Top News
|Mossad and Israeli Special Forces infiltrate Iran for a secret operation Details of the daring ground operation yet unknown | Kuwaiti defence forces mistakenly shoot down three USAF F 15E Strike Eagle aircraft | All Six Pilots Parachute Safely and are in hospitals for Checks | F 15E is a powerful warjet, has two pilots, one to Fly and the other as a Weapons Officer | Iran meanwhile has widened its missile strikes whiie the US Air Force and Navy have intensified Bombing of Iran | US Def Sec Hegseth says There Are No Timelines BUT IRAN WILL NOT HAVE NUCLEAR CAPABILITY | And that ‘War Will Not Be Endless’ | Trump asks Iranians to ‘Rise up and Take Over Your Government’ | Iran says No Negotiations With US | Trump Confirms Iran’s Supreme Islamic Leader ‘evil’ Ali Khamenei killed in targeted missile strikes | Many Iranian military and Islamic leaders also dead | US and Israel launched the biggest ever military strikes in history to decimate Iran’s top leadership | There are no reported of boots on ground | About 200 USAF and Navy jets are hammering Iran’s political and military targets without stop | The missiles are precision | Care is taken to avoid cities and civilians | It’s War | US and Israel attack Iran | Trump says Will Not Allow to Have Nuclear Bomb | Iran Retaliates with Missiles across Gulf and Jordan | But Not Oman | US Bases in UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait Hit | Trump asks Iranians to Remove Evil Regime and Take Over | Trump says US Will Annihilate Iranian Navy | Free Exchange of Missiles and Drones | Iranian Foreign Minister Calls For Stopping Attacks and Then Talks | Iran under Internet Blockade | UK PM says Our Planes in Sky for Defensive Operations | Terror Anywhere Threatens Peace Everywhere: PM Narendra Modi while Addressing Israeli Knesset | PM Modi in Israel, Prime Minister Netanyahu receives him with warm hugs | India clears Grand Mother of All Defence Deals Ever - For $ 40 Billion | Dassault Rafales, Airbus Helicopters, Boeing P 8I, Sikorsky MH 60R, Newer Technology Weapons and Drones Cleared | Modi, Macron announce India-France Strategic Partnership And India-France Year of Innovation | India Finally Decides to Buy 114 Rafale Fighters | Big, Bold Decision by Modi Government | Virtual paralysis in MoD Ends, 35 Years After VP Singh’s Lies Over Bofors | Prime Minister Modi Initiates Many Other Reforms on Defence | Congratulations Mr Modi | Nuclear Talks with US a Good Start, says Iran | Oman will continue to Mediate and host the Talks | India’s Agni-3 Nuclear IRBM Test Successful | India, US Trade Pact May be signed in March, says Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal | US asks Russia and China for a Fresh Nuclear Treaty | India’s Oil Imports from Russia lowest at $2.7 billion in 38 months | RIL buys 2 million barrels of Venezuelan Oil | India fully paid the Committed $120 million to Iran for Chabahar Port development | Project though is uncertain due to US pressure | Police cannot arrest an accused simply to Ask Questions, rules the Supreme Court of India | Adani Defence, Leonardo Aerospace in partnership to make advanced Helicopters in India | Leonardo Aerospace collaborates with Adani Defence to manufacture advanced Helicopters in India | The two companies announced an MoU to set up a ‘fully integrated Helicopter Manufacturing Ecosystem in India’ | ‘Any Attack Will be an All Out War Against Us,’ says Iran | India votes Against a Human Rights motion Censuring Iran in UN | Indian Woman Preeti Unhale Lives for 25 Years With Donor Heart ♥
INDIAN AIR FORCE

Aerial dogfights will remain relevant forever, says ace pilot

Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh). In an era of beyond visual range (BVR) and fire-and-forget missiles, the art of aerial combat — dogfights in military parlance — will forever be relevant, says an ace Indian Air Force (IAF) pilot who commands a squadron of the cutting edge technology Sukhoi Su-30MKI combat jets at this sprawling frontline airbase in north India.

“It’s been proved time and again that no matter what the technology at your command, the man in the machine is paramount. Thus, the art of aerial dogfights will forever be relevant,” says Wing Commander N N Sinha.

“A BVR missile can miss its target, resulting in the pilot trying again to hit the target. This means he has to fly closer to the target and this raises the immediate possibility of aerial combat with enemy aircraft,” he told IANS in an interview here.

In this context, he noted that even the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor, currently the only operational fifth generation fighter in the world, retains its guns, as do other advanced jets like the Su-30MKI, the Eurofighter Typhoon, the Boeing F/A-18 and the Lockheed Martin F-16.

“Guns take up space that could otherwise house missiles and other weapons. So why are they still there? Because the need for fighting your way out of a tricky situation could arise any time,” Wg Cdr Sinha explained.

The term dogfight first emerged during the First World War when rickety biplanes were used as mobile observation vehicles and pilots gave little thought to aerial combat and even waved at enemy pilots.

The more intrepid pilots then decided to go further by throwing grenades and even bricks at opposing aircraft. This progressed to pilots firing hand-held guns at enemy planes and once machine guns were mounted on aircraft, the era of air combat truly began.

The art has been refined over the years and reached its zenith during World War II and the Vietnam War of the 1960s and 1970s. This prompted major air forces around the world to create specialized institutions to hone the skills of their fighter pilots in the art of aerial combat.

Thus, if the US has its Fighter Weapons School at Miramar in California — better known by its sobriquet TOPGUN — India has the less romantic sounding Tactical and Combat Development Establishment (TACDE) at the Gwalior Air Force base at Madhya Pradesh in central India.

And for once, these two premier air forces are almost matched — when it comes to the frontline jets they hold on their inventories. In repeated war games over the past few years, the IAF Su-30MKIs have consistently held their own against the US F-16s and F-18s, leading the US Air Force (USAF) to grudgingly admit that they are worthy adversaries.

That’s not all.

At a joint war game at Gwalior in 2006, the Su-30 repeatedly triumphed over the Royal Air Force (RAF) Tornadoes, prompting the British to field their latest acquisition, the Typhoon at the England-end of the exercise earlier this year.

By all accounts, the honours were evenly matched — and Wg Cdr Sinha is not surprised.

“With its thrust vector engines and canards, the Su-30MKI can perform unbelievably in the air as it possesses abilities that its competitors do not,” he observed.

The thrust vector engines enable the pilot to direct the aircraft into a 180 degree vertical climb, while the canards — rotatable winglets just behind the cockpit — permit the aircraft to adjust to the adverse wind flow which results from such a manoeuvre. This means that the aircraft can actually stand on its tail at great heights and then snap back into a 90-degree level to continue combat.

“This gives us tremendous advantage as in normal dogfights, aircraft weave and turn, but with the Su-30, a pilot can climb vertically and literally snap back like a cobra striking,” the IAF officer explained.

Not surprisingly, therefore, Wg Cdr Sinha’s is the first squadron of Su-30MKIs that have been made fully operational at Bareilly to increase the IAF’s strategic reach against China. Another squadron of the fighters will reach a similar status here within a year, while two more squadrons will be deployed at Tezpur in Assam to guard the eastern frontiers against China.

It may be recalled that Bareilly hosted the super secret half-a-dozen Mig 25 Foxbat aircraft of the Indian Air Force till last year, when they were phased out after a glorious 25-year service. The Mig 25s flew at three times the speed of sound at 80000 to 100000 feet, or just the edge of earth’s atmosphere.

Related Articles

Back to top button