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Rafale Jets Won’t Save India’s Air Force

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Rafale Jets Won’t Save India’s Air Force
Thanks to decades of underinvestment, the force has lost its edge over its increasingly aggressive rivals. A few more planes won’t fix that.
BY HARSH V. PANT, ANGAD SINGH | AUGUST 10, 2020, 11:18 AM

GettyImages-rafale-jet-1195295140.jpg


The first five of India’s new Rafale fighter aircraft touched down in country on July 29. According to the terms of a 2016 contract with the French manufacturer Dassault, 31 more will follow. They will go some way toward filling India’s larger requirement of 126 such jets. The Indian Air Force has long needed refurbishing, but it has been perennially delayed both by New Delhi’s infamous bureaucratic red tape and by budgetary issues. Now, the arrival of the new fighters—the first in over 20 years—in the middle of an unprecedented border face-off against China, will be a boost for Indian military capability as well as morale. But it won’t do much to change the hard reality that, as an air power, India is falling far behind.

The Indian Air Force has historically been one of the best-equipped air forces in the region, but it has seen its advantage, both qualitative and quantitative, against China and Pakistan narrow dramatically over the past two decades. Even worse, it now faces the challenge of mustering enough aircraft to tackle any possible collusion between the Pakistani and Chinese air forces. Related to tensions in Ladakh, China seems to be activating air platforms in its Tibetan airfields. And along the border with Pakistan, the Pakistan Air Force recently conducted an air exercise out of the Skardu base in Gilgit-Baltistan. Taken together, those are tough challenges for an underequipped air force to take on.

The Rafale may help somewhat. After decades of fielding upgraded legacy fighters and struggling to develop contemporary jets, the Rafale finally provides the Indian Air Force with a comprehensive combat craft that requires very little further tinkering. Unlike any previous procurements, the Rafale fighters’ capabilities are already up to par, and small enhancements will be relatively easy and cheap via the so-called India-specific enhancements.

These India-specific changes are being carried out under a concurrent design, modification, testing, and certification program carried out by Dassault. The modifications involve a mix of hardware and software changes, including an improved infrared search-and-track capability, the addition of an Israeli helmet-mounted display and sight system, changes to the electronically scanned radar, a new device for jamming low-band radio frequencies, integration of an Israeli-created decoy system, an upgraded radar altimeter, expanded navigation aids, and a more robust cold start system for the engines to make them suitable for winter operations from the Air Force’s Himalayan bases. Once all changes are tested and certified in 2021, the entire Indian Rafale fleet will be updated. This allows Dassault to keep producing fighters at an economical rate and the Air Force to induct jets and train personnel in an organized manner, while still ensuring that the final aircraft does not compromise on the original capability requirements.

Technical merits aside, India’s order for only 36 Rafale jets was clearly a bow to fiscal realities.

Technical merits aside, India’s order for only 36 Rafale jets was clearly a bow to fiscal realities. And, on its own, the fleet will not fix India’s comparatively diminished air capabilities. Against a government-approved strength of 42 fighter squadrons, the Indian Air Force currently operates only 31. By 2024, the force will shed the last of its MiG-21 squadrons and add only two or three replacement squadrons over the same period, taking the Air Force down to 30 squadrons as it approaches the quarter mark of this century. Yet the length of India’s restive borders has not changed, nor has the scale of the military challenge posed by Pakistan and China. No matter how advanced the Rafale or how effective its long-range weaponry, the addition of 36 jets will not dramatically alter the balance of power in the region.


After all, China’s Western Theater Command that directly faces India comprises some 200 fighter aircraft, a mix of legacy and modern types. While not a large number, and certainly hampered by the limited number of usable bases close to the border with India, the flexibility inherent to all air power means that a large portion of the rest of the People’s Liberation Army Air Force could be brought to bear against Indian forces in short order should the need arise. The Pakistan Air Force, similarly comprising a mix of older and newer aircraft, has around 350 fighters it can put up against India. Unlike China, Pakistan has few operating restrictions relating to bases and aircraft performance. Taken together, as all worst-case Indian military planning scenarios do, the Pakistani and Chinese air forces far outnumber India’s and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. More crucially, both these air forces operate a greater number of airborne tankers and early-warning surveillance aircraft than the Air Force. These so-called force multipliers dramatically increase the combat effectiveness of tactical fighters by extending their range or endurance and improving situational awareness in the aerial battlespace.

The Indian Air Force has repeatedly sought to invest in its own force multipliers but has always ended up stymied by funding issues or procurement rules. While budgetary pressures are unavoidable, particularly in recent years as Indian economic growth has slowed, the Air Force has been bereft of comprehensive and sustainable recapitalization efforts for the better part of 20 years. A troop level-focused, army-centric approach to national defense has denied the air and maritime branches not only financial support but also the political attention key to pushing through reforms and procurements that would address long-standing capability issues. As China moves toward a leaner, more technology-centric military, India will have no choice but to force through changes in its own military to keep pace. If not, Ladakh might be the first of many confrontations where New Delhi is forced to cede ground to Beijing.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/08/10/rafale-jets-wont-save-indias-air-force/
 
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It’s true that these 5 planes won’t do much. But Indians hang their hope on this plane after thrashing from Pakistan last Feb 27th. Can’t blaming them for making a hoopla on this plane as they know that Pakistan shot down more than the MiG-21...

Of course Indians still cling on to their fictional victory of shooting down a F-16. But everyone else and the Indian leadership knows that is baloney. Just like how they made up Chinese casualties On June 15th.
 
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Rafale Jets Won’t Save India’s Air Force
Thanks to decades of underinvestment, the force has lost its edge over its increasingly aggressive rivals. A few more planes won’t fix that.
BY HARSH V. PANT, ANGAD SINGH | AUGUST 10, 2020, 11:18 AM

GettyImages-rafale-jet-1195295140.jpg


The first five of India’s new Rafale fighter aircraft touched down in country on July 29. According to the terms of a 2016 contract with the French manufacturer Dassault, 31 more will follow. They will go some way toward filling India’s larger requirement of 126 such jets. The Indian Air Force has long needed refurbishing, but it has been perennially delayed both by New Delhi’s infamous bureaucratic red tape and by budgetary issues. Now, the arrival of the new fighters—the first in over 20 years—in the middle of an unprecedented border face-off against China, will be a boost for Indian military capability as well as morale. But it won’t do much to change the hard reality that, as an air power, India is falling far behind.

The Indian Air Force has historically been one of the best-equipped air forces in the region, but it has seen its advantage, both qualitative and quantitative, against China and Pakistan narrow dramatically over the past two decades. Even worse, it now faces the challenge of mustering enough aircraft to tackle any possible collusion between the Pakistani and Chinese air forces. Related to tensions in Ladakh, China seems to be activating air platforms in its Tibetan airfields. And along the border with Pakistan, the Pakistan Air Force recently conducted an air exercise out of the Skardu base in Gilgit-Baltistan. Taken together, those are tough challenges for an underequipped air force to take on.

The Rafale may help somewhat. After decades of fielding upgraded legacy fighters and struggling to develop contemporary jets, the Rafale finally provides the Indian Air Force with a comprehensive combat craft that requires very little further tinkering. Unlike any previous procurements, the Rafale fighters’ capabilities are already up to par, and small enhancements will be relatively easy and cheap via the so-called India-specific enhancements.

These India-specific changes are being carried out under a concurrent design, modification, testing, and certification program carried out by Dassault. The modifications involve a mix of hardware and software changes, including an improved infrared search-and-track capability, the addition of an Israeli helmet-mounted display and sight system, changes to the electronically scanned radar, a new device for jamming low-band radio frequencies, integration of an Israeli-created decoy system, an upgraded radar altimeter, expanded navigation aids, and a more robust cold start system for the engines to make them suitable for winter operations from the Air Force’s Himalayan bases. Once all changes are tested and certified in 2021, the entire Indian Rafale fleet will be updated. This allows Dassault to keep producing fighters at an economical rate and the Air Force to induct jets and train personnel in an organized manner, while still ensuring that the final aircraft does not compromise on the original capability requirements.

Technical merits aside, India’s order for only 36 Rafale jets was clearly a bow to fiscal realities.

Technical merits aside, India’s order for only 36 Rafale jets was clearly a bow to fiscal realities. And, on its own, the fleet will not fix India’s comparatively diminished air capabilities. Against a government-approved strength of 42 fighter squadrons, the Indian Air Force currently operates only 31. By 2024, the force will shed the last of its MiG-21 squadrons and add only two or three replacement squadrons over the same period, taking the Air Force down to 30 squadrons as it approaches the quarter mark of this century. Yet the length of India’s restive borders has not changed, nor has the scale of the military challenge posed by Pakistan and China. No matter how advanced the Rafale or how effective its long-range weaponry, the addition of 36 jets will not dramatically alter the balance of power in the region.


After all, China’s Western Theater Command that directly faces India comprises some 200 fighter aircraft, a mix of legacy and modern types. While not a large number, and certainly hampered by the limited number of usable bases close to the border with India, the flexibility inherent to all air power means that a large portion of the rest of the People’s Liberation Army Air Force could be brought to bear against Indian forces in short order should the need arise. The Pakistan Air Force, similarly comprising a mix of older and newer aircraft, has around 350 fighters it can put up against India. Unlike China, Pakistan has few operating restrictions relating to bases and aircraft performance. Taken together, as all worst-case Indian military planning scenarios do, the Pakistani and Chinese air forces far outnumber India’s and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. More crucially, both these air forces operate a greater number of airborne tankers and early-warning surveillance aircraft than the Air Force. These so-called force multipliers dramatically increase the combat effectiveness of tactical fighters by extending their range or endurance and improving situational awareness in the aerial battlespace.

The Indian Air Force has repeatedly sought to invest in its own force multipliers but has always ended up stymied by funding issues or procurement rules. While budgetary pressures are unavoidable, particularly in recent years as Indian economic growth has slowed, the Air Force has been bereft of comprehensive and sustainable recapitalization efforts for the better part of 20 years. A troop level-focused, army-centric approach to national defense has denied the air and maritime branches not only financial support but also the political attention key to pushing through reforms and procurements that would address long-standing capability issues. As China moves toward a leaner, more technology-centric military, India will have no choice but to force through changes in its own military to keep pace. If not, Ladakh might be the first of many confrontations where New Delhi is forced to cede ground to Beijing.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/08/10/rafale-jets-wont-save-indias-air-force/

the main problem with rafale it eats up funds from other acquisition types ...

is it a silver bullet?..

no..

but does it help?... i dont know

IAF main enemy is PAF. PAF is smart , talented and hard working air-force. It has a uncanny ability to some how match IAF not in terms of numbers but off set it.

Indians always live in delusion superiority..

- 1971 their "victory" in east Pakistan made them think Pakistan can never challenge them -
- 1974 their nuke test deluded them in thinking Pakistan can never make or acquire the bomb..
- 1980s their purchase of Mirage 2000 made them hit cloud # 9.. a few years later Pakistan received F-16s.. blunting their advantage
- 1996 - they acquired S0-30s & BVRs ten years later we got the F-16 block 52s..
- they bought thousands of tanks we bought even more anti tank weapons

it is vicious circle that some how Pakistan armed forces are able to blunt..

now go figure what the Chinese can do...
 
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Even if India get all 36 Rafale tomorrow. They will not used them in war for at least 2 years. Pilots needs Time to master the machine. Other fighter jets needs to synchronized with technology of Rafale for effectiveness.

Main question is will Russia allow India to connect Rafale with Russian AWACS, MIGs, Su and other Russian radars.?
All those Rafales which India spent billions on could be lost in the first day of the combat, the second day IAF will switch back to Mig.21s
 
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Main question is will Russia allow India to connect Rafale with Russian AWACS, MIGs, Su and other Russian radars.?

Very good point, and not one considered as far at this forum goes. I guess they would have to adopt the same model that Pakistan has, where all data has to flow via relays/gateways etc.
 
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the main problem with rafale it eats up funds from other acquisition types ...

is it a silver bullet?..

no..

but does it help?... i dont know

IAF main enemy is PAF. PAF is smart , talented and hard working air-force. It has a uncanny ability to some how match IAF not in terms of numbers but off set it.

Indians always live in delusion superiority..

- 1971 their "victory" in east Pakistan made them think Pakistan can never challenge them -
- 1974 their nuke test deluded them in thinking Pakistan can never make or acquire the bomb..
- 1980s their purchase of Mirage 2000 made them hit cloud # 9.. a few years later Pakistan received F-16s.. blunting their advantage
- 1996 - they acquired S0-30s & BVRs ten years later we got the F-16 block 52s..
- they bought thousands of tanks we bought even more anti tank weapons

it is vicious circle that some how Pakistan armed forces are able to blunt..

now go figure what the Chinese can do...

We need to stop chasing the Indians as a reactive and actually take the initiative for once bhai
 
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We need to stop chasing the Indians as a reactive and actually take the initiative for once bhai


You need to stop posting as a Pakiee living in sydney driving a car made by soon to be unemployed aussie bottlers..
 
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If 5 Rafale jets can save india, then the French air force can shot down the sun and rule the universe...lol...
 
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If 5 Rafale jets can save india, then the French air force can shot down the sun and rule the universe...lol...
The Indian obsession with the latest foreign imported aircraft is absolutely crazy ... a couple of years ago, all the Indians did was drool over the Su-57/FGFA. Now the Rafael has completely replaced the FGFA on that pedestal which the Indians worship ... meanwhile the FGFA is never to be heard from or talked about ever again.
 
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Rafale become another one of the zillion gods among Indians, along with rats, snakes and such.
 
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