Five months after Balakot, Pakistan opens airspace for all civilian traffic

TNN Bureau. Updated: 7/17/2019 11:34:18 AM Front Page

Suffering Rs 491 Crore loss, Air India flights pass Pakistan airspace

JAMMU: Asserting that the twenty years after Kargil war have made his force capable to counter any kind of air threat, Air Force Chief B S Dhanoa on Tuesday said that the Balakot strike demonstrated the IAF's ability of precision bombing, even as he stressed that his men are capable of taking part in full spectrum of conflict, ranging from "sub-conventional to nuclear".

He said in case "we have correct coordinates, the Air Force is capable of doing all-weather bombing through clouds".

Early this year, after the Pulwama terror attack that killed 40 CRPF personnel, the Air Force launched air strikes at a terror camp in Balakot, inside Pakistani territory.

Speaking at a seminar on '20 years of Op Safed Sagar' in New Delhi, Dhanoa said precision bombing capability was very much needed during the Kargil operations where targets were very small and at high altitudes.

"In 1999 (precision bombing capabilities) was operationalised only on the Mirage-2000 aircraft. Now all aircraft, Mirage, Su-30, Jaguar, MiG-29 and MiG-27 upgraded aircraft have the capability for precision bombing. Not only that, in case we have correct coordinates we can do all-weather bombing through clouds very accurately," Dhanoa said.

"We have just seen in the attack that we carried out on February 26 that we are capable of precision strike from standoff distances and very accurately," he added.

Dhanoa, who was then the Commanding Officer of 17 Squadron and operating from Srinagar, recalled the air action that took place during the Kargil conflict.

It was for the first time that the MiG-21 aircraft carried out air-to-ground bombing at night in the mountains, he said.

Operation Safed Sagar was carried out by the Air Force in Operation Vijay to drive out infiltrators from Kargil.

Dhanoa spoke about the operational limitations that existed in 1999 and the innovative ways adopted by the IAF to overcome the difficulties during the conflict.

He also pointed out the non-availability of winter-clothing and "big intelligence gaps" during the Kargil operations.

"We had no (winter clothing)... I want to emphasis that point. Winter clothing was authorised to units that were flying over Siachen. Rest of us did not have this clothing. We had our summer overalls and the woolen inner. We used to wear two of them," Dhanoa said.

The developments which took place post Kargil war have transformed the Air Force in capability so as to counter any kind of air threat in conventional and sub-conventional domains of warfare, he said.

"Over a period of time, the Air Force has evolved in a manner that we have through a process of long our long planning and induction. Slowly, we got our ability to take part in operations across the spectrum of the conflict. It is now a force that is capable of full spectrum conflict, from sub-conventional to nuclear," the Air Force Chief said.

At present, BVR (beyond-visual-range) missiles are carried by MiG-29, Su-30 and Mirage-2000 aircraft.

The IAF has the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft to monitor the airspace deep inside the enemy territory and operates on secure communication with network-centric warfare capabilities, he said.


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