farooqbhai
THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
Good hogaya aapko krl mey lagatey hainWhy doesn't Pakistan have indigenous hypersonic?
Their R&D needs to get better.
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Good hogaya aapko krl mey lagatey hainWhy doesn't Pakistan have indigenous hypersonic?
Their R&D needs to get better.
Iran was able to respond to Israeli strikes on the first day, unlike Pakistan which did nothing for four days.Uhm no. The entire Iranian High command was wiped within 3 days, there entire C2 was compromised they shifted the 100 missile barrages (of which they were only able to do 2) on day 1 and 2 to at max 30 missiles by what day 3-4 and by the end of week they were firing anywhere from 1-10 BMs per day. On top of they did not even manage hit a single airbase let alone any military infrastructure.
Compared to that at least we successfully struck S400 at Adampur and at least hit several buildings at Udhampur airbase and Beas IA Base.
Please do show me said "Iranian response" against IDF military infrastructure which they did after taking a heavy blow on Day 1
+1Did Iran even manage to hit even a single "military target" with its BMs? I dont think so. Then what is all the hype with Iran. The Israelis literally hammered Iran and dropped JDAMs over Iranian sites using there air power ... And that is what's needed for us not large long range BM inventories
Iranian doctrine is a response to heavy sanctions and inability to buy aircraft and air defense from abroad. So they focused on missiles and drones instead. Iran BM's were in competition with Israeli interceptors and thats why they were built in a huge numbers, to ensure the interceptors were the ones to run out first. We saw the flaws in that doctrine, like dependency on launchers.+1
Regarding the discussion here:
I fear BMs are a great propaganda tool - propaganda for which a lot of our twitterati fell for. Remember the surreal videos of the Nevatim air base strike. But the strike achieve nothing of military value. That's the deal with conventional BMs - look great, do little. Maybe they can be used as a terror weapon if used in large numbers. But keep in mind a BM is an EXPENSIVE thing - it needs to launch from the ground, go to space, come back. Iran basically spent a large portion of their funds on their BM program - greatly sacrificing their air force. Yes you can make BMs accurate, but then you're making them even more expensive. BMs are a weapon of desperation for Iran because they couldn't build an air force I guess.
What was Iran's plan after the BMs ran out? It could do absolutely nothing. On the other hand, the Israeli jets could still generate sorties, bomb Iran at will, and basically created a no-fly zone over Iran.
So no. Pakistan should NOT replicate the Iranian doctrine. Please no. If there's anything this war has taught us, it is that air power is supreme. And thankfully, our planners realize that fully.
As you said, Pakistan's situation is very different. We have a very competent airforce. PAF has always wanted to fly into India to conduct strike missions - recall Pathankot strike in 65. I believe this is the reason for PAF's interest in J35 and Kaan as well. Also S400 strike in the current conflict is an indication.Iranian doctrine is a response to heavy sanctions and inability to buy aircraft and air defense from abroad. So they focused on missiles and drones instead. Iran BM's were in competition with Israeli interceptors and thats why they were built in a huge numbers, to ensure the interceptors were the ones to run out first. We saw the flaws in that doctrine, like dependency on launchers.
Pakistan's situation is different, we can buy stuff from China and few other places, but have limited amount of money. We still need to be able to hit targets deep inside India, to mitigate India's strategic depth. PAF cannot be expected to repeatedly fly deep into India, but you can do it with missiles. PAF planes can be shot down. You also need credible delivery systems for your nukes.
You can at least learn from Iran how their missiles managed to pierce Israeli/NATO/Arab air defense and still make impact in Israel.
Israel is quite far away from Iran, has the entire western world providing it sensor data, and is tiny.If ABM systems can intercept 70% of incoming missiles, the mutually assured destruction in a nuclear conflict is doomed.
This is very important observation for a country like Pakistan who don't have ABM , while adversary has.
70% figure is from Israel Iran conflict.
Iran was able to respond to Israeli strikes on the first day, unlike Pakistan which did nothing for four days.
Despite heavy censorship in Israel, here is some documentation of Iranian missiles striking Israeli military and economic targets :
Israel cyberware communications base : https://electronicintifada.net/blog...edia-censors-iranian-strike-cyberwarfare-base
airbases : https://www.timesofisrael.com/how-e...-israeli-public-doesnt-have-the-full-picture/
haifa refinery : https://www.timesofisrael.com/missi...rings-renewed-urgency-to-plants-closure-plan/
naval base in Haifa : https://www.twz.com/news-features/i...trategic-points-in-israeli-port-city-of-haifa
chemical plant :
I didn't include the tons of social media videos of strikes on Israel that imposed a major cost on the country. On the other hand, we don't have anything to backup the claims of hitting S4 battery or buildings in Adampur airbase. No pictures, satellites, social media. This is despite the Indian AD being inferior to Israel.
I will have to find further documentation then, since you dispute this. But the point is that reports/footage exists of Iranian strikes on Israel, whereas Pakistani strikes on India and claims about S4 battery being hit etc are completely lacking in news reports, satellite images and social media footage. In this day and age, with everyone carrying a smartphone and satellites and recon drones in the sky and weapon systems sending back data, the absence of any documentation means Pakistani offensive with aircraft and missiles on May 11th was a flop. The discussion should shift to why Pakistan fared well defensively but not offensively.1. "Cyber comms base" is actually a Microsoft facility.
2. Satellite imagery is live now, some accounts have done an analysis on Negev on Ramon and there's 0 impacts on the airbase itself.
3. Refinery was hit sure, a big easy target where accuracy didnt matter, but again the Iranians intended to hit something else here and there accuracy was just.
4. No naval base in Haifa was hit, accuracy was way off here too and a random high rise building outside the naval base was hit here.
You literally summarised my entire point and said I'm wrong?Here what I have observed so far. Hitting anything with 'precision' requires 'terminal guidance'. On the other hand 'near-precision' (order of 10ish meters CEP = O(10m) CEP) can be achieved via 'INS/GPS Guidance'. Precision = O(1m) CEP.
Precision --> Terminal Guidance --> Seeker head on missile (any type, passive, actie, semi-active, radar, imaging, IR etc)
The challenge remains for seekers to work with atmospheric re-entry, due to heating up of missile at high speed. That is why all 'mature' technologies to hit with precision are delivered at sub-sonic speed and usually with aircraft.
So you are conflating two things in your post, we must recognise the difference between tactical strikes (Iran) vs strategic strikes (nuclear deterent). Iran chose the wrong medium to deliver conventional deterence, it does not mean "Missile strategy at long range will fail".
Even Russian Oreshnik was not precise, instead they used it to demonstrate penetrative capability meant to bolster their nuclear deterent.
That still means (200*0.3=60 warheads) Thats a lot for a MADIf ABM systems can intercept 70% of incoming missiles, the mutually assured destruction in a nuclear conflict is doomed.
This is very important observation for a country like Pakistan who don't have ABM , while adversary has.
70% figure is from Israel Iran conflict.
I'm in agreement with this, our part of the world (MENA/SA) absolutely love performative flashy optics and are desparate for some wins, but they ignore the actual strategic and practical benefit.+1
Regarding the discussion here:
I fear BMs are a great propaganda tool - propaganda for which a lot of our twitterati fell for. Remember the surreal videos of the Nevatim air base strike. But the strike achieve nothing of military value. That's the deal with conventional BMs - look great, do little. Maybe they can be used as a terror weapon if used in large numbers. But keep in mind a BM is an EXPENSIVE thing - it needs to launch from the ground, go to space, come back. Iran basically spent a large portion of their funds on their BM program - greatly sacrificing their air force. Yes you can make BMs accurate, but then you're making them even more expensive. BMs are a weapon of desperation for Iran because they couldn't build an air force I guess.
What was Iran's plan after the BMs ran out? It could do absolutely nothing. On the other hand, the Israeli jets could still generate sorties, bomb Iran at will, and basically created a no-fly zone over Iran.
So no. Pakistan should NOT replicate the Iranian doctrine. Please no. If there's anything this war has taught us, it is that air power is supreme. And thankfully, our planners realize that fully.
I don't think Pakistan is ignoring ballistic missiles entirely, it just won't be the primary core weapon like in Iran.Iranian doctrine is a response to heavy sanctions and inability to buy aircraft and air defense from abroad. So they focused on missiles and drones instead. Iran BM's were in competition with Israeli interceptors and thats why they were built in a huge numbers, to ensure the interceptors were the ones to run out first. We saw the flaws in that doctrine, like dependency on launchers.
Pakistan's situation is different, we can buy stuff from China and few other places, but have limited amount of money. We still need to be able to hit targets deep inside India, to mitigate India's strategic depth. PAF cannot be expected to repeatedly fly deep into India, but you can do it with missiles. PAF planes can be shot down. You also need credible delivery systems for your nukes.
You can at least learn from Iran how their missiles managed to pierce Israeli/NATO/Arab air defense and still make impact in Israel.
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