F 35 with Canards nice.
Your points are welcome Snow Monkey but the sarcasm coming out of inferiority complex is not required.
Air Station of Vadodara equipped to meet challenges
Vadodara Sep 26 The Air Force station of the Indian Air force located in the city is fully equipped to meet challenges of enemies, asserted its Air Commodore A .S. Bahal here today.
Talking to newsmen on the occasion of silver jubilee of the station, Bahal said it was formed in October 1984 and since then it has kept on augmenting various facilities.
Bahal said “Pechora Missiles were inducted in the Airforce Training School here in 1975 after which it was converted into full fledged Air Force station while AVRO flying unit was formed in March 2000.”
The Air Force station is split into four major locations namely Makarpura, Harni Airfield, Harni Camp and Darjipura” which are on the outskirts of the city, he said.
As part of silver jubilee celebration, the Air Force station has adopted Darjipura Village on the outskirt of the city to enhance integration with the civilian society, Bahal said.
This station has been providing assistance to the civilian authorities during floods and other natural calamities.
As part of silver jubilee celebration, Akash Ganga team of the Indian Air Force is to display a unique type of Para trooping programme here on Sunday, Bahal said.
US puts Lockheed off Tejas flight path
Déjà vu for the US giant, as queries land at the eleventh hour.
The US government is, for the second time, squeezing American aerospace giant Lockheed Martin out of an important contract related to India’s Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA).
Business Standard learns that Lockheed Martin, selected in June as a consultant for developing the Naval version of the Tejas, was given 90 days to obtain the clearances it needed from the US government. But now, with time running out, Washington has sent Lockheed Martin a list of questions about what assistance the company will provide.
Senior officials from Bangalore-based Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA), which manages the Tejas programme, say they will not delay the naval version any longer. ADA has recommended to the Ministry of Defence that another consultant be chosen. It has put forward the names of France’s Dassault Aviation, and European consortium EADS.
For Lockheed Martin, this is déjà vu. In 1993, it was selected to partner ADA in developing the Tejas’ high-tech flight control system (FCS). But after India’s nuclear tests in 1998, Washington ordered the company to terminate the partnership. India eventually went it alone, developing the world class FCS that is on the Tejas today.
Lockheed Martin is still fighting to salvage the situation. The company told Business Standard, “We are continuing our dialogue with the Aeronautical Development Agency and the US Department of Defense and are hopeful we will be able provide the consultancy desired by ADA on the Naval LCA.”
But the decision now lies in the hands of V K Saraswat, scientific advisor to the defence minister.
Lockheed Martin’s current situation replicates that of Boeing, which was front-runner for the air force Tejas consultancy. But earlier this year, after the US government failed to grant Boeing a clearance (called Technical Assistance Agreement) in time, the defence ministry awarded EADS the contract. The European consortium obtained the sanctions in time and is now working with ADA.
Foreign consultancy has been sought by ADA to introduce the Tejas into service without further delay. The air force Tejas, a single-seat, single-engine fighter, is at an advanced stage of testing. The naval Tejas, being developed around the twin-seater air force trainer, will take to the skies by mid-2010. But it will fly off an aircraft only in 2014, after getting a new, more powerful, engine. That is about when the Indigenous Aircraft Carrier, being built in Kochi, will join the Indian Navy.
The immediate challenges before the naval Tejas — which the consultant will help to resolve — include strengthening the undercarriage to absorb the high impact of landing on aircraft carrier decks, fitting an arrestor hook at the tail of the aircraft to bring it to a quick halt after landing, and adding a flap on the front edge of the wings to slow the landing speed by almost 150 kmph.
In addition, the naval Tejas needs a fuel dump system, in case of an emergency just after take-off. The take-off weight of a Tejas, with full weapons load and fuel, is 12.5 tonnes. But for landing back on an aircraft carrier, it must be less than 9.5 tonnes. In an emergency, 2 tonnes of weapons and external fuel tanks will be instantly shed, but a system must be built in for jettisoning another tonne of fuel from the fighter’s wing tanks.
None of the US Navy’s most successful carrier-borne aircraft — the F-4 Phantom, the F-14 Tomcat and the F/A-18 Hornet — was built by Lockheed Martin. Despite that, ADA believes Lockheed Martin’s experience in designing the futuristic F-35 Lightning Joint Strike Fighter qualifies it as a consultant.
“All the earlier US navy aircraft had two engines, giving them the weight and strength to support a tail hook,” explained P S Subramaniam, the director of ADA. “But Lockheed Martin has designed the F-35 Lightning, which is a single-engine fighter with a tail hook.”
Dassault’s Rafale fighter and EADS’s Eurofighter Typhoon are both twin-engine aircraft.
http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/us-puts-lockheed-off-tejas-flight-path/371489/
You are making too much of nothing. If you got to BRF or another dozen Indian sites or forums you will see much worse Anti-China sentiment and talk about breaking china into confederations etc. You are ****-scared of China period, I wish the people here had the confidence of Chinese who took on the UN troops with basically a peasant army in the Korean War. The only War you will fight with China is in your head matt.
China and India will fight their Wars elsewhere over resources but I am 100% sure that there will be no direct conflict.
U.S. committed to nuclear deal, India told
Siddharth Varadarajan
Pakistan should give up ‘old attitude’: PM
PITTSBURGH: Notwithstanding its recent sponsorship of a U.N. resolution calling, inter alia, on all countries to sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, the United States has assured India it remains fully committed to the civil nuclear agreements of 2005 and 2008.
“We have been assured that this is not a resolution directed at India and that the U.S. commitment to carry out its obligations under the civil nuclear agreements that we have signed with it remain undiluted,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said when asked by reporters here about the U.N. resolution.
India, he said had been “assured officially [about this] by the United States government.”
Asked about what could be expected from the upcoming meeting of the Indian and Pakistani foreign ministers in New York, Dr. Singh said that India wanted to normalise relations. “The only obstacle is that Pakistan should give up its old attitude regarding the use of terror as an instrument of state policy,” he added.
The Prime Minister said he hoped that the material India had given Pakistan regarding last November’s terrorist attack in Mumbai would make Islamabad carry forward the investigation and bring to book all the culprits. “If that is done … we will move an extra mile to normalise our relations,” he said. “We are neighbours and as neighbours, we have an obligation to work together.”
On Iran’s recent disclosure about a second enrichment plant, Dr. Singh refused to get drawn into the controversy. As a signatory to the NPT, he said, Iran had the right to the peaceful use of atomic energy and must also carry out all its obligations. “That is the principled position [India] has taken [on the Iranian nuclear issue] in the last five years,” he said.
The Prime Minister denied that American leaders had ever suggested that India scale back its assistance programme in Afghanistan. “The U.S. and European countries have been very appreciative of the role that India has played there],” he said. “We are not supplying any armed forces, we are there to assist the Afghan people in construction and development. We are helping finance some of the most important projects in the area of power, road transport, health and education.”
He was responding to a question about the recent U.S. Army report on Afghanistan by General Stanley A. McChrystal in which he praised India’s assistance but said Indian involvement was also likely to exacerbate regional tension by triggering Pakistani “counter measures.”
India Warns of Piracy by Terrorists
Indian ships not to transit threatened areas without naval escort
The Indian Shipping Ministry on Friday warned of terrorist related pirate attacks in the Gulf of Aden and along the Somali coast.
The ministry issued a security advisory for India-flag vessels, crews, all ship owners and agents in the wake of reports that Indian vessels and seafarers could be susceptible to attacks by terrorist groups such as al-Qaeda.
“All Indian ships and ships with Indian crewmembers are not to transit the piracy affected areas without the Indian navy escort services,” the ministry said.
The ministry specifically called on India-flag vessels to seek convoy protection while transiting through the region.
The Gulf of Aden is a crucial shipping channel for merchant vessels passing to and from the Suez Canal. An increasing number of pirate attacks in recent months have prompted several countries to deploy naval forces around the pirate-infested areas.
Many major carriers, including the state-owned Shipping Corporation of India, earlier imposed an emergency surcharge, ranging from $25 to $50 per 20-foot equivalent unit, on shipments moving through the Gulf, in a bid to cover increased insurance premiums and other costs.
This is an old article which came on Hindu and posted again to support ur POV ?
btw..why is it good to know for you..didnt you think they were “rouge” scientists and what not , who know nothing about nuclear policy?
It is good to hear he is less of a LIAR than what i thought he is.
Good to know that Mr.Santhanam thinks we have CMD.
IAF beefs up security on China border
The Indian Air Force (IAF) has beefed up security along the India-China border on the Northern sector, even as the country shied away from accusing China of violating the borders.Troops along the China border are assured of better and regular logistics with the activation of three new air bases. In addition, the IAF has also deployed mountain radars to monitor incursions by the Chinese.
By 2011, two squadrons of Su-30 MKI fighter will be deployed at the Halwara air base in Punjab to support both eastern and western borders. In the last 18 months, the IAF has converted three 1962 advanced landing grounds (ALG)— Daulat Beg Oldie, Fukche and Nyoma—into airstrips for transport planes. The latest one, Nyoma—located at an altitude of 13,300 ft and just 23 km from the Line of Actual Control (LAC)—was activated last week.
“Next week onwards flights will regularly land at Nyoma to support 14 Corps operations in the north eastern Ladakh,” NAK Browne, commander of Delhi-based Western Air Command said. Without disclosing the total number of unused ALGs in Ladakh, Browne said there are a “number of drop areas” in Ladakh out of which only three have been activated. Though the IAF had activated DBO and Fukche last year, it took some time to compact the strip after it developed cracks and fissure due to snowfall
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/27385/iaf-beefs-up-security-china.html
It is essential to strengthen India’s nuclear deterrence
Brigadier S K Chatterji (retd) explains why India needs to strengthen its nuclear deterrence.
Indian Army chief General Deepak Kapoor’s statement, being construed as a call to revisit the country’s nuclear doctrine, in the light of the Federation of American Scientists report about Pakistan now possessing 70 to 90 nuclear warheads has predictably created a storm.
Whether or not the basic pillar of Indian nuclear policy — No First Use — merits a review, is the issue. Simultaneous with the FAS assessment are the reports that the 1998 Pokhran tests were not as successful as touted to be. Whether they were a fizzle or sizzle is being questioned by Dr K Sanathanam who directed the test site preparations.
The issue had become big enough for ex-President A P J Abdul Kalam to step in with a reassuring statement, thereby immediately drawing flak from two former highly reputed Atomic Energy Commission chairmen, Dr Homi Sethna, who oversaw the 1974 test, and Dr P K Iyengar, questioning Kalam’s competence in commenting on this issue.
Before going into the issue of India reviewing its doctrine of no first use, an assessment of India and Pakistan’s requirement of nuclear weapons and their numbers, needs to be undertaken.
Pakistan’s threat assessment in the nuclear spectrum stems from India, its nuclearised neighbour that possesses the delivery means, weaponisation capability apart, to reach its entire length and breadth.
There is no other threat that can be construed by its decision makers, should it not want to revamp its foreign policy fundamentally and club China along with India in the threat matrix.
In the case of India, the threat emanates from two traditional rivals that have for long remained demonstratedly inimical — China and Pakistan. To state the obvious, of the two, China is by far the greater threat, and hence Indian nuclear capabilities have to take into consideration the Chinese arsenal and its reach.
The threat from Pakistan is automatically taken care of in the process. It barely merits additional analysis, except perhaps in the area of warning time available after launch, with Pakistani delivery means being located much closer to sensitive Indian targets.
With the Pakistani threat perception being limited to India, the requirement of building up its nuclear arsenal to 70 to 90 weapons is certainly debatable. Further, with all due faith in its efforts to turn a new leaf and leave behind its past that pirouetted it to be the leading exporter of global jihad, a few truths cannot be disregarded.
The most critical of these is the fact that the country is in a state of volatile turmoil and the world community has been alarmed for some time now regarding the possibility of its warheads falling in the hands of jihadis.
Further, though the Pakistani army’s operations along its western borders have been very reassuring to the world community, the possibility of the nation having been a proliferator, and its top nuclear scientist A Q Khan having had a rather dubious role in it, cannot be wished away.
On the Indian side, irrespective of the ‘sizzle or fizzle’ of 1998, definitely no more testing can be undertaken, even though it does not sign up on the dotted line of CTBT to prove it.
The sanctions that would follow another test are better avoided by greater reliance on the ‘strong simulation capabilities,’ that Anil Kakodkar, the current chairman, Atomic Energy Commission, confirmed in his response post the 1998 test controversy.
Nuclear defence, however, is not contingent to only possessing a nuclear arsenal. It is also dependent on associated systems and structures like the delivery means, triad capabilities, sound command and control structures, standard operating procedures and finally enough system survivability to undertake a second strike launch capability.
The last issue becomes more relevant for a country that espouses the ‘no first strike’ concept. The launch of the INS Arihant, the first Indian nuclear submarine and the undersea component of the triad, is a strong demonstrator of the resolve to attain the triad capability.
In the absence of any scope of further testing of nuclear warheads, it is essential in order to strengthen nuclear deterrence, to focus upon the associated structures of nuclear defence. It is also important in the area of nuclear strategy to declare these structures fairly openly.
That the Strategic Command is already in place is already well known, and Arihant was launched with due fanfare. Missile tests are regularly reported by the media. Such exercises in placing information regarding nuclear preparedness in the open domain serve to strengthen nuclear deterrence.
As far as the Pakistani arsenal is concerned, the threat from its volumes needs to be evaluated by the world community. A nation that gave nightmares of being overrun by jihadis of late, has undoubtedly displayed the will to start its long march out of the morasses. However, to what extent will it be able to purge its State machinery and military infested with jihadi sympathisers, remains the moot point.
The Inter State Intelligence with its long association with the jihadi establishment is also a nagging worry. Will the Pakistani leadership display the will to extend its anti-terror operations beyond the current theatre in the North West Frontier Province, further eastwards in that country — to areas alongside the Line of Control with India, will provide a few answers.
Meanwhile, should the Pakistani leadership be able to keep its arsenal secure, the threat from it can at best be part of the Indian calculus. With Pakistan now shifting to plutonium-based warheads, that are lighter and lend to miniaturisation and thus weaponisation of missiles more easily, as reported by the FAS, would attain better capabilities.
However, if there be pilferage or compromise, be it technology or warheads, the threat assumes global dimensions.
BJP welcomes govt stand on CTBT, NPT
NEW DELHI: In the wake of US President Barack Obama’s statement alluding that India should sign the CTBT and NPT, BJP on Friday welcomed the
government’s firm stand against it.“BJP is of the clear view that India should not sign the CTBT or NPT under any circumstances. We have, on our own, imposed voluntary moratorium and no-first-use policy on ourselves,” BJP President Rajnath Singh said.
Singh said, “We welcome the stand (of not signing the two treaties) taken by the Indian government in the United Nations. We are in full support (of the government) on the issue.”
When NDA was in power, it had conducted Pokharan-II nuclear tests in 1998, making India nuclear-capable. Though the tests had led to severe economic sanctions against India, the government did not bow to international pressure and refused to sign the CTBT or the NPT.
BJP has maintained that it favours good relations with the US but “only on our own terms”. BJP had opposed the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal last year, arguing that it was against India’s interest.
Mid-course correction for Chandrayaan-2: Isro
The space agency has planned two rovers on board this time to mine the moon’s surface to find more water
Bangalore: India’s second rocket to the moon, scheduled for 2013, will land two remote-controlled vehicles to collect soil to test for further evidence of water and elements such as helium-3, a clean nuclear fuel.
“We are making a mid-course correction for Chandrayaan-2,” G. Madhavan Nair, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro), said on Friday. “We will mine the moon’s surface much deeper to find more water.”
India’s first lunar mission, Chadrayaan-1, found the strongest evidence yet that there might be water on the moon.
The instruments on the rovers from Chandrayaan-2 will mine the soil, analyse them and send data back to earth.
Isro will spend Rs425 crore on the second mission that will be launched by its geosynchronous satellite launch vehicle.
Of the two rovers planned, the larger one will be supplied by Russia’s federal space agency. Isro would develop the smaller rover estimated to weigh 15kg. It will also create a lab in Bangalore that would simulate the moon’s terrain to test the vehicle.
“The thinking is to have more instruments on the rovers because of the water finding. The orbiter can be smaller,” said M. Annadurai, director of the Chandrayaan programme at Isro. Around 20 teams from India have submitted proposals for the second lunar mission, he said.
“For the first time in the history of space research, water is confirmed on the moon. It is acknowledged the world over that this is a real discovery and a path-breaking event for the Indian space agency,” Nair told reporters.
In one of the three papers published in the latest edition of the journal Science on Thursday, researchers said they analysed light waves detected by instruments made by National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the US on board the Indian satellite and two other US probes that suggest the existence of water on the moon’s surface.
While India’s public funded agency plans to land two vehicles on the moon, there is global competition to kindle private interest in moon exploration.
Twenty privately funded teams are pitted against each other to bag the Google Lunar X prize competition, which entails them to safely land a robot on the surface of the moon, travel 500m over the surface and send images and data back to the earth. The winner of the contest to be completed by 2012 will get $20 million in cash.
They will be replaced by Mi-8, medium sized assault helicopter
‘Sarang’ team bids adieu to Yelahanka Air Force Station
The pride of the Air Force Station in Yelahanka, the 151 Helicopter Unit, also known as ‘Sarang,’ the colourful helicopter display team of the Indian Air Force (IAF), has bid goodbye to its home base for the past four years.This was announced by Air Commodore Sagar Bharati, Air Officer Commanding of the Air Force Station, here on Friday. The team from Sarang displayed its final flypast in a dazzling rehearsal here. The unit comprising the Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) or the ‘Dhruv’, a multi-role, multi-mission helicopter powered by two Turbomeca TM 333-2B2 engines was moved to the Yelahanka air base in April 2005 and accorded the status of a full fledged helicopter unit. “The Sarang team will move to the Sulur Air Force Station in Coimbatore. The decision is a routine operational requirement of the IAF. The unit will be replaced by a Mi-8 helicopter squadron,” said Air Cmde Bharati.
Recalling the team’s association with Yelahanka Air Base and the City, Wing Commander Ravuri Sheetal, Commanding Officer of the Sarang team said the 151 helicopter unit will leave behind lot of good memories.
“It was a pleasure to be in Yelahanka, our home from 2005 and participate in the Aero India display. We will continue to capture the hearts of audiences. Those interested in the Sarang display can place a request to the Air Headquarters,” he said.
The Sarang (Peacock in Sanskrit) is symbolic to the IAF as it is the national bird of India. The display team comprises four Dhruv’s, manufactured by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited and comprises 13 pilots, 2 technical officers and 1 commentator. It has earned accolades at air-shows the world over, for its breathtaking aerobatics display and is also a regular participant in the bi-annual Aero India show at Yelahanka. The Sarang team will now head for New Delhi to participate in Air Force day celebration on October 8, and then fly-in to its new home at Sulur Air Base.
IAF Inducts Rapid Action Mobile Medical Hospital
An ultra-modern fully air-conditioned, ‘Rapid Action Mobile Medical Hospital’ was inducted into Indian Air Force by the Vice Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal PK Barbora, at the IAF’s Hindon airbase near Ghaziabad, today. Air Marshal P Madhusoodanan, Director General Medical Services (Air) who conceptualized the need for such a setup was also present during the induction ceremony.
The mobile medical Hospital, the first-of-its-kind in the country is field/disaster area deployable 25-bedded hospital with a full complement of Operation theatre, oxygen generating system and other sub-systems that would aid the military and civilians in both disaster areas and operational grounds. The system is air/road transportable and will serve as a key force multiplier to the expert disaster medical management teams on ground who have till now been working under serious constraints of facility. More such units will be inducted and positioned in each command zone after evaluation so that the entire geographic spread of the country is duly covered, informed DGMS (Air).