rafale
Registered Member
100% agreed.I agree with you, and this is an important refinement.
What makes this closer to a doctrinal failure than just a bad day is precisely the point you highlight: India initiated the engagement, at a time and place of its own choosing, using what it publicly framed as its decisive enabler.
The Rafale was not inducted quietly or defensively. It was sold, politically and doctrinally, as a game-changer: the platform that would allow India to strike with impunity using stand-off weapons, protected by superior sensors, EW, and situational awareness. In other words, Rafale wasn’t just another aircraft; it was meant to anchor a new way of fighting. The confidence level was running so high that the Defence Minister Rajnath Singh personally performed a Hindu ritual on the Rafale with limes, chillies and coconut.
Yet when that concept was tested against a prepared opponent, the assumptions didn’t hold. Launching SCALP and other stand-off weapons from within Indian airspace was supposed to control escalation and minimise risk. Instead, it encountered an adversary that was:
1. networked rather than platform-centric,
2. disciplined in EM management,
3. and prepared to cue BVR engagements without obligingly lighting up radars.
That’s where the doctrinal issue lies. If your most advanced platform, used in the role it was explicitly acquired for, fails to impose control over the battlespace, the problem is not the jet, it’s the concept of employment.
This also explains why the Indian analysts Shiv and Vishnu sound uneasy rather than dismissive in the video. They’re not questioning the Rafale’s specifications; they’re implicitly grappling with the fact that platform superiority did not translate into operational dominance. That is always a doctrine problem.
And this loops directly back to the F-16 upgrade discussion. The concern isn’t that Pakistan is getting “better jets.” It’s that Pakistan is scaling a doctrine that has already been demonstrated under combat conditions, across platforms it understands deeply. Familiarity plus networking is a force multiplier. They are actually gripped in fear.
So yes, when you initiate, escalate on your own terms, deploy your showcase platform, and still absorb losses, that goes beyond friction or fog of war. That’s a signal that core assumptions need revisiting.
That’s the subtext running through this entire episode of CTRL ALT Defence, even if the analysts never say it outright.
Real intelligent indians, which are few, know that PAF has absolute mastery over multi domain now and used IAF's best fighters as target practice to refine even more. Imagine the amount of tactical data PAF took away that night.......from electronic signatures to knowing own strengths and weaknesses...what worked and what not worked....what was expected to work and what did not.......... Meanwhile what did IAF manage to take? Am pretty sure they couldn't collect enough data on PL15 or J-10s.
The reality is, F-16s even with AIM C5s are equal or better than anything in their fleet except for Rafales. V standard just ensures that PAF has 3 types of fighters that can kill their current and future F4 rafales.
IAF's doctrine just got easier.......don't bother flying AA combat. Just focus on swarm ALCM attacks. No chance they will be flying within 200km of the Pakistan border. Zero chance. And this also solves AD problem for Pakistan.....the longer ranged ALCMs they need to use and fire far away from border....gives our AD assets more time to pick them up.




