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Nopes, Truck ki Bati is when you wash the soap before your hands, it is when you display a project with such headlines that it's a game changer or a war winner.Every new weapon prototype and proof of concept shall remain "Truck ki Bati" unless there's a established production line in PAC which can churn out several hundreds of them per year.
I want to see that more than everyone. It'll be really sad day for me if I don't see 4x AZB-81LR SDB on dual racks or any at all on our jets.
"unless there's a established production line in PAC which can churn out several hundreds of them per year"Nopes, Truck ki Bati is when you wash the soap before your hands, it is when you display a project with such headlines that it's a game changer or a war winner.
Every country has dozens of concepts, models or even prototypes in works, which are given publicity and even displayed , some materialise others and some evolve onto something else so how can you call a project on drawing boards or in model shape Truck ki Bati . Its a different story that something keeps in headlines for year after year without baring any fruit then you can give your verdict on that .
so if its not in PAC then what? unless it meets your, an internet nobody, standard, it did not happen. That kind of delusion only exists in creatures to our east."unless there's a established production line in PAC which can churn out several hundreds of them per year"
Then what? I guess nothing. If there's another aerospace organization that can step up it's brilliant. Right now PAC is the only aerospace organization with considerable manufacturing capacity.so if its not in PAC then what? unless it meets your, an internet nobody, standard, it did not happen. That kind of delusion only exists in creatures to our east.
| Feature / Role | Al-Murtajiz | Sarfarosh | YIHA-III |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Low-observable, high-speed loitering suicide drone (UCAV-like) | Strategic long-range loitering munition | Tactical propeller-driven kamikaze drone |
| Developer | NASTP (most probably) | GIDS (indigenous, canister-launched system) | Baykar (Turkey) + NASTP (Pakistan) |
| Range / Endurance | 500–750 km (long-range precision strikes; can loiter near target area) | ~1,000 km, ≥120 min endurance (GIDS / Medium) | Several hundred km (short-to-mid range tactical missions) |
| Speed | Mach 0.7–0.9 (subsonic high-speed) | Subsonic | Low-subsonic (prop-driven) |
| Propulsion | Turbojet/turbofan, likely with solid-fuel booster for launch | Turbojet | Rear-mounted propeller |
| Warhead / Payload | High-explosive fragmentation or penetrator; suitable for radars, depots, C2 centers | 25–50 kg modular warhead (penetrator / HE options) | High-explosive kamikaze payload |
| Guidance System | INS + GPS/BeiDou, with potential EO/IR seekers or passive radar homing for terminal phase | INS + GPS guidance | GPS/INS + camera guidance (short-range targeting) |
| Stealth / Survivability | Stealth-optimized design, terrain-following flight profile, mobile launch for rapid deployment | Canister launch increases survivability; mid-sized RCS | Limited stealth, relies on swarming for survivability |
| Launch Method | Mobile ground launcher; rocket-assisted take-off | Canister (truck or ship-based) | Runway, catapult, or vehicle-mounted |
| Key Roles | SEAD/DEAD, air-defense suppression, C2 disruption, deep precision strikes, MUM-T integration | Strategic deep-strike on radar, HQs, depots, infrastructure | Tactical swarm attacks, decoy operations, saturation of defenses |
| Operational Status | Newly revealed (2025 Independence Day, no trials disclosed yet) | Tested & exhibited; moving towards operational induction | Operational; already employed in Pakistan-India engagements (2025 clashes) |
zohaibauthor.com
The ZulJannah divided India and created Pakistan.His horse's name was Zuljannah. Murtajaz was the the horse of his half brother Abbas Alamdar (as).
ChatGPT-generated crap. This stuff should be banned from the forumAl-Murtajiz, Pakistan’s Next-Gen Suicide Drone That Shocked the Region
he Big Reveal – Independence Day Surprise
On August 14, 2025, Pakistan Air Force (PAF) quietly dropped a bombshell — but not the kind you think. During its Independence Day display, a mysterious airframe was revealed for a few minutes before being swiftly pulled back from public view. Observers first assumed it was a new cruise missile, some even went as far as speculating a hypersonic platform, given its sleek, narrow fuselage and stealth geometry. Others theorized it might be Pakistan’s first indigenous loyal wingman UCAV.
But the truth was even more intriguing. The system was formally named “Al-Murtajiz” — a codename dripping with symbolism, taken from the legendary steed of Imam Hussain (A.S.), representing speed, endurance, and unwavering resolve. What PAF revealed was its first ground-launched suicide drone, a low-observable loitering munition designed to intercept air-to-surface munitions, perform kamikaze strikes, and act as a decoy or ECM carrier.
This wasn’t just another drone unveiling. It was a strategic announcement — Pakistan is officially entering the next phase of drone warfare.
Design & Technical Impressions
Al Murtajiz is believed to operate at Mach 0.7–0.9, giving it the speed advantage over traditional loitering munitions. With an operational range of 500–750 km, it can engage targets far beyond frontline zones, penetrating deep into enemy territory.
The drone likely employs a small turbojet or turbofan propulsion system, potentially aided by a solid-fuel booster for launch, allowing flexible deployment from mobile launch platforms. Its stealth-optimized design minimizes radar cross-section, while a terrain-following flight profile makes detection and interception extremely difficult.
For guidance, Al Murtajiz is expected to integrate INS + satellite navigation (GPS/BeiDou), with possibilities of electro-optical/infrared seekers or passive radar homing for terminal-phase accuracy. This means the drone can autonomously strike with precision, even in GPS-denied or heavily jammed environments.
The payload options are equally versatile:
Crucially, the system reportedly has the ability to loiter in designated target areas before striking, turning it into both a reconnaissance and strike platform in contested zones.
- High-explosive fragmentation warheads – for devastating effect against soft targets and concentrations.
- Penetrator warheads – for hardened infrastructure like bunkers, C2 nodes, and radars.
Battlefield Roles – From Decoy to Deadly Striker
Al-Murtajiz isn’t just a one-trick pony (pun intended). It appears to be designed for multi-role adaptability:
In short, Al-Murtajiz is Pakistan’s entry into drone-enabled asymmetric warfare, designed to multiply strike power while minimizing risk to pilots. However, Al Murtajiz’s balance of speed, range, and stealth sets it apart as a hybrid between loyal wingman drones, cruise missiles, and loitering munitions.
- SEAD/DEAD Operations – Suppression and Destruction of Enemy Air Defences, taking out radar and SAM systems.
- Counter-Munitions Interceptor – Designed to target subsonic cruise missiles or incoming stand-off munitions, effectively serving as a “suicide air-defender.”
- Critical Infrastructure Strike – Hitting depots, early-warning radars, C2 nodes, and logistics hubs.
- ECM & Decoy Roles – Acting as a radar decoy or jammer to blind enemy defences.
- Manned-Unmanned Teaming (MUM-T) – Operated alongside JF-17, J-10c or future J-36, JF-17 Block 4 and KAAN, with drones entering first into contested airspace while manned fighters remain safe.
Regional Threat Perception
For India, the unveiling of Al Murtajiz poses a nightmare scenario. Its low-observable design, mobile deployment, and deep-strike capability mean that no target—from Punjab’s airbases to C2 nodes in Rajasthan—can be considered safe. Unlike slower loitering drones, Al Murtajiz combines speed, stealth, and precision, creating a weapon system that blurs the line between drones and cruise missiles.
Strategic Doctrine – Why It Matters
The unveiling of Al-Murtajiz aligns with PAF’s shift to MUM-T (Manned-Unmanned Teaming). Globally, air forces are restructuring doctrines where cheap, expendable drones take the brunt of air defence fire, allowing expensive manned aircraft to conserve their edge.
For Pakistan, this doctrine has several advantages:
Simply put: Al-Murtajiz is Pakistan’s answer to contested skies.
- Cost Efficiency: A drone like Al-Murtajiz is 10–20x cheaper than a fighter jet, but can neutralize million-dollar SAM systems.
- Asymmetric Power: Counters India’s growing S-400 and MR-SAM shield without requiring massive fleet expansion.
- Psychological Disruption: A wave of stealthy suicide drones forces the enemy to overstretch air defences, deplete missile stockpiles, and remain constantly on edge.
- Strategic Autonomy: Showcases indigenous engineering and doctrinal innovation, signaling that Pakistan is not dependent on imports for next-gen warfare.
Why the Hype?
The hype storm after its reveal was not accidental. Three reasons fueled it:
In essence, PAF wanted adversaries guessing. Was it a suicide drone? A loyal wingman? A mini-cruise missile? That ambiguity itself adds to deterrence.
- Its Shape: To casual observers, it looked like a mini cruise missile or even a hypersonic glide vehicle prototype.
- Its Secrecy: The PAF refused to disclose details, pulled the mock-up swiftly, and personnel dodged questions — a perfect recipe for speculation.
- Its Timing: Announced on Independence Day, a symbolic moment, it was less about technical detail and more about strategic signaling.
Comparisons – How Does Al-Murtajiz Stack Up?
To understand its place, let’s compare with global analogues:
So where does it stand? Al-Murtajiz is essentially Pakistan’s answer to bridging the gap between swarm kamikaze drones and precision cruise missiles.
- U.S. Switchblade 600: Portable loitering munition with anti-armor role, but far shorter range (~40 km). Al-Murtajiz dwarfs it in strategic reach.
- Russian Lancet-3: Used in Ukraine, effective but propeller-driven with limited endurance (~40 min). Al-Murtajiz’s turbojet propulsion means longer range and higher penetration ability.
- Iran’s Shahed-136: A mass swarm drone used by Russia, cheap and long-range but non-stealthy. Al-Murtajiz seems stealth-optimized, more akin to a mini-cruise missile than a noisy delta-wing.
- Chinese FH-97 (loyal wingman): A true UCAV platform. If Al-Murtajiz evolves further, it could blend into this category as PAF’s low-cost wingman, but for now it sits between Shahed and FH-97 in concept.
Comparison of Pakistani Loitering Munitions & Suicide Drones
Feature / Role Al-Murtajiz Sarfarosh YIHA-III Type Low-observable, high-speed loitering suicide drone (UCAV-like) Strategic long-range loitering munition Tactical propeller-driven kamikaze drone Developer NASTP (most probably) GIDS (indigenous, canister-launched system) Baykar (Turkey) + NASTP (Pakistan) Range / Endurance 500–750 km (long-range precision strikes; can loiter near target area) ~1,000 km, ≥120 min endurance (GIDS / Medium) Several hundred km (short-to-mid range tactical missions) Speed Mach 0.7–0.9 (subsonic high-speed) Subsonic Low-subsonic (prop-driven) Propulsion Turbojet/turbofan, likely with solid-fuel booster for launch Turbojet Rear-mounted propeller Warhead / Payload High-explosive fragmentation or penetrator; suitable for radars, depots, C2 centers 25–50 kg modular warhead (penetrator / HE options) High-explosive kamikaze payload Guidance System INS + GPS/BeiDou, with potential EO/IR seekers or passive radar homing for terminal phase INS + GPS guidance GPS/INS + camera guidance (short-range targeting) Stealth / Survivability Stealth-optimized design, terrain-following flight profile, mobile launch for rapid deployment Canister launch increases survivability; mid-sized RCS Limited stealth, relies on swarming for survivability Launch Method Mobile ground launcher; rocket-assisted take-off Canister (truck or ship-based) Runway, catapult, or vehicle-mounted Key Roles SEAD/DEAD, air-defense suppression, C2 disruption, deep precision strikes, MUM-T integration Strategic deep-strike on radar, HQs, depots, infrastructure Tactical swarm attacks, decoy operations, saturation of defenses Operational Status Newly revealed (2025 Independence Day, no trials disclosed yet) Tested & exhibited; moving towards operational induction Operational; already employed in Pakistan-India engagements (2025 clashes)
Strategic Takeaway:![]()
- YIHA-III is the swarm/saturation layer (cheap, tactical, prop-driven).
- Sarfarosh is the long-range strategic punch (cruise missile alternative).
- Al-Murtajiz sits in between — a stealthy, precision, survivable UCAV-style suicide drone, bridging tactical and strategic roles while fitting perfectly into PAF’s MUM-T doctrine.
What’s Next?
The model shown was likely a proof-of-concept mock-up. The real test will be:
Until then, the mystery is part of its power. The very fact that people debated whether it was a cruise missile, a hypersonic glider, or a loyal wingman shows that Pakistan achieved the psychological edge without even firing a shot.
- Flight Trials – When will PAF conduct first live trials?
- Specifications Disclosure – Official numbers for range, payload, and speed.
- Serial Production – Will it be mass-produced for saturation tactics, or kept as a high-value asset?
- Export Potential – Could Pakistan offer Al-Murtajiz to friendly states as part of its growing drone export ambitions?
Designed for survivability, precision, and deep penetration, it provides the armed forces with an effective tool to cripple enemy defenses, level the technological playing field, and ensure deterrence against numerically superior adversaries.
Final Word – Al-Murtajiz and the Future of PAF
Al-Murtajiz isn’t just a drone — it’s a statement of intent. PAF is openly embracing next-gen asymmetric airpower, leveraging stealth drones, MUM-T, and loitering munitions to counter adversaries with far larger fleets.
For Pakistan, which cannot afford a fleet of 200 fifth-gen fighters, drones like Al-Murtajiz are the force multiplier that levels the playing field. It represents indigenous innovation, doctrinal maturity, and psychological warfare, all rolled into one sleek, stealthy package.
As its codename implies — the prancing horse — Al-Murtajiz may well become the stallion that carries Pakistan into the next era of air combat.
Zohaib Ahmed
Founder – The New World Disorder | Pakistan’s Leading Brand Strategist & Geopolitical Analyst
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Al-Murtajiz, Pakistan’s Next-Gen Suicide Drone That Shocked the Region - Zohaib Ahmed
PAF unveils Al-Murtajiz, a stealth suicide drone sparking global buzz. Cruise missile? Loyal wingman? Or Pakistan’s next big airpower leap?zohaibauthor.com
Prove it info is wrong.ChatGPT-generated crap. This stuff should be banned from the forum
This guy’s entire website is filled with such stuff. This forum isn’t IDRW, please keep it that way
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