gambit
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If you had actually READ up on the Vietnam War instead of trying to pass the impression that you know anything about it, you would have known that the majority of USAF losses in Vietnam were because of ground anti-aircraft efforts, not from air-air combat. Even wiki has it...I agree that with superior tactics any air force can beat the best. I guess you would be knowing that from the Veitnam war where a inferior air force totally " ran over " USA's air force, i dont need to give you the facts for that. I guess if you want to compare Russian and usa fighters you can go over the Vietnam war and see what happened there. What Russian mig-21's did to the usa air force is world known fact and i guess i dont need to stress more on the fact that you cannot just write off the Russian planes in front of usa tech.
Aircraft losses of the Vietnam War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What the North Vietnamese did with what little air force they had was pure hit-and-run tactic due to the USAF's overwhelming numerical superiority, and even when the NVA had the formidable Mig-21 the targets were the less maneuverable fighter-bomber F-105, which was the workhorse of the USAF in Vietnam. It was widely believed that without Chinese or even Soviet pilots the North Vietnamese would have nearly nothing to boast about regarding air combat.There were a great many aircraft losses during the Vietnam War. Hundreds of U.S. fixed-wing aircraft were lost to ground fire of antiaircraft artillery (AAA), surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), and fighter interceptors (MiG)s. The great majority of U.S. combat losses in all areas of Southeast Asia were to AAA. The Royal Australian Air Force also flew combat and airlift missions in South Vietnam, as did the Republic of Vietnam. Among fixed-wing aircraft, more F-4 Phantoms were lost than any other type in service with any nation.
Here are a couple of items for your further education...
Robin Olds - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Operation Bolo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Vietnam War at large and Operation Bolo in particular are instructive that despite the factor of numerical superiority, the nature of aerial combat consistently encourages one-on-one engagement and this is where superior airmanship and creative tactics are proven to be apolitical, meaning the side that has an abundance of superior airmanship and creative tactics will win, not necessarily through superior numbers. The Mig-21 has superior maneuverability over the F-4 but the American pilots possessed superior airmanship with their training, which forced the Mig-21 pilots to either engage the heavier F-4 but with superior speed advantage, or to break off the fight and run. Operation Bolo was a harsh lesson for the North Vietnamese, Chinese and Soviets. I suggest you cast aside personal biases and start being more objective before making these comments that contradict history.Of the 16 MiG-21s known to be in the VPAF inventory, 11 to 14 had been engaged (depending on the source), with 7 destroyed and two others probably shot down (by Combies and Maj. Herman L. Knapp, Rambler 03).
For the North Vietnamese (and their Soviet allies who supplied the MiG-21 aircraft and helped set up the integrated air defense network), the two reverses forced them to husband their assets by grounding the MiGs for several months for retraining and devising of new tactics.
The difference between a bullet and a radar pulse is that no one die with a radar pulse. In Electronic Warfare, we consider a radar pulse to be as 'lethal' to the body as a bullet, with the benefit that no human die in our battles. In that, we EWarriors take our crafts no less serious than other branches of the military. Because no one dies in our battles, EW is constantly fought in any part of the world by any military, usually without the public's knowledge. The outcomes are always 'classified' super-duper ultra secret. You are entitled to your opinions, but not your facts, as the old saying goes. Opinions should be based upon facts, not as replacements for facts. The fact is that the B-2 and F-22 have faced more 'real' enemies than you think, even before their first flights...Again i am not saying that USA tech is not gud but the f-22 and jsf are still very much unproven and by my opinion highly over-rated, They have yet to face a "real enemy" and only then we can see what they are capable off.
The above is called a 'radar range'. The facility itself is often mistaken for a small airport from the air. Full size models are mounted in various angles and they are bombarded with radar pulses from many positions. Baseline RCS figures are established, predictions are made as to how the models should fare in flight and finally correlate against actual 'real world' data. The B-2 and F-22 flies with radar transponders to mask their true RCS and to assist air traffic controllers regarding their locations in the sky. This was done worldwide with all types of equipments, civilian and military. It cannot get any more 'real' than this. The only thing left are real missiles and bullets and we leave them to others to worry about. American 'stealth' aircrafts have elevated EW to a new level and for now we are winning. Your fellow Indians should be glad that India's generals are not as shortsighted as you have shown here so far.
Going back to Operation Bolo above...In combat, not just in the air, you win by forcing your opponent to fight by your rules, not by you obeying his. Advantages are rules and the Su-30 does not possess all the rules. Even so...The extremes of air combat does not allow the pilot much time seize the moment when his opponent fell into disadvantage. If you actually read any honest pilot accounts from past wars, you will find no shortage of instances where advantages were gained and equally rapidly lost. So it is intellectually dishonest to demand a blanket dismissal of variables that could force a flight of Indian Su-30s into fighting under Pakistani JF-17s' rules. The Americans in Operation Bolo did not have airborne radars or much of the modern day assistance. They had only their training and cunning. This is not an auto race where everyone get together for a party after the contest. This is a fight to the death, cheating is allowed and the loser die a spectacular death.I think we are loosing sight of this thread, this is about jf-17 vs the MKI. And on that aspect when you said that superior tactics can win then you are using variable to compare aircrafts. We should only compare the MKI with the jf-17 one on one not using awacs or military planning or w.e. because it makes no sense. I have been saying this again and again dont using scenarios and variables to compare them. Im sure that you have enough knowledge of jets to say clearly that when comparing the jf-17 to the MKI "one on one " without any variables, the MKI wins hands on, just like how if we compare a j-7 to a f22, there is no comparison there also. I hope you agree with me but again i really enjoyed your post.