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I am 100% blaming the machine.
I am aware of the general openion and stats that 80% Military Jet crashes are associated with Pilot/Human error.
I Fully understand that, just by looking at the video clips it is not wise and ethical to behave like all knowing and behave like I cant be wrong.
So, I stated my strong openion and left it there for everyone to have their own, I am a human and I can be wrong, Which most of the time I am ..lol
In my POV, This behaviour is logical and staying in touch with the reality, instead of living in an imaginary word and passing judgement purily without any Internal Info.
It applied to all fields of life.
There is no question about it: Trump has sensed India's weaknesses in not only to 'contain' China, which he hinted toward when he went out of his way to praise Pakistan for nabbing the terrorist who had attacked at the Kabul Airport in August 2021--but he is also capitalizing on India's failures in the aerial war on May 7, 2025 to pressure India for concessions. Some months ago, I had thought, maybe Trump only wanted major trade concessions from India before going back to the 'normal' but I am not sure anymore. Trump's change of heart seems like not something short term.Very true. Pakistan’s sales pitch for J-17 is about its ‘battle tested performance’ and that is getting some traction. What’s India’s pitch for the Tejas going to trumpet? Decades late to the finish line and crashed at an Airshow?
"We have the money "
. The favorite refrain.
Wonder what happened to the "pro-India " tilt of the USA despite the "massive economic relationship " ,
F86 Sabres maintained a 10:1 kill ratio against Mig15 flown by NK/Chinese and Russian pilots. Majority of U.S. losses were WW2 era Mustangs/Corsairs and SkyRaiders. Sabre losses were 78.During the Korean War air campaign, the US suffered 2,714 aircraft destroyed and 4,055 missing personnel killed. The circumstances of air losses in the Korean War drive much of the on-going research focus. .
source
The US lost 2,714 aircraft, with 1,841 of those being combat casualties, though this figure includes all types of aircraft, not just jets.
damn you weren't kidding ,
Service | Approx. Losses | Notes |
| USAF | ~1,466 | ~1,041 combat, ~425 non-combat |
U.S. Navy | ~564 | Includes carrier-based operations |
U.S. Marine Corps | ~316 | Mostly F4U Corsairs, AD Skyraiders |
Side | Total Aircraft Lost |
| United States (all services) | ~2,000 |
China + North Korea + Soviet pilots | ~2,550–3,000 |
Yes you are right. Maybe my expectations are too high. But these are the times especially when you are honoring a fallen comrade that your discipline shows.Sir, You are worried about salute here?
If the Officer could not control her emotions, she is crying out of control, Do you think she is worried about her salute allignments?
Its natural.
and we have seen the difference in discipline during the handling of the BOX in UAE and India, Indian Officers were not even able to walk straight holding the Box, all shaky jelly legs.
Mods please allow this post. ( last one):Indeed. India's "secular" identity is threatened by Muslim military personnel. We recall how Kashmiri armed personnel were quietly stood down and relieved of their weapons by way of direct orders from Delhi whenever "national security" was a concern.

Problem I see with Indians is, rebranding everything to put Make in India Tag.Ok got it now. Well I'm also on the "blame the machine" team. I am also not convinced that it was a pilot error because the whole design philosophy for Tejas' FBW and CLAW is the "carefree handling" - so even if the pilot gives an erroneous command, the FBW will limit the input to match the max allowed by CLAW. So e.g. the pilot can't pull more G's than allowed by the system and I think on Mk1 the limit is around 5-5.5
I just can't get my head around the crash being a pilot error, it could be, I mean I'm not an expert but so far what I know about the aircraft points to machine malfunction as the most likely case - some sensor that feeds the FBW or the FBW system itself (considering it's Indian made and they made it very complex to begin with the redundant quadruplex channels) - there's just so many ways the machine could malfunction that it favors the probability of a technical fault more than the pilot error.
Yup. The crash of Tejas, along with the events on and since the Pakistan-India conflict starting May 7, 2025 are a combined assault on India on many levels. No serious analyst is going to ignore this crash from the events of the last 6 months, including India's diplomatic isolation and Pakistan's geopolitical rise.
Tejas going total dead is my take.Yeah I'm still curious as to why the pilot didn't eject. Perhaps he tried till the end to somehow save the aircraft which would be commendable irrespective of him being part of enemy force.
Also, Tejas doesn't have back up manual override so the pilot can never take manual control over the aircraft if FBW system fails or malfunction. JFT has that manual override, and so does a lot of these Russian aricrafts but that's because their designs are generally stable unlike Tejas.
this guy is a regular contributor to AFM especially related to Iranian affairs…

This is how a pilot rectifies a mistake and avoids a disaster
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