Xeric
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This discussion will give us a fair idea about the indian capability and our response to it. The article is distributed in different posts. It contains headlines and news from different sources and also shows a 'dialogue' sorta response and counter-responses...
Please follow the complete article for proper comprehension.
Important of all this not for flame bait.
Indian members are welcome to give a response and prove otherwise.
The discussion of the IAF vs. the PAF is as old as Pakistan vs. India. The PAF with the induction of the new F-16s and the JF-17 Thunder is in good shape. A new factor that has entered the theater is the induction of missiles. Whereas previous Indo-Pakistan wars depended on aircraft and army mobilizations, now the scene has changed. Missiles have transformed the landscape. First some background of the PAF.
Pakistan Air Force
Combat Aircraft------Numbers----Serviceability---Combat Effectiveness---Aggregate Combat Value
.F-16------------------44-----------90% ----------- 0.9-------------------35.64
.JF-17-----------------17------------95% -----------0.93----------------15.0195
.F-7 PG ---------------55 ------------85% -----------0.75 ---------------35.0625
.F-7 MP/P--------------105-----------70%-------------0.7------------------51.45
.Mirage Rose ------------125 ---------70%------------0.8--------------------70
.Mirages - other-----------20----------60%------------0.7--------------------8.4
.A-5III/C ‘Fantan’---------40------------50%------------0.25-------------------5
.Total-------------------406 ----------72.78% --------0.72---------------220.572
.Indian Air Force
Combat Aircraft------Numbers----Serviceability---Combat Effectiveness---Aggregate Combat Value
.Su-30 MKI -------------100 -----------70% ----------0.99 --------------69.3
.Mirage 2000H/TH Vajra----51 -----------80%-----------0.9 --------------36.72
.Jaguar S(I) Shamsher-----139 ----------75%-----------0.6---------------62.55
.Mig-29/UB Baaz-----------62 ----------50%-----------0.8---------------24.8
.Mig-27 Bahadur -----------130 ---------50%----------0.55-------------35.75
.MiG-21 Bison --------------120----------60%----------0.75-------------54
.MiG-21 Bis------------------56----------50% ---------0.3---------------- 8.4
.MiG-21 M/MF---------------80-----------50%------------0.25-------------10
.Total------------------------738 -----------61.12%-------0.65------------301.52
.
.Capability Gap ------------36.70% --- (relative to PAF)
.Numbers Gap -------------81.77% --- (relative to PAF)
.Serviceability Gap ---------Minus16.03% --- (relative to PAF)
.Combat Effectiveness Gap-Minus 10.94% --- (relative to PAF)
The violation of Pakistani air space by Indian jets recently has given everyone a lot to be excited about. Everyone from every walk of life has had an opinion about it. Still it was when I saw a senior corporate lawyer suddenly transform into a TV expert on international law and its application to military aviation that I decided enough is enough, I need to jump in. After all, in the past I had pursued with some amount of seriousness the dream of joining the ranks of the Pakistan Air Force before I abandoned it for education abroad. Every now and then the PAF Warrior asleep somewhere deep inside yawns and tries to rise up from deep slumber. These are his ramblings.
There is no Pakistani worth his salt who is not proud of our Air Force–perhaps one of the few institutions that have truly lived up to the finest aspirations of the new nation that was founded in 1947. It is a truly merit-based institution that has served the nation with the devotion and integrity that is becoming of a truly professional fighting force. As was true of the whole country in 1947, RPAF too faced scarce supplies and, at partition, a deliberate kick in the pants from the Indians, who had choked the engines of RPAF planes with sugar. It also survived the great ego battle of two Englishmen, the commander in chief of Pakistan’s Army, General Gracey, and the Air Chief, Air Vice Marshal R L Atcherley, with the former holding the view that the RPAF’s only conceivable role would be to act more or less as the aviation wing of the Pakistan Army–i.e, air support to ground operations. Thankfully, the view of Air Vice Marshal Atcherley prevailed and the PAF became arguably the most efficient fighting arm of our state.
In 1965, the PAF was able to retain air superiority over India by retaining the element of surprise and scaring the living daylights out of Indian pilots by strategic use of the dozen F-104 Star Fighters in aid of the F-86 Sabres. In 1971, the war that was lost politically and on the ground, the PAF still came out on top with more than three times the number of kills than its Indian rivals. In his autobiography, renowned American pilot Chuck Yeager, the then attaché to Pakistan, wrote, “PAF is second to none… the air war lasted two weeks and the Pakistanis scored a three-to-one kill ratio, knocking out 102 Russian-made Indian jets and losing thirty four airplanes of their own… they were really good aggressive dogfighters and proficient in gunnery and air combat tactics. I was damned impressed. Those guys just lived and breathed flying.” Despite the numerical disadvantage, the PAF managed to keep up with the IAF over the first four decades since Pakistan’s inception through superior pilot training, as well as aircrafts which had qualitative edge over Indian planes. This prompted another American, Lt Gen Charles Horner, the architect of the air segment of the Gulf War, to declare that “Pakistan has one of the best most combat ready air forces in the world… For the Indian war planners, the Pakistan Air Force is their worst fear. Pakistani pilots are respected throughout the world…because they know how to fly and fight.''
Please follow the complete article for proper comprehension.
Important of all this not for flame bait.
Indian members are welcome to give a response and prove otherwise.
The discussion of the IAF vs. the PAF is as old as Pakistan vs. India. The PAF with the induction of the new F-16s and the JF-17 Thunder is in good shape. A new factor that has entered the theater is the induction of missiles. Whereas previous Indo-Pakistan wars depended on aircraft and army mobilizations, now the scene has changed. Missiles have transformed the landscape. First some background of the PAF.
Pakistan Air Force
Combat Aircraft------Numbers----Serviceability---Combat Effectiveness---Aggregate Combat Value
.F-16------------------44-----------90% ----------- 0.9-------------------35.64
.JF-17-----------------17------------95% -----------0.93----------------15.0195
.F-7 PG ---------------55 ------------85% -----------0.75 ---------------35.0625
.F-7 MP/P--------------105-----------70%-------------0.7------------------51.45
.Mirage Rose ------------125 ---------70%------------0.8--------------------70
.Mirages - other-----------20----------60%------------0.7--------------------8.4
.A-5III/C ‘Fantan’---------40------------50%------------0.25-------------------5
.Total-------------------406 ----------72.78% --------0.72---------------220.572
.Indian Air Force
Combat Aircraft------Numbers----Serviceability---Combat Effectiveness---Aggregate Combat Value
.Su-30 MKI -------------100 -----------70% ----------0.99 --------------69.3
.Mirage 2000H/TH Vajra----51 -----------80%-----------0.9 --------------36.72
.Jaguar S(I) Shamsher-----139 ----------75%-----------0.6---------------62.55
.Mig-29/UB Baaz-----------62 ----------50%-----------0.8---------------24.8
.Mig-27 Bahadur -----------130 ---------50%----------0.55-------------35.75
.MiG-21 Bison --------------120----------60%----------0.75-------------54
.MiG-21 Bis------------------56----------50% ---------0.3---------------- 8.4
.MiG-21 M/MF---------------80-----------50%------------0.25-------------10
.Total------------------------738 -----------61.12%-------0.65------------301.52
.
.Capability Gap ------------36.70% --- (relative to PAF)
.Numbers Gap -------------81.77% --- (relative to PAF)
.Serviceability Gap ---------Minus16.03% --- (relative to PAF)
.Combat Effectiveness Gap-Minus 10.94% --- (relative to PAF)
The violation of Pakistani air space by Indian jets recently has given everyone a lot to be excited about. Everyone from every walk of life has had an opinion about it. Still it was when I saw a senior corporate lawyer suddenly transform into a TV expert on international law and its application to military aviation that I decided enough is enough, I need to jump in. After all, in the past I had pursued with some amount of seriousness the dream of joining the ranks of the Pakistan Air Force before I abandoned it for education abroad. Every now and then the PAF Warrior asleep somewhere deep inside yawns and tries to rise up from deep slumber. These are his ramblings.
There is no Pakistani worth his salt who is not proud of our Air Force–perhaps one of the few institutions that have truly lived up to the finest aspirations of the new nation that was founded in 1947. It is a truly merit-based institution that has served the nation with the devotion and integrity that is becoming of a truly professional fighting force. As was true of the whole country in 1947, RPAF too faced scarce supplies and, at partition, a deliberate kick in the pants from the Indians, who had choked the engines of RPAF planes with sugar. It also survived the great ego battle of two Englishmen, the commander in chief of Pakistan’s Army, General Gracey, and the Air Chief, Air Vice Marshal R L Atcherley, with the former holding the view that the RPAF’s only conceivable role would be to act more or less as the aviation wing of the Pakistan Army–i.e, air support to ground operations. Thankfully, the view of Air Vice Marshal Atcherley prevailed and the PAF became arguably the most efficient fighting arm of our state.
In 1965, the PAF was able to retain air superiority over India by retaining the element of surprise and scaring the living daylights out of Indian pilots by strategic use of the dozen F-104 Star Fighters in aid of the F-86 Sabres. In 1971, the war that was lost politically and on the ground, the PAF still came out on top with more than three times the number of kills than its Indian rivals. In his autobiography, renowned American pilot Chuck Yeager, the then attaché to Pakistan, wrote, “PAF is second to none… the air war lasted two weeks and the Pakistanis scored a three-to-one kill ratio, knocking out 102 Russian-made Indian jets and losing thirty four airplanes of their own… they were really good aggressive dogfighters and proficient in gunnery and air combat tactics. I was damned impressed. Those guys just lived and breathed flying.” Despite the numerical disadvantage, the PAF managed to keep up with the IAF over the first four decades since Pakistan’s inception through superior pilot training, as well as aircrafts which had qualitative edge over Indian planes. This prompted another American, Lt Gen Charles Horner, the architect of the air segment of the Gulf War, to declare that “Pakistan has one of the best most combat ready air forces in the world… For the Indian war planners, the Pakistan Air Force is their worst fear. Pakistani pilots are respected throughout the world…because they know how to fly and fight.''
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