Sanjha Morcha

Balakot strikes show shift in govt handling of terror: IAF chief

Balakot strikes show shift in govt handling of terror: IAF chief

Indian Air Force chief R K S Bhadauria

Hindon, October 8

The strategic relevance of the Balakot strike reflected the resolve of the political leadership to punish the perpetrators of terrorism and this has been a major shift in the government’s way of handling terrorist attacks, Indian Air Force chief R K S Bhadauria said on Tuesday.

In his Air Force Day message, Bhadauria, who took charge as the Chief of Air Staff a little more than a week ago, said to ensure operational success in all future operations, the IAF must maintain a high serviceability of combat equipment and exceptional training standards.

“The strategic relevance of this is the resolve of the political leadership to punish the perpetrators of terrorism and the capability of the IAF to execute a strike inside Pakistan. This has been a major shift in the government’s way of handling terrorists attacks,” Bhadauria said in a written message on the 87th anniversary of the Indian Air Force.

In a separate address at the Hindon Air Base, he also pointed out that the geo-political environment has been rapidly changing and uncertainties have created numerous challenges to national security.

“It is extremely important that we are always vigilant and alert to the existing sub-conventional threat. In the year gone by, the IAF has demonstrated its resolve and capability in punishing the perpetrators of terrorism and we need to be ever prepared to meet any contingency that challenges the defence of our country,” the Air Force chief said, referring to the Balakot strikes.

Post the Pulwama attack on February 14 that killed 40 CRPF personnel, the IAF launched air strikes on terror camps at Balakot in Pakistan.

Bhadauria said the IAF also acknowledges the contributions of all personnel of commands, stations and units who silently and professionally contributed to the success of the air strikes on the terrorist camps at Balakot earlier this year. —PTI


COLUMN: The IAF Is Right To Marshal Its Full Muscle For The AMCA

By YUSUF UNJHAWALA

There have been interesting and varied reactions to the idea that it will be better for the Indian Air Force (IAF) to put in all its efforts on the 5th generation Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) and cancel the 4th generation LCA MkII which is now known as the Medium Weight Fighter (MWF) program. While
some have been supportive, others don’t think the MWF should be scrapped. Their arguments are that the MWF is required and without the learning from it, India will not be able to make the AMCA. Another argument is that it is needed to replace the Mirage-2000, MiG-29 and Jaguar fleets. Some others fear that any
delay in the development of the AMCA will leave a hole while killing the LCA program.

First of all, the MWF is not required to make the AMCA. The AMCA was a separate development program and is not intended to succeed the LCA. The  technologies and learnings from the LCA Mk1 and the LCA Mk1A will help the DRDO, HAL, ADA and the private sector companies involved to make the AMCA. This was also stated by the HAL CMD R Madhavan. Interestingly, this was in December 2018 when the LCA MkII had not changed into the bigger MWF. Earlier In April 2018, the then Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in a written reply to a question in Lok Sabha stated that the feasibility study for the programme has been already completed So clearly, the making of the MWF has no bearing on the future manufacturing of the AMCA.

The LCA program which was initiated to replace the MiG-21 did not envision a larger MWF as a follow up. After the shortcomings of the LCA Mk1, the LCA MkII
was to be re-engined with a more powerful GE-414 from the current GE-404 along with the advanced avionics and weapons capabilities with modifications to the
airframe. The delays in getting the LCA MkII project led to the LCA Mk1A with upgrades as demanded by the IAF – primarily, the AESA radar and electronic warfare suite.

The Medium Combat Aircraft (MCA) was envisioned in the middle of the 1990s to replace the Mirage and Jaguar fighter jets. As that project didn’t take off, it transformed into the AMCA project in 2010 which the IAF saw as the replacement for its Mirage, MiG-29 and Jaguar fleets. So the question of the recently announced MWF being the replacement for these jets does not arise and is not dependent on it.

The fear of delays in AMCA leaving a hole in capabilities while killing the LCA project is unfounded. Perhaps those saying so doubt the capabilities of our scientists and engineers to deliver. The LCA project is not being killed as a total of 123 jets are on order as on date. But delays in giving full backing to the AMCA will hurt the project as both the LCA Mk1A and MkII projects will run parallelly taking majority of the resources and effort. In fact the LCA project itself could benefit from the AMCA project. The advanced sensors and other technologies that will be developed for the fifth generation AMCA can be used to upgrade the LCA and make it a potent platform. This can potentially lead to an LCA Mk1B model in the future which the IAF will find useful to order in certain numbers. This is what Lockheed Martin has done with the F-16 block 70 which draws from technologies developed for its F-35 5th generation fighter. Incidentally, it is one of the contenders for India’s medium range combat aircraft acquisition project.

Since there are reports of interest in the LCA from other countries, India will have a potent product to offer for export after the requirements of the IAF are completed.

The Indian Navy (IN) will not have an indigenous option if the AMCA is not developed at the earliest as it has rejected the LCA for carrier operations. The IN has stated that it will only buy the AMCA even as it backs the testing of technologies for naval operations with the Naval LCA. The IN operates one aircraft carrier, the INS Vikramaditya and building a second which will be named INS Vikrant. The IN is also going to build a much larger third carrier that will carry twice the number of aircrafts with assisted take off. The carrier which is likely to enter service sometime in the mid 2030s will require about 100 fighter jets.

In the absence of an indigenous option, the navy will be forced to look for an imported jet. It is already looking to buy 57 fighter jets for which the French Rafale and the American F/A-18 Super Hornet are in contention. The navy will also need a replacement for its 45 MiG-29s that currently are in service. The potential requirement for the AMCA from both the IAF and the IN is nearly 400 jets. The time frame for that acquisition to start is in the next 12-15 years. This will only be possible if there is complete backing and support for the AMCA so that it enters production in that timeframe.

Yusuf Unjhawala is a military affairs analyst and Editor of Indian Defence Forum. His work appears in Livefist, Mint, The Print and other publications. His views are his own and may not reflect those of Livefist.

Also read: More Than Tejas, The IAF Needs To Take Over AMCA Project NOW


Can Kashmir compel the ummah to close ranks?

Can Kashmir compel the ummah to close ranks?

ISI views the Islamic State and Al Qaida as adversaries in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but Indian security agencies are weighing if the circumstances have changed enough in Kashmir for ISI to make an alliance with these pan-Islamic ideology-driven terror organisations

Sandeep Dikshit in New Delhi

Kashmir of 2019 is definitely very different from the troubled Valley we have been witness to for the past three decades. Leave alone the diminishing of the politico-governance arrangement from that of a full state to a mere Union Territory with the loss of Ladakh to boot. Also leave alone the scrapping of Article 370, a temporary provision as External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar never tires of educating his audience at American think-tanks, while omitting to mention that it was provisional only till a plebiscite was held.

These two injuries to the Kashmiri psyche are enough cause for the vulnerable and the young to rally to the militant banner. But a more potent one worries Intelligence officials. It has not yet made it to TV chat shows and newspaper articles. Yet it lurks at the back of the Indian Intelligence’s calculations. This is the ebbing of Palestine as the cause célèbre for the activist Muslim all over the world.

Once the second Intifada petered out into the 2008-09 Israel-Gaza conflict and a right wing government took power in Tel Aviv, the Palestine cause has lost a lot of its emotional power to rally Muslims. If not in sending fighters, then in making contributions and providing them moral and diplomatic support.

Impending threat

After the restrictions ease in Kashmir and there is the inevitable violence if the citizenry faces off with the security forces, it is the cheerleaders of the thus-far mythically united Muslim ummah (community) whom India’s Intelligence community will be closely watching.

Security forces would not like to acknowledge, but they have had considerable help in Kashmir from the division among the militancy’s sponsors over the ideology. When militancy first took roots in Kashmir, armed groups were at odds over the end goal: should Kashmir be a part of Pakistan or should it be an independent country?

At times, the armed gangs decimated each other to the delight of the security establishment. Sometimes one group would walk over to the side of the security forces to eliminate their rivals. In one celebrated case, the leader of a gang of gunmen who crossed over became an MLA after one of the poorly patronised elections. At that time, there was little effort at mediation by the sponsors of terrorism sitting in different countries. This was partly because they were involved in other pressing violent mayhem in the Balkans, Chechnya, Indonesia, etc.

It was also because Pakistan kept the insurgency at a low boil. The intention never was to wrest Kashmir valley. It has known that the Indian armed forces have made that impossible. The aim behind frequent violence in the Valley was to deplete New Delhi’s political capital to force it into talks with Islamabad. Pakistan’s bottomline was freezing the Line of Control (LoC) into a de-facto border.

The new reality

Once the equations changed in Kashmir valley, the bets should be off on the other side too. Till a month before the August 5 clampdown, a new rivalry was playing out among militant groups. On one side were groups like Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) or Hizbul Mujahideen that want political independence or Kashmir’s merger into Pakistan. On the other, groups like ISJK (Islamic State for Jammu & Kashmir) or AGH (Ansar Ghazwat-ul-Hind) that want to set up an Islamic Caliphate and are affiliated with Islamic State and Al Qaida.

Days before the clampdown, the Army shot dead a few militants in separate encounters. What was unusual was that they were earlier with LeT and had crossed over to ISJK and AGH. There is a strong possibility one group had tipped the security forces about the newly converted Islamic State and Al Qaida fighters.

Though the ISI views the Islamic State and Al Qaida as adversaries in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the security agencies are weighing if the circumstances have changed enough in Kashmir for it to make an alliance with the pan-Islamic ideology driven terror organisations.

The ISI is up against a stable government whose Kashmir policy is driven by the quartet of Modi-Doval-Amit Shah-Bipin Rawat. On the other hand, the desperate appeals of business tycoons to Pakistan’s army chief Qamar Javed Bajwa indicate the economy is severely malfunctioning. Pakistan’s rulers will need a diversion. The old methods may not work with the Indian quartet on Kashmir.

This is where the role of ideologues of armed ‘jihad’ scattered all over the world becomes crucial. Kashmir is the cause that unites all of them as Palestine goes on the backburner, Syria enters a stalemate and the war in Yemen unravels badly for the Sunnis.

Dealing with global backers

India has been well-served in the past by the distractions of the flag-bearers of a united Muslim ummah. This time, India has worked on countries such as Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and UAE that claim this pedestal while Nigeria and Sudan have remained largely neutral. But others such as Malaysia, Turkey and Iran have remained immune to the persuasion by South Block. Their stance gives legitimacy to activists of the Muslim cause to attempt to heal the breach among the jihadis in the Kashmir valley.

The clampdown since August 5 has ensured that the regular season of infiltration has been nipped in the bud. The US, as long as it can, will be holding Imran Khan to his promise to keep a check on cross-border terrorism. Forces inimical to India will have to make do with the current lot of jihadis bottled up in the Valley to create much more than a ripple. But the communications clampdown in the Valley is delaying attempts at rapprochement between the groups.

ISI will be going against its grain if it concedes ground to pan-Islamists. It had sheltered Al Qaida leaders in Pakistan after 9/11 but was equally quick to hand them over to the Americans to keep the military aid spigot flowing. Osama bin Laden was permitted limited contact with his comrades. Now that the old tactics of calibrated violence have not worked with the Modi government since 2014, ISI could consider throwing the kitchen sink. But if it does so, it would do so knowing that the more virulent brand of terrorism, Al Qaida and Islamic State, need a short spell of abetment before they become out-of- control monsters.

 


Positive move Politicians rise above partisanship for Guru Nanak

Positive move

PEOPLE from all over the world will gather to commemorate the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev. In a spirit that cuts across narrow partisan divisions, which is rare in today’s environment, political leaders both from the Centre and Punjab, along with religious leaders, will be together on the stage. This is the way it ought to be. However, recent politicking and bickering between various political parties, particularly the Congress on one side and the Akali-BJP combine on the other, have raised the unholy spectre of a distastefully fragmented event.

Guru Nanak’s message of universal brotherhood finds resonance far beyond his followers, the Sikhs. The values advocated by Guru Nanak need to be followed, more so in these disturbed times. Credit for reaching out would go to Capt Amarinder Singh, who went the extra mile. President Ram Nath Kovind, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, all have accepted the Punjab Government’s invitation to attend the Sultanpur Lodhi celebrations. The SAD announced that it had already invited the President and the Prime Minister. Such one-upmanship needs to be eschewed.

Now, more than ever, coordination between the state government and the SGPC, and thus the SAD, will need to be strengthened to ensure that various irritants are overcome graciously. Statements by both SAD and Congress leaders have betrayed a particularly myopic view focused more on ‘taking credit’ than taking concrete steps that would enrich the celebrations. The eyes of the world will be on what happens at Sultanpur Lodhi. It would be deeply distressing if partisan sniping were to detract from the main event. People who jostle for their spot in the sun must remember that the focus of the event is a celebration of the Guru and his teachings, which guide us to take the path of honest living and sharing. Let the spirit of ‘seva’ prevail among all those who celebrate the birth anniversary of the founder of Sikhism.


Air Marshal Harjit Singh Arora is new IAF vice chief

Air Marshal Harjit Singh Arora is new IAF vice chief

Air Marshal Harjit Singh Arora assumes the office of Vice Chief of Air Staff at Air HQ, in New Delhi on Tuesday, October 1, 2019. PTI

New Delhi, October 1

Air Marshal Harjit Singh Arora, who has a total flying experience of over 2,600 hours, was on Tuesday appointed the new vice chief of the Indian Air Force (IAF).

Arora succeeds Air Marshal Rakesh Kumar Singh Bhadauria who was appointed the new IAF chief on Monday.

Prior to being appointed the vice chief, Arora, who was awarded the Ati Vishisht Seva Medal in 2011, was the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the South Western Air Command at Gandhinagar in Gujarat. The position of the chief of South Western Command was in turn taken over by Air Marshal S.K. Ghotia on Tuesday. Ghotia is an alumnus of the National Defence Academy (NDA) and is a batchmate of Arora, both of whom were commissioned as fighter pilots in December 1981.

According to defence officials, Air Marshal Arora has rich and diverse experience of accident-free operational flying which includes several fighter aircraft, including the MiG 21, the MiG 29 and other aircraft including helicopters. A graduate of the Tactics and Air Combat Development Establishment of the Defence Service Staff College and National Defence College, Arora has commanded a MiG 21 squadron in the South Western sector where he was later also appointed as the Commander of Air Defence Direction Centre.

Arora holds a Master of Science in Defence Studies and Master of Philosophy in Defence and Strategic Studies.

Arora has not only commanded a premier MiG 29 Base but has also, as an Air Vice Marshal, been appointed the Air Defence Commander at Headquarters Western Air Command and Eastern Air Command.

As an Air Marshal, Arora has held the appointments of Director General (Inspection & Safety) and Director General Air (Operations) at the Air headquarters.

Arora was a Directing Staff at Tactics and Air Combat Development Establishment and has been a Flying Inspector in the Directorate of Air Staff Inspection. He also brings in a certain amount of diplomatic experience because he served as India’s Defence Attache in the Embassy of India, Bangkok, Thailand from 2006 to 2009. He has also served as Honorary Air Force ADC to the President of India. — IANS


Militant killed in Anantnag

Militant killed in Anantnag

Suhail A Shah

Anantnag, October 29

A militant was killed, shortly after he allegedly killed a non-local truck driver, in a gunfight with security forces on Monday night in the Bijbehara area of the district, the police said.

The body of the militant has been kept at a police facility in Anantnag, where several families from different parts of south Kashmir were called for its identification.“But so far he remains unidentified,” SSP Anantnag, Altaf Khan said.

The two incidents took place in the Kanelwan area of Bijbehara, which is also known as the ‘apple valley’ area in local parlance.A truck driver, Narayan Dutt, from the Katra area of Jammu, was shot by militants at about 8 pm on Monday night. This has been the fifth such incident here in south Kashmir since October 7. Five non-local truck drivers and a brick kiln worker from Bihar have been killed in these incidents.

The police confirmed Dutt’s killing half an hour later and maintained that the area was being combed by security forces.

On Tuesday morning the police claimed that a militant had been killed in a brief exchange of fire, not more than 200 metres from where Dutt was shot dead.

“We had two parties deployed on the main road in the area. Their response was timely and the militant was intercepted and killed in a gunfight,” Khan said.

Local sources said intense firing was heard in the area for several minutes after which the guns fell silent.

“The firing started at about 8 pm and continued for more than 10 minutes, before the guns fell silent,” the local sources said.

On Monday morning, clashes erupted in the area and several other parts of Anantnag district. However, no one was injured in the clashes.

Later in the day, an Army party was fired upon by militants in the Drubgam area of Pulwama district. The Army retaliated and after a brief exchange of fire the militants managed to flee the area.

“A cordon has been laid in the area and efforts to track down the militants are on,” a senior police official from Pulwama said. He said the situation was under control and no one was injured in the firing.


Don’t Sleep on Russia’s MiG-31 (One of the Fastest Planes on the Planet)

An excellent design.

Key point: The MiG-31 was great for patrolling Russia’s vast airspace.

During the Cold War, the Soviet Union’ s Air Defense Forces (VPVO) needed a series of heavy interceptors to patrol its massive borders. Most regular “light” fighters like the early MiGs were not up to the task, as they lacked the range and speed to intercept to rapidly climb and intercept supersonic American bombers, who were expected to zoom over the Arctic to drop bombs on the Soviet Union.

As a result, a specialized class of aircraft was created for this purpose. The first was the Tupolev Tu-28 and Tu-128. These aircraft would lay the template for later interceptors: they were large for good endurance, fast, and were armed solely with missiles.

This design was obsolete from the time it entered service in the 1960s, as the B-58 Hustler that was in service at the time could outpace it. However, the MiG-25 “Foxbat” was also in development at the time. This aircraft would go on to become the definitive interceptor of the VPVO.

Blisteringly fast and armed with the massive R-40 air-to-air missiles, the Foxbat stood ready to defend the Soviet Union’s borders against all threats. Its airframe also saw adaptation into more tactical roles, photo reconnaissance and strike versions of the MiG-25 were created for the Soviet Air Force (VVS).

Grand Theft Auto III was released, popularizing a genre of open-world, action-adventure video games as well as spurring controversy around violence in video games.

 Michael Zehaf-Bibeau attacks the Parliament of Canada in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, killing a soldier and injuring three other people.

In the 1980s, the MiG-25 was followed up by the MiG-31, which added in a second weapons systems officer on all models and increased the flight performance, radar and weapons of the craft. Early versions also featured a cannon, but this was quickly deleted once it was determined that such extras were not necessary on a pure interceptor.

Nowadays the MiG-31 is the standard long range interceptor of the Russian Air Force (the VPVO was merged with the VVS in the 1990s) and is expected to serve into the 2030s. A “mid-life upgrade” of the MiG-31 is currently being procured: the MiG-31BSM. This modification integrates many new strike weapons onto the MiG-31 and modernizes most systems. The MiG-31 was also chosen as the primary carrier aircraft for the Kinzhal hypersonic missile.

But in August 2018, Russian outlets announced that experimental design work was beginning on a next generation pure interceptor that is meant to replace the MiG-31. Following the naming convention of Russia’s other next generation aircraft projects (PAK (XX)), the new interceptor project is called PAK DP, or Prospective Aviation Complex Long-range Interceptor.

The continuation of a line of dedicated interceptors is interesting because the existing PAK-FA/Su-57 fighter in many ways could fulfill the same role as the MiG-31. It has a highly advanced radar, it can supercruise (maintain Mach 1+ flight without the use of afterburners), and it could be armed with long range air-to-air missiles.

While the range is less than a MiG-31, air-to-air refueling can make up the gap. But since the capabilities as they stand are so similar, why the need for a separate airframe? Sukhoi fighters have also served in the interceptor role before, the Su-27P variant of the Flanker was meant explicitly for the VPVO. There are a couple reasons why the Russian government still considers the PAK DP to be necessary.

The first is that the PAK DP might build off the multirole nature of the earlier MiG-31 and MiG-25 conversions. An aircraft close to the original conception of the F-111 could be in the cards for Russia in the PAK DP: something that can carry a ton of long-range missiles and also perform strike with a wide range of munitions (including hypersonic ones)while moving very fast.

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Homage paid to 2 soldiers killed in Tangdhar

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, October 21

The Army paid tributes to two soldiers, who were killed in a ceasefire violation in north Kashmir’s Kupwara district.

Havildar Padam Bahadur Shrestha and Rifleman Gamil Kumar Shrestha were killed on the Line of Control in Tangdhar sector.

In a ceremony at BB Cantt, Maj Gen GS Kahlon, Chief of Staff, Chinar Corps, and all ranks paid homage to the bravehearts on behalf of the proud nation. In a show of solidarity, representatives from other security agencies also joined in to pay their last respects, a statement from the Army said.

The late Havildar Padam Bahadur Shrestha and the late Rifleman Gamil Kumar Shrestha were deployed on the LoC in Tangdhar sector. They sustained splinter injuries during unprovoked ceasefire violations by Pakistan Army in the early hours of Sunday.

“Both individuals were evacuated to Field Hospital, Tangdhar, but unfortunately succumbed to their injuries”, the statement said.

Havildar Shrestha, 38, had joined the Army in 2001. He belonged to Dighali Pather village of Dhansiri tehsil in Golaghat district, Assam, and is survived by his wife, a daughter and two sons.

Rifleman Shrestha, 21, had joined the Army in 2017. He belonged to Rampur village of Palpa district in Lumbini Zone, Nepal, and is survived by his parents.


Birthday party costs jawan his life

Hyderabad, October 20

Army jawan stabbed to death at birthday party in Telangana

A brawl at a birthday party cost the life of a 28-year-old Army jawan, who was “stabbed” to death at the party in Warangal district. The police said the incident took place on Saturday night and the jawan has been identified as H Prem Kumar.

According to the police, the incident took place at Narsampet town of the district. The injured jawan was rushed to a local hospital, but since his condition was serious, he died while being taken to Hyderabad.

The police said, “As per available information, the jawan had come down on a vacation a couple of days ago and attended birthday celebrations of his friend on Saturday night where an altercation took place after some of his friends got drunk and one person who attended the birthday party stabbed him”.

Sources said Prem Kumar was serving in Kashmir and had come home on leave three days ago. — TNS


Thanjavur to become key IAF base: Air Marshal B Suresh

Air Marshal B Suresh PVSM AVSM VM ADC Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief (AOC-in-C) Southern Air Command, Indian Air Force, arrived at Air Force Station Thanjavur, on Tuesday. On arrival, he was received by Group Captain Prajual Singh VM, Station Commander, Air Force Station Thanjavur and presented with a guard of honour.

The AOC-in-C inspected various sections and units at Air Force Station Thanjavur and reviewed the operational preparedness of the base. He was apprised on the various ongoing work services and fast moving projects towards developing Air Force Station Thanjavur as one of the premier fighter airbase in the Southern region.

During his interaction with the personnel, AOC-in-C emphasized on the optimization of resources, operational expertise, dedicated efforts towards key result areas, improvised training and professional competency.
Mrs. Radha Suresh, President Air Force Wives Welfare Association (Regional) was received by Mrs. Vandana Singh, President Air Force Wives Welfare Association (Local).