hanks for bringing this up, especially since I thought you were well-versed in this subject. Just one correction: Pakistan did manage to divert many BrahMos missiles, but a few still got through and caused minor damage to key installations. This wasn’t a total failure, but it did expose critical gaps in the current air defense setup.
To address this, Pakistan is actively exploring multiple options, both short-term fixes and long-term upgrades. These include evaluating systems like Italy’s CAMM-ER, Germany’s IRIS-T SLM, Russia’s S-500, and Turkey’s SİPER and HİSAR series. Each offers different strengths in intercepting high-speed, low-altitude threats like BrahMos.
At the same time, Pakistan is also investing in next-gen technologies like microwave and laser-based directed energy weapons, aiming to build a more agile and cost-effective defense layer—especially useful against saturation attacks or swarm drones.
In short, the goal is to move toward a hybrid, multi-layered defense model that blends kinetic interceptors, electronic warfare, and directed energy systems to better handle evolving threats.