16, the design is set to be enhanced considerably with the integration of new weapons and technologies. The aircraft has been highlighted repeatedly as a possible replacement to India’s ageing Jaguar attack jets, and with the Indian Air Force planning to significantly expand its combat fleet from 32 to 42 squadrons production of more units under licence is seen as an effective means of doing so. Although a next generation replacement for the Su-30MKI is likely to begin to be ordered by the end of the 2020s - the Russian Su-57 fighter or a jointly manufactured twin seat derivative - the extent of India’s fighter modernisation plans and the advanced capabilities of the Flanker means that the country will likely retain it in service in upgraded form for several decades to come. An assessment of the upgrades and new munitions set to be integrated onto the Su-30MKI gives some indication as to its future capabilities.

article_5d9e0a2d3e1705_14878488.png

Indian Air Force Su-30MKI Heavyweight Fighter

Irbis-E ‘Stealth Hunter’ Radar
The Indian Air Force is reportedly planning to equip the Su-30 with the Irbis-E ‘stealth hunter’ radar - a platform developed for the newer Su-35 air superiority fighters. The Su-35 is a later derivative of the Flanker design which first entered service in 2014, and has a number of advantages over the Su-30MKI including a lower radar cross section, superior thrust vectoring capabilities, more powerful engines, a lighter composite airframe and a far more capable radar designed specifically to counter stealth fighters such as the American F-22 and Chinese J-20. Russian sources differ on the Irbis-E’s ability to lock onto stealth jets, with some claiming it can do so at 58km ranges while others place the range at 90km. With India fielding Flankers in their hundreds, should multiple fighters deploying Irbis-E radars share data from their sensors they will have an extremely high level of situational awareness few other fighter units can match - allowing them to seek and destroy adversaries including stealth fighters at long ranges. The radar will also better allow the fighters to make use of extreme range munitions such as the R-37M, and is more resistant to jamming by its potential targets.

Saturn AL-41FS
Another major technology from the Su-35 which Russia has offered to integrate onto older Flanker derivatives, the Saturn AL-41FS engine is considerably more powerful than the AL-31FP currently used by Indian Flankers. The engine benefits from advanced high and low-pressure turbines, a new digital control system, superior thrust vectoring nozzles and a longer lifespan. While thrust vectoring systems alone will improve the Flanker’s manoeuvrability substantially, the aircraft’s thrust/weight ratio will also improve with the new engines putting out 32,000 lbf of thrust with afterburner compared to just 27,700 lbf from the AL-31FP. New engines will not only increase the fighter’s endurance, but also make it more survivable and better suited to carrying heavier weapons payloads. Licence production of the AL-41FS in India is reportedly on offer should the country select the Su-35 as the winner of the MMRCA competition for a new Indian fighter.

article_5d9e0a6ec71d23_83997168.jpg

Saturn AL-41FS Engines

R-37M
While the R-77 and the ER, ET and EA variants of the R-27 provide Indian Flankers with air to air engagement ranges of 110km and 130km respectively, the Indian Air Force has expressed an interest in acquiring more modern and longer ranged munitions for its fighters. The deployment of the PL-15 by China and possible future sale to Pakistan, a missile with a 200km range, and possible future deployment of the PL-21, PL-12D and PL-XX which are estimated to have similar or longer ranges, means that Indian Flankers could find themselves at a range disadvantage in standoff engagements. The R-37M was developed to equip the Su-35 and Su-57 next generation fighters of the Russian Air Force, but with the Irbis-E integrated onto the Su-30MKI it should be able to make full use of this missile's capabilities. The missile is one of just two classes of hypersonic air to air missile in production anywhere in the world, and ensures a short response time even for faraway targets due to its formidable speed of Mach 6. With a 400km engagement range, the missile will be able to engage most targets at four times their engagement range (the PL-12 and AIM-120 both have a range of around 100km). Their range and speed makes these missiles a far more effective ‘AWACS killer’ than the older K-100 the Indian Air Force currently deploys, and unlike this platform the R-37M is also highly viable against manoeuvrable fighter sized targets. While the capabilities of America’s upcoming AIM-260 and China’s PL-XX air to air missiles remain unknown, at present no missile can match the R-37's combination of speed and range.

article_5d9e0a8b753c91_71126512.jpg

R-37M Hypersonic Air to Air Missile


article_5d9e0c6ef29d54_82110039.jpg

R-77 Air to Air Missile

K-77
A second class of air to air missile likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI, the K-77 retains a shorter range of little over 190km but benefits from a number of unique technologies. The first missile to use an active phased array antenna guidance system, the missile's radar is capable of detecting fighters in a 360 degree arc - rather than 90-120 degrees as is common for other air to air missile types. This makes the missile almost impossible to evade even for the most manoeuvrable enemy fighters - Chinese Su-35 and J-10C jets included. Combined with a very long range, this makes the K-77 a unique and unparalleled asset - one which will make the Su-30MKI extremely lethal in beyond visual range engagements.

K-74M, AIM-132 and K-MD
While the beyond visual range capabilities of the Su-30MKI are being seriously enhanced, to complement improvements to the fighter’s manoeuvrability new short ranged air to air missiles are likely to be acquired. The first if these is the K-74M, an enhancement of the R-73 with an expanded ±75° off boresight, a longer range, and fully digital and re-programmable systems. The second is the AIM-132 ASRAAM, a British equivalent to the AIM-9 sidewinder and the Russian R-73. Although its benefits over the other two platforms are minimal, it will provide Indian Flankers with greater diversity in their short range armaments which will present greater challenges for adversaries to counter. A third class of next generation missile, the K-MD, is currently under development and is likely to be available for export by the mid 2020s. The platform is a clean sheet design intended to meet the Russian Air Force’s needs in the 21’st century, and is expected to be considerably more capable than any short ranged air to air missile currently in service.

article_5d9e0b997762e1_60619372.jpg

K-74M Air to Air Missile

BrahMos
While Indian Su-30MKI fighters have deployed BrahMos cruise missiles for testing, large scale deployments have yet to take place. This could change particularly as India phases its Jaguar attack jets and MiG-27 strike fighters out of service and a new Su-30 squadrons are pressed into a strike role. The Mach 3 missile is reportedly capable of tearing warships in half with the sheer force of its impact, and is extremely difficult to intercept due to its high speed and manoeuvrability. With India and Russia reportedly jointly developing a more capable variant of the BrahMos capable of surpassing Mach 5, such missiles are also likely to be deployed by the Su-30MKI when they become available. Russia has tested similar hypersonic missile technologies successfully in the past, and their sale to India for an air launched platform is likely to be on offer by the mid 2020s.

Even after receiving its first French Rafale fighter, a lighter lower performance jet set to be acquired in small numbers, the Su-30MKI remains by far the most capable fighter in the Indian fleet. Unless the Su-35 is selected as the victor of the MMRCA competition, providing India with a second more modern Flanker derivative, the Su-30MKI will remain India's most capable fighter for the foreseeable future. Once upgraded with new air to air missile technologies, sensors and engines the fighter will be able to hold its own against all manner of high end adversaries including fifth generation fighters such as the Project AZM jet despite its lack of stealth capabilities - particularly considering the vast numerical advantages the Indian Flanker will enjoy and the sheer scale on which it is set to be acquired.

article_5d9e0be9924941_74778350.jpg

Su-30MKI Launches BrahMos Cruise Missile

https://militarywatchmagazine.com/a...ajor-enhancements-to-india-s-su-30mki-by-2025
India's SU-30MKI will turn out to be most dangerous (Indeed as was on 27/02).
Assuming, rest all others are sleeping or either playing flute in the region.
Still Indian didn't learn any lesson and just bragging to sooth their bleeding @$$/nose whatever it is.
 
.
India taking aggressive path to modernization since Feb 27. Hopefully Pakistan army is taking notes and planning along.

PDF Pakistanis are just fan boys. They'll keep making bravado statements till the next time Indian army gives Pakistan a bloody nose. Then they'll all turn against army for their incompetence and what not.

We have seen this behavior after they won championships trophy earlier on fluke. India went from strength to strength from there on defeating Pakistan 4 times since then.

Let hope for PDF fan boys sake this doesn't come to bear.
 
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We have seen this behavior after they won championships trophy on fluke. India went from strength to strength from there on defeating Pakistan 4 times since then. Same will repeat.
Comparing the ups and downs of cricket with major aerial conflicts. Nice keep it up !
Im sure you would trade that win in Champions Trophy Final for your later wins against us. When we strike we strike big time !
 
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Comparing the ups and downs of cricket with major aerial conflicts. Nice keep it up !
Im sure you would trade that win in Champions Trophy Final for your later wins against us. When we strike we strike big time !
Lol. Ya whatever makes you sleep at night.
 
. .
Lol. Ya whatever makes you sleep at night.
At least we get to sleep your pilots died at their own comrades hands shameful !
Yet such inflated egos. Your Airforce is in a terrible morale currently. If only you knew.
 
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Creating the Most Dangerous Fighter in South Asia:


Most dangerous for IAF pilots or HAL employees??


India's Sukhoi fleet faces problems despite Russian spare parts deal

NEW DELHI — Despite signing a long-term agreement with Russia for the supply of spare parts and the rendering of technical assistance for five years for India's Sukhoi Su-30MKI aircraft, the fleet continues to face maintenance problems and a lack of spare parts.

https://www.defensenews.com/air/201...es-problems-despite-russian-spare-parts-deal/



IAF not keen on getting more Sukhoi fighter jets
IAF is not keen to add more Sukhois in its fleet due its high cost of maintenance and low serviceability.

https://www.indiatoday.in/mail-toda...g-more-sukhoi-fighter-jets-1258923-2018-06-13






An Indian facility that makes Su-30MKI jets may shut down, toppling 400 local suppliers
( They are simply assembled from CKD kits in India and nothing is made locally)

https://www.defensenews.com/industr...s-may-shut-down-toppling-400-local-suppliers/
 
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