PAF No. 2 sqn was previously operating F-7Ps.
PAF Masroor is at Karachi, so it is expected to have a maritime role.
We also have to consider our second strike capability here. We have a 100 odd warheads and an unknown number of missiles. With a limited arsenal, the only two responses to any sort of nuclear strike is either massive retaliation where every major city in Pakistan is targeted or no response at all. We don't have the luxury of wasting precious warheads in limited counter-force strikes. What happens if the pakis retaliate with everything they have and we are now left with insufficient warheads to respond? We don't want to end up in a situation where all of our major cities have swallowed nukes while some of theirs are still standing. So I do believe the govt. when they say massive nuclear retaliation will be our response to any tac nuke strike on our forces. Unless they want to do nothing and face the wrath of Indian people, that is the only thing they can do.Aditya G wrote:This is not about Modi or MMS per se. There could be a UPA or Mahaghatbandhan sarkar after 4 years. We all know that there are varying sorts of opinions in the GoI establishment, and given the committee type decision making system there is a chance that the Prime Minister may be advised against Massive Retaliation (MR), and hence may not press ahead with it.Karan M wrote:...If you think weak leaders detract from it, then elect strong ones. That's it. That's all we can do.
MMS etc making strong statements and turning other cheek on border firing, on being pro-Pak, as versus Modi speaking little but giving Pakistan a proper slap as required.
I'd say the "signalling" is then fairly obvious.
In total I have 19 ships on order by PN and PMSA:...
At present, surface fleet of PMSA is comprised of 04 x Corvettes
of Chinese origin. These corvettes were procured in 1989-1990 and have been
assigned to patrol, navigate and protect around 240,000 Sq km of our EEZ, which
corresponds to 60,000 Sq km area per corvette, translating to 6000 hours of nonstop
patrolling. Being of old vintage, less tonnage and draught, these vessels are not
capable to operate beyond Sea State 3. The rough sea conditions results in heavy
wear and tear of material. In view, it is pertinent to mention that existing corvettes have
outlived their life and recurring defects have been hampering PMSA to pursue its
assigned roles and tasks
...
(2) High POL consumption and speed limitation have led to limited
endurance. This is hindering PMSA to undertake patrolling/ surveillance of vast
area of responsibility i.e 240,000 Sq km of Pakistan EEZ.
(3) Due old machinery, maximum speed of existing PMSA Corvettes have
been limited to 10 knots which is hampering PMSA to undertake assigned roles
and tasks in befitting manner. New ships will not have such speed limitation and
will increase PMSA capabilities to undertake high speed operations on high
seas:
....
Due to limited sea worthy
capabilities of existing PMSA Corvettes, PMSA is unable to operate at sea in entire
monsoon season. Keeping in view current security situation in Pakistan, exploitation of
said deficiency in monsoon season by terrorists cannot be ruled out. Therefore any
delay in induction of new ships which will be able to operate at sea in monsoon season
may have devastating effects on Pakistan
....
1. From Footnote 2 on that table:sarang wrote:A question raises from the PDF,
The table in PDF shows all weapons are of 12KT (its weird though that Pakistanis dont have bigger bums), how much is destructive power of that size of weapon.
2. From page 3 of the pdf:2 Yield estimate is based on the maximum yield measured in the 1998 nuclear tes
12kt is Hiroshima size. Pakis themselves say that Nasr is 0.5 to 5 kt. I would say it will be 0.2 to 0.5 ktThat yield estimate accords with recorded yields of Pakistan's 1998 nuclear tests, which are somewhere between 5 and 12 kt
Spaced armor (one layer up front, to set off the warhead, and
one layer a ways back, to give the jet time to defocus, without
having to carry the extra mass of armor in the in-between space)
is somewhat effective against HEAT. Almost all modern MBT's have
spaced armor, and almost all the rest are refitted with reactive
(explosive) armor. To counter these counters, some countries have
devised dual-warhead HEAT munitions (ie, one warhead to penetrate
the outer layer, and the other on a slight time-delay to penetrate
the inner layer). The Hellfire missile, carried by the Apache and
some other US platforms, is a dual-warhead HEAT munition.
+++ Very goodshiv wrote: Have you seen my "educational purposes" video?![]()
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxJvLNrZzdU
Interesting.RoyG wrote:Shiv,
I was playing around with Nukemap. .5kt is perfect for usage in Balochistan. You're looking at 70-80% mortality between 400m-1km. Below 170m is close to 100%. Fallout on Punjab will be close to nothing.
.....Castrate Pakistan’s nuclear programme and weapons, especially tactical, because they are a clear and present danger to the Indian army from making any ingress into Pakistan in a conventional war that will negate their ‘Cold Start’ doctrine. We can nuke it in the small area they have entered in Pakistan and claim that we nuked our own land, not someone else’s....
The quote claims nuking their own land, not their own people.If they nuke Indian armour which is on Paki soil, they can claim that they nuked themselves only.
So Shiv, what I don't understand is that the pakis also know this, why would they do something so stupid. Its also not clear to me, why they spent time and effort developing it ? What am I missing ?shiv wrote:1. From Footnote 2 on that table:sarang wrote:A question raises from the PDF,
The table in PDF shows all weapons are of 12KT (its weird though that Pakistanis dont have bigger bums), how much is destructive power of that size of weapon.2. From page 3 of the pdf:2 Yield estimate is based on the maximum yield measured in the 1998 nuclear tes12kt is Hiroshima size. Pakis themselves say that Nasr is 0.5 to 5 kt. I would say it will be 0.2 to 0.5 ktThat yield estimate accords with recorded yields of Pakistan's 1998 nuclear tests, which are somewhere between 5 and 12 kt
Have you seen my "educational purposes" video?![]()
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxJvLNrZzdU
There are several plausible explanations some of which have been discussed on the "Deterrence" thread in the other forum.Guddu wrote: So Shiv, what I don't understand is that the pakis also know this, why would they do something so stupid. Its also not clear to me, why they spent time and effort developing it ? What am I missing ?
a little short circuit such as the above one is a good possibility if China were to do fence sitting as it was before in the Indo-Pak wars, setting off a reaction between India and China works for both Paki's and US advantageshiv wrote:But the US cannot be relied upon to control Pakis so hopefully a few Paki nukes will escape and turn towards Europe and maybe inshallah a couple turned against tarrel than mountain fliends of China.
The dilemma here is that if Pakis put tactical nukes on hair trigger alert - then all the above problems arise. if they keep them secure they the Pakis may not be able to use them in time if and when India decides to do a quick cold start style retaliation.
This is what my impression has been. It is quite difficult to make a small tactical nuke. Even if you get the fissile material correct, how about the other elements like the amount of explosive required to trigger the actual fission?shiv wrote:
It is not easy to make small tactical nuclear bombs. they require a very high degree of technical sophistication to make them work and the really small "less than 30 cm/12 inches" diameter ones have had very small yield of less than 1 kiloton. And despite these small yields they use up as much or more nuclear material than bigger bombs. the analogy is like lighting a campfire on a wet and windy day. It does not matter whether you want to light a small fire or a big one - you will use up a lot of matches.
This is where i am a great supporter of more nukes for Pak. Specially sub based. Nothing like a Pak nuke sub on the loose. Would for example Israel trust a PN nuke sub in a sea near it?Finally if your own soldiers are bearded guys who have friends in the unofficial army the Lashkar e Toiba or LeJanghvi etc - a battery of Nasr missiles may simply vanish and be taken to hit the Kafir Americans who are killing our Muslim brothers in Syria. In fact I would be happy to see all this happening - but these are things that scare the crap out of the US. From the US viewpoint it may be OK to hit India, but if the nukes turn the other way there is a problem. But the US cannot be relied upon to control Pakis so hopefully a few Paki nukes will escape and turn towards Europe and maybe inshallah a couple turned against tarrel than mountain fliends of China.
Everything is possible - but keeping the diameter down under 40 cm and weight down under 500 kg is difficult. That means bigger missiles or aircraft. They could make a truck sized bomb and simply drive the truck towards an attacking force. I wouldn't put it past the Pakis to do that. Available reading material says that the easiest is a Hiroshima type device with a 50 kg lump of enriched Uranium divided into two parts and one part - a bullet fired into another part with a hole. That device will fit only into a truck and unless shielded with a ton of lead will be radiating like the sun. And machining Uranium to get 50 kg will waste another 25 kg just like "making waste" that jewellers account for. And Pu and Uranium are much much much more expensive than Gold. I don't know exactly but we may be talking 100 times more expensive than gold. In fact Pakis could use gold shielding rather than lead and not notice the increase in IMF loans they need to do that.nit wrote: Even if you get the fissile material correct, how about the other elements like the amount of explosive required to trigger the actual fission?
jrjrao wrote: Somebody must have taken away Gobar's whiskey bottle. Because he is writing sensibly, for once.
Behold the ‘beauty’ of democracy: death by a thousand debts
This is just my conjecture, but I think that the quid pro quos are obvious:
- Castrate Pakistan’s nuclear programme and weapons, especially tactical, because they are a clear and present danger to the Indian army from making any ingress into Pakistan in a conventional war that will negate their ‘Cold Start’ doctrine. We can nuke it in the small area they have entered in Pakistan and claim that we nuked our own land, not someone else’s. If we agree to this the explosion could come even before the economic meltdown reaches our kitchens.
- Ease up on our friendship with China and budding relationship with Russia.
- Come into India’s orbit of influence and let them deal with Afghanistan, the Indian Ocean and the neighbourhood.
- And, of course, help America in Afghanistan. But America seems confused: it simultaneously tells us to kill the Afghan Taliban and at the same time to bring them to the negotiating table, a crass contradiction. Then they also say that the Afghan Taliban are their partners in peace. Most confusing. Make up your minds, friends. Know what you want. Do you?
thank you, I had Aksai Chin in mind when talking about limited geography.Lalmohan wrote:yes, the isotopic composition can be used to identify the source
I was thinking the same thing too. This is getting interesting. Imagine if set those suckers to airburst. Not even a blip on the seismic readings. Satellites may read it as a large conventional explosive. Chinese would begin pushing their troops toward the Karakorum pass and push a huge naval battle group through Malacca to secure the ports and checkmate anything coming out of Diego Garcia. After 1-2 weeks the full effects of radiation sickness in the countryside will begin to take its toll. Taking out a few villages and towns will be enough to get ordinary balochis to sh*t bricks and start ratting out the insurrectionists. The PA will get some breathing room and regain deployment flexibility and shift more troops to other provinces and the Eastern border.shiv wrote:Interesting.RoyG wrote:Shiv,
I was playing around with Nukemap. .5kt is perfect for usage in Balochistan. You're looking at 70-80% mortality between 400m-1km. Below 170m is close to 100%. Fallout on Punjab will be close to nothing.
One of the things Saddam was accused of (probably rightly) was the use of Chemical weapons against Kurds. Saddam was not removed for that because NATO ally Turkey does not like Kurds either. Saddam was removed on a fake nuke accusation.
In the case of Pakistan the usual powers - US and China will deny that nuclear weapons have been used. Pakis will fence off the area and no one will be wiser. Maybe I should make up a story about this . Gives me an idea ..
RoyG wrote:
I was thinking the same thing too. This is getting interesting. Imagine if set those suckers to airburst. Not even a blip on the seismic readings. Satellites may read it as a large conventional explosive. Chinese would begin pushing their troops toward the Karakorum pass and push a huge naval battle group through Malacca to secure the ports and checkmate anything coming out of Diego Garcia. After 1-2 weeks the full effects of radiation sickness in the countryside will begin to take its toll. Taking out a few villages and towns will be enough to get ordinary balochis to sh*t bricks and start ratting out the insurrectionists. The PA will get some breathing room and regain deployment flexibility and shift more troops to other provinces and the Eastern border.
The world finds out the truth 3-4 weeks later but by then it's too late. The PA is in full control, India is calmer than a hindu cow as usual, and the Chinese are parked outside.
The PA blames the attack on a few "rogue" elements and promises to purge them. 3-4 months later Paki eggspurt CFaire publishes her usual rant on NYT or some other BS print stating how we shouldn't give them more aid and how they actually purged more of the lower ranking non-punjabi guys.
Reuben F Johnson, Dubai - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
18 November 2015
A Pakistan Air Force JF-17 Thunder making the type's first European display at the Paris Air Show on 15 June. Source: IHS/Patrick Allen
The Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) has no plans to replace the JF-17 fighter's Klimov/Sarkisov RD-93 powerplant despite Chinese suggestions otherwise, according to Pakistan Air Force (PAF) officials.
While several, non-specific statements have been made by representatives from Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) during the past few months, a PAC senior representative recently told IHS Jane's , "We are completely satisfied with this Russian-made engine.
"When we designed the JF-17 we evaluated a number of design alternatives and we determined that the RD-93 in this single-engine installation is absolutely right for this application," he said. "We worked extensively with the people from Klimov bureau in St Petersburg [Russia] and this engine turned out to be an ideal solution."
PAC representatives added that the next step is to establish a full-scale servicing and overhaul facility for the RD-93 at their plant in Kamra.
"What does this tell you?" asked one programme officer rhetorically. "If the situation was as it has been portrayed at times - that we are just utilising the RD-93 as a temporary solution until the Chinese can 'save' us with their own new engine - then we would not be expending the resources to set up this overhaul base. For us, changing to another engine would not make any sense and would be disruptive and cause a huge expense for the JF-17 programme."
PAF officials told IHS Jane's at the 2015 Dubai Air Show that improvements to the JF-17's design and the reliability of the RD-93 have attracted a number of interested parties.
"The experience at [the Paris Airshow in] Le Bourget brought about 11-12 countries that approached us with some interest in a JF-17 acquisition," said one of the officials. "Out of all of those there are today some four or five customers that we regard as being serious prospects in the near term." PAC representatives declined to name any of those countries, however.
Say what you want about them. They have more pride in their products than we do. The PAF is serious about the aircraft and want to push it to its limits.Austin wrote:So what happened to the famed Chinese engine WS-10 that was suppose to replace Russian one , looks like it didn't make the cut
Apparently they are now. Read elsehwere on a Pak Fora that AAR after 4 odd years of fighting have shown the Regular PA grunt performed poorly with SSG having to be called in far more frequently then needed. Supposedly now each Regiment will have a 'Commando Battalion' geared towards COIN ops. Also the Frontier Force has stood up a "Special Operations Wing" with American Help for COIN.WHy have the Pakis not built a force like the RR to take on the TTP and return the reserves to their peacetime locations?