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Is the Chinese JH-7 an Answer to the Pakistan Air Force’s Deep Strike Needs?

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Answering your first part and yes it's lot of work but eventually you have to do that work. You simply can't keep delaying it. Eventually you have to replace older jets and get new ones.
YAAR Maulana Saheb.
Bhai we have heard about JH7 from Mastan Khan and if I remember there have been multiple threads on it in the past as well. PAF has evaluated and rejected the JH7. Currently their supply and assembly line has been discontinued so it is a mute subject. PLAAN has moved on from J16 to JXX as they felt that in today's environment even J16 does not cut it(other reasons being financial and technological) and they need a stealth plane. So to restart the supply and assembly line you will have to pour in your money into the project. Can you honestly say that this is a wise thing to do as the JH7 remains a one trick pony and there will be no space in modern day strategy for one trick ponies. Unlike the US encounters against Iraq and VIet Nam, the 2 Air forces are more or less evenly matched. You will not , therefore be able to use the JH7 till you have gained decisive air superiority and even then JH7 will need top cover to do the job you want it to do. The Indian missile defence remains comprehensive and good so get ready to lose men and machines on a mad adventure like this which you cna carry out with missiles as well and possibly more expediently and with more damaging effects(I understand the repercussions of this as well so let us not go down that route). There is so much wrong with this strategy and it is so out of whack with what PAF wants why does this topic keep coming up??????????
A
 
Despite its potent display of combat capability during the Balakot standoff, the PAF requires additional platforms to balance against a much larger Indian Air Force.

By Ammad Mailk
May 27, 2020
thediplomat-2020-05-26-7.jpg

Credit: Alert5 via Wikimedia Commons

Amidst sustained tensions between the two nuclear armed South Asian neighbors, the Indian Air Force is scheduled to receive the first batch of four state-of-the-art Rafale fighter jets by the end of July 2020. The 7.87 billion euro Rafale deal between France and New Delhi for a total order of 36 jets was finally inked in September 2016, after much controversy and delay. According to the delivery schedule, the Indian Air Force shall receive all jets by May 2022. Armed with Meteor missiles and a highly sophisticated electronic warfare suite, New Delhi’s Rafale acquisition threatens to tilt the balance of power in South Asia in the IAF’s favor.

The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) has been following the Indian Air Force’s modernization program with keen interest, but budget constraints mean that Islamabad’s chances of acquiring a fighter jet of similar capability are slim. Instead, Pakistan seems to be focusing on the latest variant of its indigenous JF-17 Thunder multi-role fighter.

A prototype of the new JF-17 Block 3 fighter first flew in December 2019 and the jet has since undergone a further period of testing. By inducting an AESA radar-capable Block 3 variant in numbers by 2025, the PAF is confident that it can deny the larger Indian Air Force victory in a future conflict. Numerous reports have also hinted that the Block 3 would be armed with the much vaunted Chinese PL-15 missiles, which out-range everything in the IAF’s inventory, barring the Meteors.

Furthermore, unlike the IAF’s emphasis on induction of new platforms, the Pakistan Air Force has in recent years focused more on weapon systems and sensor upgrades to their existing fleet. This strategy paid dividends during the aerial engagement between the two air forces’ on February 27, 2019, as the PAF successfully infiltrated Indian airspace in Kashmir and managed to shoot down an IAF MiG-21.

However, despite the PAF’s well executed operation in February 2019, the Indian Air Force is equipped with aircraft that are both qualitatively and numerically superior to much of the PAF’s inventory. These include the IAF’s frontline air superiority fighter, the Sukhoi Su-30MKI, and the highly capable Mirage 2000 multirole aircraft. On the other hand, the PAF still relies largely on its limited fleet of F-16 Fighting Falcons as its primary air asset. The PAF has no more than 75 F-16 jets and a significant number of those are of the vintage Block A variant, delivered to Islamabad in the 1980s. Other aircraft include 100-plus JF-17s of the Block 1 and Block 2 variants, as well as a large operational fleet of the 1960s-era Mirage 3 fighter.

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In the event of an all-out conventional war, the PAF’s limited frontline air assets are at risk of getting overstretched. More worryingly for Islamabad, the Indian Navy operates a sizeable independent air arm, which can be utilized in a conflict scenario to target Pakistan’s coastal industrial hub of Karachi. The much smaller Pakistan Navy does not operate fighter jets, instead relying on the PAF for aerial maritime strike operations.

This creates additional problems for the PAF, which is tasked with confronting the IAF along its long vulnerable eastern border as well as countering the Indian Navy’s air arm on the southern coast. The PAF’s problem of diverting much-needed air assets to the coast can be resolved by the acquisition of a cost-efficient aerial strike platform for the Pakistan Navy. Given Islamabad’s intimate relationship with China and the economic problems currently gripping the country, acquiring the JH-7 heavy strike fighter can both provide its navy with much needed aerial strike capability as well as free up PAF’s core assets to engage with the IAF for supremacy over the battlefields of Kashmir and Punjab.

The JH-7, while utilizing an old air frame, is a highly effective aircraft for deep strike operations. The jet first flew in 1988 and small numbers were delivered to the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Air Force during the 1990s. An improved version of the JH-7 fighter-bomber, also known by the NATO designation Flounder, began to be inducted in large numbers after 2004, after the Chinese aviation industry was able to indigenously manufacture a derivative of the Rolls Royce Spey engine. The Spey engine was designed specifically by the British for development of a low flying naval strike aircraft to counter the Soviet Navy in the Cold War.

Blackburn Buccaneer, to extract a heavy toll on large Soviet Navy cruisers in a future conflict. The Spey engines were later utilized on the Royal Air Force’s fleet of F-4 Phantoms, giving the aircraft greater range and a shorter takeoff distance.

In addition to their low maintenance and impressive safety record, the Spey engine’s utility lies in the fact that it is designed specifically for sustained low altitude flight below the radar horizon of enemy naval vessels. Despite significant advances in jet engine development since the Cold War, the majority of engines today are designed for mid-to-high altitude flight. Flying at low altitude to avoid radar detection for longer periods thus decreases much of the engines’ range.

The JH-7 also complements the Pakistan Navy’s combat doctrine, which is based on the anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) blueprint. The PN’s three Khalid-class submarines form the linchpin of their A2/AD strategy, with the wartime objective of preventing an attempted blockade of the vital Karachi port by the Indian Navy. Acquisition of the JH -7 by Pakistan would provide Islamabad with lethal capability to considerably limit the maneuvering capacity of the Indian Navy in the proximity of Karachi port.

Also, the JH-7, with its longer combat range, heavy payload capacity, and ability to fly under enemy radar cover provides Islamabad with an offensive capacity targeted at India’s protracted western coastline. Hence, acquisition of the JH-7 by Pakistan serves both defensive and offensive purposes. The improved JH-7A variant currently in service with the PLA Air Force is capable to carry over seven tonnes of armament, including four KD-88/YJ-83 anti-ship missiles.

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The capability to carry long range anti-ship missiles, which can be launched more than 100 miles away from their targets, means that the JH-7 is able to utilize an asymmetric “hit and run” strategy before enemy air defenses can effectively engage with it. This doctrine was perhaps most aptly demonstrated by the Argentine Air Force during the 1982 Falklands War, as French Super Etendard strike aircraft armed with Exocet missiles sank two British warships.

One alternative to the JH-7 for Pakistan is its existing arsenal of cruise missiles, but this option has its own pitfalls. First, cruise missiles follow a predictable trajectory and are vulnerable to interception by India’s air defense network and fighter aircraft such as the Sukhoi 30 MKI. Second, the use of cruise missiles, even in an all-out conflict, presents a significant leap in terms of escalation. As such, a cruise missile attack by either New Delhi or Islamabad can lead to an eventual nuclear exchange.

Having extensive prior experience in operating and maintaining Chinese-built aircraft such as the H-5, J-6, and F-7, acquisition of the JH-7 by Pakistan and its effective combat use for the heavy strike role presents an ideal “stop-gap” solution for the PAF until sufficient numbers of the JF-17 Block 3 are inducted. The Chinese also appear eager to sell much of their JH-7 fleet, showcasing the fighter bomber for sale at air shows such as the China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition. As prospects of inducting foreign jets from Western countries appear bleak, the JH-7 appears to be the PAF’s only viable option to assert itself in a volatile region.

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Ammad Malik is a defense and security analyst based in Lahore, Pakistan. His work focuses on Pakistan’s relationship with the Middle East and issues concerning military strategy.

https://thediplomat.com/2020/05/is-...to-the-pakistan-air-forces-deep-strike-needs/


Yes JH-7 would meet PAF needs as a missile truck in strike role but the debate should be laid to rest as the time for it's induction has passed. Same case for Mirage F-1 was once made as well as it once met PAF needs. Any new platform inducted should be capable of meeting needs for the next 20-30 year which the JH-7 can't do else the investment in support infrastructure is not feasible. As a emergency acquisition since in that scenario finance is irrelevant J-10s get the preference. In case of PAF since the proximity of our potential opponent is next door aircraft ability to defend itself is more important so multirole aircraft suite better.

JH-7
  • Empty weight: 14,500 kg (31,967 lb) [23]
  • Max takeoff weight: 28,475 kg (62,777 lb) [24]
  • Maximum speed: 1,808 km/h (1,123 mph, 976 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.52
  • Combat range: 1,760 km (1,090 mi, 950 nmi) with one in-flight refueling (estimated)
900 km (560 mi; 490 nmi) without refueling (estimated)
  • Service ceiling: 16,000 m (52,000 ft
  • Hardpoints: 9 in total (6× under-wing, 2× wing-tip, 1× under-fuselage) with a capacity of 9,000 kg (20,000 lb) external fuel and ordnance,
Mirage 3/5
  • Empty weight: 7,050 kg (15,543 lb) Mirage 3 and 7,150 kg (15,763 lb) Mirage 5
  • Gross weight: 9,600 kg (21,164 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 13,700 kg (30,203 lb)
  • Maximum speed: 2,350 km/h (1,460 mph, 1,270 kn) at 12,000 m (39,000 ft)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 2.2
  • Combat range: 1,200 km (750 mi, 650 nmi) Mirage 3, 1,250 km (780 mi, 670 nmi) hi-lo-hi profile with 2x 400 kg (882 lb) bombs and max external fuel Mirage 5
  • Ferry range: 3,335 km (2,072 mi, 1,801 nmi)
  • Bombs: 4,000 kg (8,800 lb) of payload on five external hardpoints, including a variety of bombs, reconnaissance pods or Drop tanks;
J-10
  • Empty weight: 9,750 kg (21,495 lb) [56]
  • Gross weight: 12,400 kg (27,337 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 19,277 kg (42,499 lb) [30][56]
  • Range: 3,200 km (2,000 mi, 1,700 nmi) [57][56]
  • Combat range: 1,250 km (780 mi, 670 nmi) [57][56]
  • Maximum speed: Mach 2.2[57][58]
  • Hardpoints: 11 in total (6× under-wing, 2× under-intake and 3× under-fuselage) with a capacity of 7,000 kg (15,400 lb) external fuel and ordnance[29],
JF-17
  • Empty weight: 6,586 kg (14,520 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 12,700 kg (27,999 lb) [196]
  • Fuel capacity: 2,330 kg (5,137 lb) internal fuel; 1 x 800 kg (1,764 lb) centre-line drop tank; 2 x 800 kg (1,764 lb) or 1,100 kg (2,425 lb) under-wing drop tanks
  • Payload: 4,600 kg (10,100 lb) external stores
  • Maximum speed: 2,230 km/h (1,390 mph, 1,200 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.8
  • Cruise speed: 1,359 km/h (844 mph, 734 kn)
  • Stall speed: 150 km/h (93 mph, 81 kn)
  • Never exceed speed: 2,300 km/h (1,400 mph, 1,200 kn)
  • Range: 2,500 km (1,600 mi, 1,300 nmi)
  • Combat range: 1,352 km (840 mi, 730 nmi)
  • Ferry range: 3,500 km (2,200 mi, 1,900 nmi) with 3 external drop tanks

Comparison

Payload: JH-7 is 9000kg, J-10 is 7000kg, JF-17 is 4600kg and Mirage is 4000kg
Combat range: JF-17 is 1,350km, J-10 and Mirage 3 are both 1250km whereas JH-7 is 900km
Speed: @ Mach2.2 Mirage is fastest.

So we can wait for Azm or the J-10C. Till then almost 2 x Mirages/JF-17s can do almost same job as a JH-7 not only are they fast they also have smaller RCS and because of single power plant cheaper to run. Also the ability to carry local made ordinance make them more feasible from a operational and combat cost perspective. In role of precision strike Mirage with electronic updates is pretty much relevant for today. JH-7 only excels in payload and if we really need a missile truck for firing cruise missiles H-6K more sense or in case of PN a customized jet LRMP which already is in the pipeline.
 
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Yes JH-7 would meet PAF needs as a missile truck in strike role but the debate should be laid to rest as the time for it's induction has passed. Same case for Mirage F-1 was once made as well as it once met PAF needs. Any new platform inducted should be capable of meeting needs for the next 20-30 year which the JH-7 can't do else the investment in support infrastructure is not feasible. As a emergency acquisition since in that scenario finance is irrelevant J-10s get the preference. In case of PAF since the proximity of our potential opponent is next door aircraft ability to defend itself is more important so multirole aircraft suite better.

JH-7
  • Empty weight: 14,500 kg (31,967 lb) [23]
  • Max takeoff weight: 28,475 kg (62,777 lb) [24]
  • Maximum speed: 1,808 km/h (1,123 mph, 976 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.52
  • Combat range: 1,760 km (1,090 mi, 950 nmi) with one in-flight refueling (estimated)
900 km (560 mi; 490 nmi) without refueling (estimated)
  • Service ceiling: 16,000 m (52,000 ft
  • Hardpoints: 9 in total (6× under-wing, 2× wing-tip, 1× under-fuselage) with a capacity of 9,000 kg (20,000 lb) external fuel and ordnance,
Mirage 3/5
  • Empty weight: 7,050 kg (15,543 lb) Mirage 3 and 7,150 kg (15,763 lb) Mirage 5
  • Gross weight: 9,600 kg (21,164 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 13,700 kg (30,203 lb)
  • Maximum speed: 2,350 km/h (1,460 mph, 1,270 kn) at 12,000 m (39,000 ft)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 2.2
  • Combat range: 1,200 km (750 mi, 650 nmi) Mirage 3, 1,250 km (780 mi, 670 nmi) hi-lo-hi profile with 2x 400 kg (882 lb) bombs and max external fuel Mirage 5
  • Ferry range: 3,335 km (2,072 mi, 1,801 nmi)
  • Bombs: 4,000 kg (8,800 lb) of payload on five external hardpoints, including a variety of bombs, reconnaissance pods or Drop tanks;
J-10
  • Empty weight: 9,750 kg (21,495 lb) [56]
  • Gross weight: 12,400 kg (27,337 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 19,277 kg (42,499 lb) [30][56]
  • Range: 3,200 km (2,000 mi, 1,700 nmi) [57][56]
  • Combat range: 1,250 km (780 mi, 670 nmi) [57][56]
  • Maximum speed: Mach 2.2[57][58]
  • Hardpoints: 11 in total (6× under-wing, 2× under-intake and 3× under-fuselage) with a capacity of 7,000 kg (15,400 lb) external fuel and ordnance[29],
JF-17
  • Empty weight: 6,586 kg (14,520 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 12,700 kg (27,999 lb) [196]
  • Fuel capacity: 2,330 kg (5,137 lb) internal fuel; 1 x 800 kg (1,764 lb) centre-line drop tank; 2 x 800 kg (1,764 lb) or 1,100 kg (2,425 lb) under-wing drop tanks
  • Payload: 4,600 kg (10,100 lb) external stores
  • Maximum speed: 2,230 km/h (1,390 mph, 1,200 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.8
  • Cruise speed: 1,359 km/h (844 mph, 734 kn)
  • Stall speed: 150 km/h (93 mph, 81 kn)
  • Never exceed speed: 2,300 km/h (1,400 mph, 1,200 kn)
  • Range: 2,500 km (1,600 mi, 1,300 nmi)
  • Combat range: 1,352 km (840 mi, 730 nmi)
  • Ferry range: 3,500 km (2,200 mi, 1,900 nmi) with 3 external drop tanks

Comparison

Payload: JH-7 is 9000kg, J-10 is 7000kg, JF-17 is 4600kg and Mirage is 4000kg
Combat range: JF-17 is 1,350km, J-10 and Mirage 3 are both 1250km whereas JH-7 is 900km
Speed: @ Mach2.2 Mirage is fastest.

So we can wait for Azm or the J-10C. Till then almost 2 x Mirages/JF-17s can do almost same job as a JH-7 not only are they fast they also have smaller RCS and because of single power plant cheaper to run. Also the ability to carry local made ordinance make them more feasible from a operational and combat cost perspective. In role of precision strike Mirage with electronic updates is pretty much relevant for today. JH-7 only excels in payload and if we really need a missile truck for firing cruise missiles H-6K more sense or in case of PN a customized jet LRMP which already is in the pipeline.


These are very basic comparisons that don't reflect that the JH-7 is designed for low level strike. Once u start flying ur compared aircraft low level, watch what happens to range and speed. Not to mention airframe life.
 
These are very basic comparisons that don't reflect that the JH-7 is designed for low level strike. Once u start flying ur compared aircraft low level, watch what happens to range and speed. Not to mention airframe life.
Again something what Mirage does.
Yes basic assumptions but should give a idea on why JH-7 case for PAF is over hyped.
As a Missile truck for cruise missiles PN is working on a better solution and for PAF the J-10 makes better sense. And if we wait it out Azm will offer a low observable and more survivable strike option.
 
YAAR Maulana Saheb.
Bhai we have heard about JH7 from Mastan Khan and if I remember there have been multiple threads on it in the past as well. PAF has evaluated and rejected the JH7. Currently their supply and assembly line has been discontinued so it is a mute subject. PLAAN has moved on from J16 to JXX as they felt that in today's environment even J16 does not cut it(other reasons being financial and technological) and they need a stealth plane. So to restart the supply and assembly line you will have to pour in your money into the project. Can you honestly say that this is a wise thing to do as the JH7 remains a one trick pony and there will be no space in modern day strategy for one trick ponies. Unlike the US encounters against Iraq and VIet Nam, the 2 Air forces are more or less evenly matched. You will not , therefore be able to use the JH7 till you have gained decisive air superiority and even then JH7 will need top cover to do the job you want it to do. The Indian missile defence remains comprehensive and good so get ready to lose men and machines on a mad adventure like this which you cna carry out with missiles as well and possibly more expediently and with more damaging effects(I understand the repercussions of this as well so let us not go down that route). There is so much wrong with this strategy and it is so out of whack with what PAF wants why does this topic keep coming up??????????
A
Sir I am no supporter of J 7 I posted the article not because I support J 7 but I support the debate which is starting on inducting a new better Jet for deep strikes.
 
JH-7
  • Empty weight: 14,500 kg (31,967 lb) [23]
  • Max takeoff weight: 28,475 kg (62,777 lb) [24]
  • Maximum speed: 1,808 km/h (1,123 mph, 976 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.52
  • Combat range: 1,760 km (1,090 mi, 950 nmi) with one in-flight refueling (estimated)
900 km (560 mi; 490 nmi) without refueling (estimated)
  • Service ceiling: 16,000 m (52,000 ft
  • Hardpoints: 9 in total (6× under-wing, 2× wing-tip, 1× under-fuselage) with a capacity of 9,000 kg (20,000 lb) external fuel and ordnance,
Combat range: JF-17 is 1,350km, J-10 and Mirage 3 are both 1250km whereas JH-7 is 900km
It is wrong.

005PydqDly1fyuuyn9bpoj30qo0zkjx3.jpg
 
Long range stand-off weapons and cruise missiles on both sides, as well as SAMs, means that the use of deep strike aircraft will have diminishing relevance in the sub-continent as time goes by. The JH-7 is now an outdated design concept similar to the Panavia Tornado. The only reason why the PAF have kept the Mirage going for so long in the same role is due to the legacy investments in the aircraft type, it's not interested in diverting valuable resources to another defunct and irrelevant design. Not sure why people can't see that, doesn't matter how many threads and posts you make on a forum, the JH-7 simply won't materialise in PAF service. Another example of people chasing their "beliefs", rather than accepting reality.
 
3000 KM and 1200 KM.

JH-7E is the export version of JH-7A, just like J-10CE and PL-10E.


I'm just talking about the information that you provide, instead of what PAF needs better.
I copied from wikipedia, maybe they arn't updated. But thanks for the update.

One question maybe you can answer as couldnt find on internet. Is JH-7 still in production for Chinese military or they've now moved to getting J-16s instead. Upgrades are happening but I'm asking about new units.
 
I copied from wikipedia, maybe they arn't updated. But thanks for the update.
Wikipedia about China's military information has no credibility.
 
Despite its potent display of combat capability during the Balakot standoff, the PAF requires additional platforms to balance against a much larger Indian Air Force.

By Ammad Mailk
May 27, 2020
thediplomat-2020-05-26-7.jpg

Credit: Alert5 via Wikimedia Commons

Amidst sustained tensions between the two nuclear armed South Asian neighbors, the Indian Air Force is scheduled to receive the first batch of four state-of-the-art Rafale fighter jets by the end of July 2020. The 7.87 billion euro Rafale deal between France and New Delhi for a total order of 36 jets was finally inked in September 2016, after much controversy and delay. According to the delivery schedule, the Indian Air Force shall receive all jets by May 2022. Armed with Meteor missiles and a highly sophisticated electronic warfare suite, New Delhi’s Rafale acquisition threatens to tilt the balance of power in South Asia in the IAF’s favor.

The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) has been following the Indian Air Force’s modernization program with keen interest, but budget constraints mean that Islamabad’s chances of acquiring a fighter jet of similar capability are slim. Instead, Pakistan seems to be focusing on the latest variant of its indigenous JF-17 Thunder multi-role fighter.

A prototype of the new JF-17 Block 3 fighter first flew in December 2019 and the jet has since undergone a further period of testing. By inducting an AESA radar-capable Block 3 variant in numbers by 2025, the PAF is confident that it can deny the larger Indian Air Force victory in a future conflict. Numerous reports have also hinted that the Block 3 would be armed with the much vaunted Chinese PL-15 missiles, which out-range everything in the IAF’s inventory, barring the Meteors.

Furthermore, unlike the IAF’s emphasis on induction of new platforms, the Pakistan Air Force has in recent years focused more on weapon systems and sensor upgrades to their existing fleet. This strategy paid dividends during the aerial engagement between the two air forces’ on February 27, 2019, as the PAF successfully infiltrated Indian airspace in Kashmir and managed to shoot down an IAF MiG-21.

However, despite the PAF’s well executed operation in February 2019, the Indian Air Force is equipped with aircraft that are both qualitatively and numerically superior to much of the PAF’s inventory. These include the IAF’s frontline air superiority fighter, the Sukhoi Su-30MKI, and the highly capable Mirage 2000 multirole aircraft. On the other hand, the PAF still relies largely on its limited fleet of F-16 Fighting Falcons as its primary air asset. The PAF has no more than 75 F-16 jets and a significant number of those are of the vintage Block A variant, delivered to Islamabad in the 1980s. Other aircraft include 100-plus JF-17s of the Block 1 and Block 2 variants, as well as a large operational fleet of the 1960s-era Mirage 3 fighter.

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In the event of an all-out conventional war, the PAF’s limited frontline air assets are at risk of getting overstretched. More worryingly for Islamabad, the Indian Navy operates a sizeable independent air arm, which can be utilized in a conflict scenario to target Pakistan’s coastal industrial hub of Karachi. The much smaller Pakistan Navy does not operate fighter jets, instead relying on the PAF for aerial maritime strike operations.

This creates additional problems for the PAF, which is tasked with confronting the IAF along its long vulnerable eastern border as well as countering the Indian Navy’s air arm on the southern coast. The PAF’s problem of diverting much-needed air assets to the coast can be resolved by the acquisition of a cost-efficient aerial strike platform for the Pakistan Navy. Given Islamabad’s intimate relationship with China and the economic problems currently gripping the country, acquiring the JH-7 heavy strike fighter can both provide its navy with much needed aerial strike capability as well as free up PAF’s core assets to engage with the IAF for supremacy over the battlefields of Kashmir and Punjab.

The JH-7, while utilizing an old air frame, is a highly effective aircraft for deep strike operations. The jet first flew in 1988 and small numbers were delivered to the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Air Force during the 1990s. An improved version of the JH-7 fighter-bomber, also known by the NATO designation Flounder, began to be inducted in large numbers after 2004, after the Chinese aviation industry was able to indigenously manufacture a derivative of the Rolls Royce Spey engine. The Spey engine was designed specifically by the British for development of a low flying naval strike aircraft to counter the Soviet Navy in the Cold War.

Blackburn Buccaneer, to extract a heavy toll on large Soviet Navy cruisers in a future conflict. The Spey engines were later utilized on the Royal Air Force’s fleet of F-4 Phantoms, giving the aircraft greater range and a shorter takeoff distance.

In addition to their low maintenance and impressive safety record, the Spey engine’s utility lies in the fact that it is designed specifically for sustained low altitude flight below the radar horizon of enemy naval vessels. Despite significant advances in jet engine development since the Cold War, the majority of engines today are designed for mid-to-high altitude flight. Flying at low altitude to avoid radar detection for longer periods thus decreases much of the engines’ range.

The JH-7 also complements the Pakistan Navy’s combat doctrine, which is based on the anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) blueprint. The PN’s three Khalid-class submarines form the linchpin of their A2/AD strategy, with the wartime objective of preventing an attempted blockade of the vital Karachi port by the Indian Navy. Acquisition of the JH -7 by Pakistan would provide Islamabad with lethal capability to considerably limit the maneuvering capacity of the Indian Navy in the proximity of Karachi port.

Also, the JH-7, with its longer combat range, heavy payload capacity, and ability to fly under enemy radar cover provides Islamabad with an offensive capacity targeted at India’s protracted western coastline. Hence, acquisition of the JH-7 by Pakistan serves both defensive and offensive purposes. The improved JH-7A variant currently in service with the PLA Air Force is capable to carry over seven tonnes of armament, including four KD-88/YJ-83 anti-ship missiles.

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The capability to carry long range anti-ship missiles, which can be launched more than 100 miles away from their targets, means that the JH-7 is able to utilize an asymmetric “hit and run” strategy before enemy air defenses can effectively engage with it. This doctrine was perhaps most aptly demonstrated by the Argentine Air Force during the 1982 Falklands War, as French Super Etendard strike aircraft armed with Exocet missiles sank two British warships.

One alternative to the JH-7 for Pakistan is its existing arsenal of cruise missiles, but this option has its own pitfalls. First, cruise missiles follow a predictable trajectory and are vulnerable to interception by India’s air defense network and fighter aircraft such as the Sukhoi 30 MKI. Second, the use of cruise missiles, even in an all-out conflict, presents a significant leap in terms of escalation. As such, a cruise missile attack by either New Delhi or Islamabad can lead to an eventual nuclear exchange.

Having extensive prior experience in operating and maintaining Chinese-built aircraft such as the H-5, J-6, and F-7, acquisition of the JH-7 by Pakistan and its effective combat use for the heavy strike role presents an ideal “stop-gap” solution for the PAF until sufficient numbers of the JF-17 Block 3 are inducted. The Chinese also appear eager to sell much of their JH-7 fleet, showcasing the fighter bomber for sale at air shows such as the China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition. As prospects of inducting foreign jets from Western countries appear bleak, the JH-7 appears to be the PAF’s only viable option to assert itself in a volatile region.

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.

Ammad Malik is a defense and security analyst based in Lahore, Pakistan. His work focuses on Pakistan’s relationship with the Middle East and issues concerning military strategy.

https://thediplomat.com/2020/05/is-...to-the-pakistan-air-forces-deep-strike-needs/
Not this crap again....NOOOOO
 
Deep strike bombers are useless in a highly contested airspace with scores of AD platforms and air assets looking to hunt you down. PAF will have to assign a number of aircraft to protect these assets (SEAD,Escort).

Also, India keeps promoting the Karachi blockade to the detriment of Pakistan. PNis then left to think defensively. India needs to be sent a message that blockading Karachi would mean ballistic missiles heading to Mumbai; not diplomatically, but directly.
Brother, i didnt mean we need deep strike aircraft, what i meant was to have a platform like J-16 to be used as a launch platform for carrying a couple of long range CMs (~1500 km). For example, the Tomahawks currently have no aerial platforms to launch, yet in Japan the idea is gaining ground already. Check this article out.

https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zo...its-f-15j-eagles-into-cruise-missile-carriers

A platform using 1500+ km range of CMs launched from within our airspace would be able to directly hit Indian ships anchored even in mumbai harbour and land targets deep inside India and at a pinpoint accuracy.

To be honest nothing on the surface of sea on India's western flank would be out of bounds by such an arrangement.

No IN aircraft carrier would dare to come to its western flank (not even in home ports!) knowing it could be targeted from within our airspace 1500 km away! Imagine the affect on the morale alone! And its all conventional!!!!

More importantly it would add another conventional yet powerful step in our escalation ladder.

All this might be bullshit that i mentioned here, the idea is just to get out of this box mentality of ours, and search for newer avenues to strech the horizon of our possibilites.

The earlier we come out of this Amritsar, Ludhiana, Bhuj or Jodhpur mentality, the better. After 70+ years, rather we should now be much more often talking about Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata and Chennai.

We should be able to raise costs for India so high (in conventional war and aside the land based BMs and CMs) that they give their thoughts a second and third chance! Thats the beauty of deterrence!

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