krash
MODERATOR
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2009
- Messages
- 5,885
- Reaction score
- 29
- Country
- Location
I am starting this thread in order to try and settle, once and for all, a ludicrous argument which has been, quit frankly, very annoying for the past many days. However my patience has run all but out for the posters on this forum and hence I request (read: demand) that any replies that may follow this post must be absent of any childish, absurd or ill-thought-out arguments. Read what is and what will be written here carefully, read it again and then try to formulate an educated and an intelligent response. All the points of argument that I am about to present are not new. They have been presented again and again but due to the persistence from some of our fellow members to completely ignore them ill post them here one more time.
Arguments as to why the Thunder is not a good investment viz-a-viz the PAF in light of the IAF:
From what I've read it seems to me (correct me if im wrong) that the primary premise being given behind this argument revolves around the fact that "the Thunder cannot match the enemies draw i.e. MKI/Rafael" and so the Pakistan Airforce should have gone searching the foreign markets looking for a solution. As is apparent, this argument is overly simplistic, extremely ingenuous and blind to many other factors surrounding the PAF-IAF scenario and the Thunder itself.
Firstly all the people who's concept and knowledge of warfare spouts from the hit strategy title Generals would be well advised to start reading some good books on the subject before posting. Any good book on the battles fought over Europe during the second World War would be a good start. Let me also assure them that in any plausible future air war scenario the Thunder will never be put against the MKI/Rafael mano-a-mano, barring any freak occurrences. The Thunder will be supported with a gang of other birds watching it's back and every move that the enemy would and could make. The vice-versa will hold just as true.http://www.defence.pk/forums/pakist...e-invested-more-j-10s-rather-than-jf-17s.html This is to say that the Thunder and the MKI/Rafael will be cogs in their respective machines rather than the machines themselves, cards in a hand rather than the hand itself. One hand will be played against the other; the PAF will be played against the IAF. All will depend on how well the hand is played and how the table unfolds. It does not simply depend on how well one card or every card is matched to one card or every card of the other. Warfare is hardly ever that boring or that simplistic. And what it is not is a simple number game. All the maneuverability of the Gnat couldn't save it from the lumbering and obsolete Saber, all the sonic booms couldn't save the Fishbeds from the dumb bombs (heck they never saw any combat) and all the might of the IAF couldn't hold back the minuscule PAF. Warfare, though gruesome and distasteful, is never artless. It is a playing field for artists such as Hannibal, Salahuddin and Subodai. It is where the brilliance of mind or method is always more important than the might of ones arm. Strengths against weaknesses and weaknesses against strengths is how one always plays this game. Today's word is Strategy.
That said lets not forget that the Thunder is a pretty formidable bird; A potent radar, a plathora of AA and AG weapons, superb maneuverability by many accounts, all sorts of gadgets and gizmos, a very good man-machine interface, a pretty awesome looking cockpit, a top-down view to die for and all this in a price which is pretty unbelievable (read: many birds instead of a few and no....a handful of SU-30s, Typhoons or Rafaels will not make do). And it is being produced in-house but that will be discussed later.
All the stats and performance perimeters, thanks to Antibody, can been found on this very forum: http://www.defence.pk/forums/jf-17-thunder/71435-jf-17-thunder-information-pool.html. I need not Read and educate yourself. The Thunder vs MKI scenarios have also been debated to death, use the search engine. It's not far fetched at all for a Thunder pilot to call a splash on an MKI/Rafael with an SD-10b. You only need to read around how the world has genuinely been surprised by this bird and they don't even know the half of it. There is no need for me to post any of this here. There are many threads already made for this purpose.
The 'apparently not so apparent' benefits that the Thunder has brought with itself:
It's been dragged around this forum time and time again that the Thunder is a major step away from sanctions, and this is with good reason. For anyone to not realize how big an advantage this is would be absurd. The overwhelming disparity that we see today between the PAF and the IAF started exactly with this daemon. For a decade we stood stagnant if not regressed while the IAF grew stronger. They bought new toys while we struggled to keep the ones we had flying. We filled our squadrons with F-7s which should have been F-16s. The F-16s which could not face a couple of Mig-29s because a weapon which had been a staple for every other respectable airforce since long was not in our arsenal i.e. the BVR missile. We went from "technologically superior" to "technologically inferior". In short we were left hanging high and dry with no options in sight. These were desperate times for the PAF and in effect for the whole Pakistani military establishment. More desperate than we had ever seen before. The PAF had come out of two wars with better standing. Today we have a very reasonable bird in our nest which is only going to improve and it is ours to keep. Anyone who downplays or ignores this factor is a moron if not clinically insane.
Pakistan is a country which has not seen much initiative taken or legacy made since the ill-thought-out nationalization of the 70s and the times which followed. Our industry has only crumbled, our institutions have only gone down under, everything has only been wasted. You have been ranting about it, I have been ranting about it. The Thunder has brought with itself an industry which was little heard off, if at all, in Pakistan. For us to step into the aircraft industry brings immense technological and economical implications. This is straightforward progress. Progress which you have been crying for. And this is merely the first step. If recognized and tended to this would spell many a good thing for Pakistan's future, even when disregarding its military significance. The JF-17 could very well spawn a JF-18 and then a JF-19 and so on.
Ergo what the Thunder is is more than just a good weapon. Its advantages go beyond the battle field and they are many. The people who envisioned this project were not only brilliant but also visionaries and as is this case with all visionaries their actions are seldom understood by the people of their time but will always be praised and thanked by the people who come after.
Arguments as to why the Thunder is not a good investment viz-a-viz the PAF in light of the IAF:
From what I've read it seems to me (correct me if im wrong) that the primary premise being given behind this argument revolves around the fact that "the Thunder cannot match the enemies draw i.e. MKI/Rafael" and so the Pakistan Airforce should have gone searching the foreign markets looking for a solution. As is apparent, this argument is overly simplistic, extremely ingenuous and blind to many other factors surrounding the PAF-IAF scenario and the Thunder itself.
Firstly all the people who's concept and knowledge of warfare spouts from the hit strategy title Generals would be well advised to start reading some good books on the subject before posting. Any good book on the battles fought over Europe during the second World War would be a good start. Let me also assure them that in any plausible future air war scenario the Thunder will never be put against the MKI/Rafael mano-a-mano, barring any freak occurrences. The Thunder will be supported with a gang of other birds watching it's back and every move that the enemy would and could make. The vice-versa will hold just as true.http://www.defence.pk/forums/pakist...e-invested-more-j-10s-rather-than-jf-17s.html This is to say that the Thunder and the MKI/Rafael will be cogs in their respective machines rather than the machines themselves, cards in a hand rather than the hand itself. One hand will be played against the other; the PAF will be played against the IAF. All will depend on how well the hand is played and how the table unfolds. It does not simply depend on how well one card or every card is matched to one card or every card of the other. Warfare is hardly ever that boring or that simplistic. And what it is not is a simple number game. All the maneuverability of the Gnat couldn't save it from the lumbering and obsolete Saber, all the sonic booms couldn't save the Fishbeds from the dumb bombs (heck they never saw any combat) and all the might of the IAF couldn't hold back the minuscule PAF. Warfare, though gruesome and distasteful, is never artless. It is a playing field for artists such as Hannibal, Salahuddin and Subodai. It is where the brilliance of mind or method is always more important than the might of ones arm. Strengths against weaknesses and weaknesses against strengths is how one always plays this game. Today's word is Strategy.
That said lets not forget that the Thunder is a pretty formidable bird; A potent radar, a plathora of AA and AG weapons, superb maneuverability by many accounts, all sorts of gadgets and gizmos, a very good man-machine interface, a pretty awesome looking cockpit, a top-down view to die for and all this in a price which is pretty unbelievable (read: many birds instead of a few and no....a handful of SU-30s, Typhoons or Rafaels will not make do). And it is being produced in-house but that will be discussed later.
All the stats and performance perimeters, thanks to Antibody, can been found on this very forum: http://www.defence.pk/forums/jf-17-thunder/71435-jf-17-thunder-information-pool.html. I need not Read and educate yourself. The Thunder vs MKI scenarios have also been debated to death, use the search engine. It's not far fetched at all for a Thunder pilot to call a splash on an MKI/Rafael with an SD-10b. You only need to read around how the world has genuinely been surprised by this bird and they don't even know the half of it. There is no need for me to post any of this here. There are many threads already made for this purpose.
The 'apparently not so apparent' benefits that the Thunder has brought with itself:
It's been dragged around this forum time and time again that the Thunder is a major step away from sanctions, and this is with good reason. For anyone to not realize how big an advantage this is would be absurd. The overwhelming disparity that we see today between the PAF and the IAF started exactly with this daemon. For a decade we stood stagnant if not regressed while the IAF grew stronger. They bought new toys while we struggled to keep the ones we had flying. We filled our squadrons with F-7s which should have been F-16s. The F-16s which could not face a couple of Mig-29s because a weapon which had been a staple for every other respectable airforce since long was not in our arsenal i.e. the BVR missile. We went from "technologically superior" to "technologically inferior". In short we were left hanging high and dry with no options in sight. These were desperate times for the PAF and in effect for the whole Pakistani military establishment. More desperate than we had ever seen before. The PAF had come out of two wars with better standing. Today we have a very reasonable bird in our nest which is only going to improve and it is ours to keep. Anyone who downplays or ignores this factor is a moron if not clinically insane.
Pakistan is a country which has not seen much initiative taken or legacy made since the ill-thought-out nationalization of the 70s and the times which followed. Our industry has only crumbled, our institutions have only gone down under, everything has only been wasted. You have been ranting about it, I have been ranting about it. The Thunder has brought with itself an industry which was little heard off, if at all, in Pakistan. For us to step into the aircraft industry brings immense technological and economical implications. This is straightforward progress. Progress which you have been crying for. And this is merely the first step. If recognized and tended to this would spell many a good thing for Pakistan's future, even when disregarding its military significance. The JF-17 could very well spawn a JF-18 and then a JF-19 and so on.
Ergo what the Thunder is is more than just a good weapon. Its advantages go beyond the battle field and they are many. The people who envisioned this project were not only brilliant but also visionaries and as is this case with all visionaries their actions are seldom understood by the people of their time but will always be praised and thanked by the people who come after.