indranilroy wrote:
1. Is there a thumb rule that all weapons training has to be on jets? Did you know that USAF is considering it to cut costs?
Indranil the irony is that the argument currently used against such aircraft is because the USAF does not use it, which is why it becomes necessary to point out that the USAF is considering using such planes to convince those who believe that all wars are fought the way the US plans and fights is wars and one's own local environment and local experiences do not count. Simply saying that it can be used or that there is a role given our circumstances is not convincing, because the standard in our view is always and invariably set by the US and Europe. The worrying part is when the IAF too is unable to see the realities of sanctions and economy and takes the attitude of the illiterate sipahi who says "hathiyar de do aur hum ladenge" . Power is about how and where those hathiyars come from and some beginning has to be made at a time when war is not breathing down our necks. This is not to exonerate HAL. but I am increasingly uncertain about IAF attitudes. The IAF is clearly speaking with two voices where senior leaders pay lip service to Indian origin stuff while I have spoken to a whole lot of junior IAF types who are completely dismissive of anything Indian. This does not bode well.
The IAF has been allowed to tide over crises by instant, reactive high tech imports. The MiG 21 was an "instant import". so was the Su-7, and the MiG 23 and MiG 27. Also the Pilatus. On the other hand the Hawk and Jaguar took an astonishingly long time for import and have not been free from issues related to import/support. Early Hawk crashes were due to quality control issues in British imported stuff. The Jaguar too was imported with a barely usable nav-attack system, no refuelling probe, underpowered for hot and high conditions, virtually defenceless against air threats requiring the special innovation of installing overwing pylons which had to be tested in retrospect and defects that came up later that were actually solved by HAL when the Brits simply washed their hands off.
I have been hesitant to say this but I see within the IAF the attitude of wealthy sons of property developers discussing cars. One lad says I like Hummers, the other says its Lamborghini for me. Both sneer at Maruti and Tata. I do admit that pilots risk their lives in protecting the nation but its not about pilots alone - its about technicians and engineers and others down the chain who must all be included in the chain of pride and self esteem.
I am nobody to take sides, but I must say that for us, being neither HAL nor IAF taking one side or the other may be mistake. there are faults on both sides that need correction. I was shocked at a statement made by Prof Prodyut Das in the latest Vayu in an article about the future of the LCA. he said that it may already have set world records as the safest testing program ever but we need to get out of this mindset. Crashes will happen and that there is "nothing like a young Flying Officer to discover design bugs that were not discovered during testing".
There may be dynamics at work here that are difficult to parse. We the public curse the MiG 21 and call it widow maker despite the fact that the IAF loves it. The IAF gets a bad name. We want the IAF to have no crashes. Why then do we curse the IAF for discarding the HPT 32? After all the IAF is merely responding to public pressure to save lives of pilots. MiG 21s crash - so give then am a/c that does not crash. HPT 32s crash - so give them something different. We don't want the LCA to crash - so the testing program is geared towards safety rather than speed. Who is "wrong" here?