Mighty_Dragon_Strike
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Credits: Irves Twitter channel
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What type of analogy is that?
Why exactly didn't you use your cruise missiles then? Quantity issues?
Also let's consider a hypothetical scenario where in the next round Pakistan launches its cruise missiles, then in a protracted war who would have the advantage? Who has more missiles in stock and a larger industrial footprint to manufacture them in scale?
Then you'd say Brahmos facilities will be targeted and yes then that would lead to equal destruction of Pakistani facilities.
Whenever India and Pakistan have engaged in larger battles India always has has the advantage in the longer run due to geography and basic economies of scale.
That's why Pakistan stresses so much on making any war really costly for India and on MAD. This is to deter India from agression.
But did you K.O. us out of the fight? I'll attribute the IAF air losses to better co-ordination and air tactics of PAF. But then Brahmos landed on your bases.Why use a Hook when we can K.O. you with a Jab?![]()
But did you K.O. us out of the fight? I'll attribute the IAF air losses to better co-ordination and air tactics of PAF. But then Brahmos landed on your bases.
We can ramble all day on what the exact damage was and stuff like that but see the impact of this strike. The ante has been upped. There was no equal reaction on this from your side. I think you launched one Fatah which was intercepted near a Gurgaon village.
You claim S400 destruction, while the exact status is not clear there is no proof of destruction of the main module, the S400 is not a single vehicle it includes a caravan of multiple launchers and recon vehicles.
But what rules did this skirmish establish? Will this deter further Indian aggression?
Both sides also use Proxies against each other. Your PM stated the exact same thing against Afghanistan what our PM said against you.
"Any terrorist attack on the nation will be considered as a declaration of war"
This makes the threat of war ever more prevalent.
- Satellite and Radar Data: Sources suggest that China's extensive satellite network, including its BeiDou navigation system and the civilian Jilin-1 constellation of imaging satellites, provided near real-time surveillance and targeting data to Pakistani forces, which could track Indian aircraft movements hundreds of kilometers away.
It is interesting that as per Trump, Showbaaz called him to thank him for stopping the war. Modi merely gave a rather curt call- it seems he was unhappy that the war stopped.
Now the question is why was Showbaaz thankful and Modi rather unhappy?
Both sides learn from each encounter. In 2019 you realised you needed Rafale, the PAF adapted accordingly and demonstrated it can effectively counter the Rafale.But did you K.O. us out of the fight? I'll attribute the IAF air losses to better co-ordination and air tactics of PAF. But then Brahmos landed on your bases.
We can ramble all day on what the exact damage was and stuff like that but see the impact of this strike. The ante has been upped. There was no equal reaction on this from your side. I think you launched one Fatah which was intercepted near a Gurgaon village.
You claim S400 destruction, while the exact status is not clear there is no proof of destruction of the main module, the S400 is not a single vehicle it includes a caravan of multiple launchers and recon vehicles.
But what rules did this skirmish establish? Will this deter further Indian aggression?
Both sides also use Proxies against each other. Your PM stated the exact same thing against Afghanistan what our PM said against you.
"Any terrorist attack on the nation will be considered as a declaration of war"
This makes the threat of war ever more prevalent. We are on Ground Zero again.
The political will of both the nations and the role of USA and other nations clearly showed who was on whose side during this skirmish.
It's primary objective is to defend Indian skies and the important military installations it is set up at, also to act as a dettarance to enemy fighters.what was the objective of S400?
please define, then, we can discuss, about its success of failure
Brahmos is not a magic missile. It is a Subsonic missile which India has in a large quantity. They can be shot down but it's harder to shoot them down given the speed and trajectory they fly at. There are not many anti missile batteries which can shoot down such missiles. You can see this in the Israeli-Iran war.secondly, re. Brahmas, it was not an over whelming success (which it was supposed so), that explanation should be enough for any sane military strategist!
Despite Pakistan’s claims of “major damages” at the 15 airbases it targeted, there is no visual evidence—either from social media photos or commercial satellite imagery—currently available to indicate meaningful damage on Indian facilities
Indian missile and standoff air strikes, in contrast, created numerous signatures of their success visible via videos and photos on social media, Indian government-released satellite imagery, and commercial satellite imagery. Indian strikes created damage at a scale difficult for the Government of Pakistan to suppress.
The eternal question:It's primary objective is to defend Indian skies and the important military installations it is set up at, also to act as a dettarance to enemy fighters.
Now I would like to ask you one thing if you think PAF had such air superiority why didn't it directly attack Indian military installations? In such a scenario you could've easily taken out S400 or some important installation.
Every poster likes to claim that IAF was operating away from the border but why didn't PAF capitalise on this then?
Brahmos is not a magic missile. It is a Subsonic missile which India has in a large quantity. They can be shot down but it's harder to shoot them down given the speed and trajectory they fly at. There are not many anti missile batteries which can shoot down such missiles. You can see this in the Israeli-Iran war.
Also it is evident Brahmos did hit most of their targets that's what matters.
The Brahmos point people raise is mostly related to the pinpoint hits and the strategic posturing such an act brings.
Pakistan doesn't have any alternative to Brahmos, you have Ballistic Shaheens and Ababeels, Fatah 1 and 2 are just guided missiles which are essentially fancy artilleries.
Ballistic missiles attacks would've increased the intensity of war and as they are nuclear capable this could've gone very wrong.
India's Ballistic missiles are Prithvi, Agni and Pralay.
End point being the skirmish showed that Pakistan was successful in the short term but it also showed Indian ability to absorb, and prolong the conflict.
It's primary objective is to defend Indian skies and the important military installations it is set up at, also to act as a dettarance to enemy fighters.
Now I would like to ask you one thing if you think PAF had such air superiority why didn't it directly attack Indian military installations? In such a scenario you could've easily taken out S400 or some important installation.
Every poster likes to claim that IAF was operating away from the border but why didn't PAF capitalise on this then? There were essentially no major hits on mainland Indian military installations.
Brahmos is not a magic missile. It is a Subsonic missile which India has in a large quantity. They can be shot down but it's harder to shoot them down given the speed and trajectory they fly at. There are not many anti missile batteries which can shoot down such missiles. You can see this in the Israeli-Iran war.
Also it is evident Brahmos did hit most of their targets that's what matters.
The Brahmos point people raise is mostly related to the pinpoint hits and the strategic posturing such an act brings.
Pakistan doesn't have any alternative to Brahmos, you have Ballistic Shaheens and Ababeels, Fatah 1 and 2 are just guided missiles which are essentially fancy artilleries.
Ballistic missiles attacks would've increased the intensity of war and as they are nuclear capable this could've gone very wrong. That's why you didn't launch any. Pakistan did launch many normal guided missiles which were intercepted and some hit with minor damage.
India's Ballistic missiles are Prithvi, Agni and Pralay.
End point being the skirmish showed that Pakistan was successful in the short term but it also showed Indian ability to absorb, and prolong the conflict.
The Pak military adapted by recognising a space for limited conventional conflict, below nuclear threshold, something that it did not expect, and in this regard you have succeeded. Pakistan has recognised that it needs long range weapons for conventional conflict, rather than just nuclear delivery alone, and inaugurated the missile and rocket force, with non-nuclear versions of its nuclear delivery platforms. This will include expanding production capacity.
Brahmos NG-is not hypersonic its a lighter version of brahmos A with a more stealthy siloutte to be abled to be carried by other fighters the IAF has....reducing redundancy on su30sThe main thing that matters is the number of such cruise missiles you possess and your industrial capacity to manufacture them. And the economics of scale as they are costly missiles. Brahmos variants have been in production since 2006 or so, there are atleast a couple thousand of such variants in service.
One manufacturing facility solely for production of Brahmos was just set up, second one is one the way.
Brahmos NG and Brahmos 2 which is likely hypersonic is in production. Nirbhay a domestic hypersonic variant has cleared tests recently.
India's ballistic arsenal in Agni, Prithvi and Pralay. These are nuclear equipped missiles with MirV and MarV. Brahmos is a conventional missile.
Corrections needed in your post
Chunian claim is not validated
Rahim yar khan is not an airbase. Rafiqui was never hit and all missiles towards rafiqui were successfully intercepted
I've always said that the PAF should relocate it's major bases further west in remote regions, preferably surrounded by mountains,
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