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"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ...
"Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message Let's get some facts, please. Mig-21 is probably the most docile supersonic fighter that has been in use since 1961 in some 50 countries. It is known for it straightfowardness and superb handling, only drawback known to me is inertia roll coupling when doing extremely high-rate unloaded rolls (the same thing it shares with F-15). It is in Indian service since 1963 in almost all versions. Suddenly, they need a Hawk training? Come on! Not suddenly - they have been begging for the hawk for the past two decades. But why have they been "begging" for it if, as you just tried to assert in another message, there is really no problem with existing IAF training and accidents? Which message would that be dear where I have asserted that IAF has no problems with training and accidents? Could you quote it? So you are not saying that? Odd. It appeared to me that you took exception with my noting the IAF was having a particular problem with accidents...but if you now agree that is the case, OK! What I wanted to know was if you really had an insight into the question at all or were merely returgating sensational accounts from the newspapers. From your other posts on this thread the answer is clear. Apparently not. I was not aware of the domestic newspaper accounts regarding this subject until you piped up with your 'it ain't so!' bleating OK once again - post the 'it aint so' part of my post - chapter and verse. OK, then you are asaying you were asking an honest question instead? If so, the answer is that the IAF has failed to provide the detailed kind of accident statistics (like those routinely released by the RAF, USAF, etc.) that would be required to support the assertion that their accident rate is no worse than any other large air force's rate, especially in the specific case of the Mig-21. Given the frequent reporting of IAF accidents in the aviation press, and the lack of opposing data from the IAF, and the domestic press accounts in India, it does indeed appear that the IAF is having an accident problem. There is you answer--if you want to refute it, come back with some accident-per-100K flight hours, by aircraft type, as provided by the IAF; otherwise you are blowing hot air, as usual. So you will ignore any statistics with which you are not familiar despite their relevance? That's your problem, not mine. And bleating eh? Good, that probably means I'll inherit the world then. and I did a little bit of websearching. I am impressed - the fact that you are doing elementary research indicates progress from the last time we had a tete-a-tete. Atta-boy! Why, have you actually increased your basic military knowledge since that time? It was none too impressive, as I recall... Indeed you were not impressed. Pray permit me to flatter myself that it is just another case of pearls before swine... My impression that the Indians do indeed have a significant problem with training losses comes from watching the accidents/write-off reports over the past few years as published in some of the military journals, Nobody cares for your impressions - In the absence of any usable factual data from the IAF, those impressions stand. If you insist I am sure that they will also dance for you in addition to standing. Unexplained is why we should give it any credence. I certainly dont after your repeated idiotic remarks about mountain warfare which you evidently still stick too. Still whining about that, eh? Whining? I am not complaining about your ignorance. While it is a bit irritating I must admit it is also a fair bit entertaining. So whining would be entirely inaccurate; disdain is more like it. I am merely noting that your track record of making _demonstrably_ _false_ _assertions_ isnt helpful when you come and ask us to give credence to your "impressions". And your tendency to snip uncomfortable parts or to just run away when cornered isnt so credibility inspiring either. Is it? And still convinced that the Chinese are plotting to sweep down from the Tibetian heights and overrun India as soon as they can, right? Surely they are far more clever than that. And THATs exactly why India needs more infantry. And still can't point out just what about any of that oxygen-deprived stratospheric terrain is actaully worth fighting over in the first place, right? I did post "China contests the Indian State of Arunachal Pradesh. 83,000 sq km with plenty of tea, coffee, rubber, oil and coal. And it is not rocky mountscape - it is covered with luxuriant forests. I suppose some americans will consider all things non-american as worthless, but the one million people who call that area home probably love it and think it beautiful." But true to form you ignored it, changed tack mid-sentence and went of racing for a tangential topic. And you expect credibility??? And lastly, still wedded to your 'mass is king' theory of Lanchesterian attrition warfare? Figures... nope. I cant be 'still' wedded to 'attrition warfare' if I wasnt ever wedded to it in the first place can I? Do you have any factual data to back up your "impressions"? Obviously not. Absolute number of accidents is meaningless unless you can measure it against sorties or as some prefer flight hours. Which despite being harangued about the number of accidents, the IAF has not provided. Curious, huh? Curious no, pragmatic yes. I already told you a quite plausible reason for the reticence for making public readiness data. Had this information been routinely available and had this information been suddenly supressed after MiG-21 crashes became an public issue, then your contention of hiding data would have had some merit. and seeing some of the cringing on the part of the IAF leadership in regards to getting their hands on relatively modern LIFT-type platforms. Which airforce doesnt want the newest, shiniest toy they can afford (and sometimes cant afford)? What is unique about that? If the brass wants new aircraft all it means is that they want new aircraft. Note that so far there have been no suggestions that the IAF is trying to con or fraud the parliament into funding upgrades as USAF is repeated claimed to be doing. Uhmmm..be careful. What is the progress on that lil' ol' investigation in the Indian armed forces I read something about recently? You know, the one where it appears some combat "incidents" in Kashmir were staged to make a couple of higher ranking officers look good...? The company commander was court martialed and found guilty. His Battalion commander and the adjutant were found guilty of administrative lapses. Informally heads have rolled right upto the Corps Commander level for letting such incidents take place in their command. I know that the US army is growing quite small but surely company commanders are not considered high ranking there, are they? Now THAT is a pretty blatant piece of "con artistry"...while the USAF has been at worst accused of setting the exercise ROE up such that *maybe* it was disadvantageous to the visiting team... while the IAF remains unwilling to release detailed accident statistics to support its own assertions that the accident problem ain't a problem? The first case is criminal activity at the individual level while the other is criminal activity at the institutional level. I know which is worse. You ever heard the one about folks living in glass houses? Indeed I have. So if you quite making oblique assertions that only what the USAF/NATO does is professional... maybe I'll keep the stones to myself. And your use of 'cringe' is interesting. You must be mighty perceptive if you could tell that from military journals. What gave the distinct impression of cringing? Are you sure that is the word you meant or just wanted to use a new word you heard your dad say? The dictionary tells me cringe is draw back with fear or pain or show submission or fear. And if the IAF is indeed afraid of its masters, the elected representatives, then surely that is prefable to what you claim the USAF is up to with the congress now and has done so in the past - swindle. You are jumping to conclusions that were not intended. Maybe my fault for using the strictly improper wording. Insert "wincing" instead, if it will keep you from getting your panties all tangled up. The IAF leadership has IIRC made it quite clear over the years that they were quite anxious to get new trainers into service..add all of those reported accidents to the mix, and what do you come up with? Sounds like they already knew they had a problem on their hands--even if they were loathe to come out and admit it. Loath to admit it? The IAF is screaming and wailing about a problem in their hands for past two decades - lack of suitable advanced jet trainers. I dont believe that they have denied it as there is a article in the papers every week by retired IAF officers about it and the price the pilots are paying. What they object to is shifting the blame on the MiG-21 - it does what it is supposed to do quite well. When you put it to uses that it isnt suited, you (or more properly a callow, young cadet who girls wont marry) pays the ultimate price. What they are object to is silly public statements that the entire fishbed fleet be withdrawn from service pronto, without any replacement in hand. The two taken together point to a real problem in the IAF. Further compounded by the IAF's reticence to list annual accident statistics in a form that allows direct comparison with the air forces that largely set the standards for professionalism. Oh yes. The same airforce in which your pop was the terror flieger? And which now bombs sewage facilities and water plants. If that is what professionalism entails then I supppose the rest of the unwashed would rather not be professional. Ah, I see you still possess your usual grace and charm. My apologies - I retract my statement about your father being a terror flieger if his criminal activities were solely limited to the Pacific theater. It was you not I who who claimed be dropped incendiaries on cities wasnt it. BTW, Did the Japs have a equivalent of 'terror flieger' nomenclature for the war criminals who fire bombed cities? Apparently you have about as much of those qualities as you possess of modern military affairs--i.e., not much (Oooh! Now its time for you to intimate how important you supposedly are, and how you *really* have some serious inside knowledge of military affairs, right? --Save it, Mr. Anonymous; Walter Mitty already stole your thunder). Ad hominem. My importance or not is irrelevant. You have my arguments and that is what is relevant. Contest that if you can, rather than my importance or lack of. Regarding importance; I suspect that my idea of what constitues importance is decidedly different from yours. Now either you agree they have a problem, or you don't--kind of hard to figure which is the case when you post in *both* modes. This is merely indicative of a defect in your mentality and attitude towards life. Unlike you I dont choose a 'side' of the argument and pile up evidence for it and belittle anything and anyone that oppposes it. To understand complex issues I am willing to keep my mind open; I will post both data that supports as well as that which conflicts with my opinions if that is available - point is to learn something; not just grind idealogical axes. So, which is it--does the IAF have an apparent problem with its accident rates (in particular with the Mig-21), or not? Stop dancing around the issue and come down on one side or the other for a change. "Come down on a side"? There are no "sides" or havent you read what I said! And what will you do if I indeed came down on one side - promptly argue for the other side I suspect? Very well then. There are four sources of attrition [1] Routine wastage. Which all air forces suffer from. Equipment failures, human errors, negligence, hand of god etc. If these were all the accidents the IAF was suffering from then there would be no "high attrition rate" issue or debate. The contributors to more than average attrition are the following. [2] Inappropiate Training Material. Lack of AJT and proper supersonic transition aircraft. Bulk of the losses involve fishbeds and occur at MOFTUs and involve disproportionate number of mongols. If a proper AJT is available (like Hawk or MiG AT) and people went to MOFTUs after finishing Hawk school then a large fraction of these accidents can be eliminated. [3] Unsuitable Equipment. The bulk of the IAF fleet is still made up of Fishbeds which are pressed into roles that they are not really suited for - CAS, NOE flying etc. A fair share of accidents can be attributed to this. i.e. If those missions were undertaken by a more suitable aircraft (say Jaguars) or Fishbeds were limited to the roles they are suitable for (interceptions) then these accidents probably would not have occured. Looking at fiscal realities this aspect of the problem cannot be solved in less than a decade. [4] Extremely high readiness states and corresponding high intensity training for the last few years contributing more accidents. This one is out of the IAF's hands and it cant be fixed until the geopolitical situation changes. Keeping these points in mind, almost all generalizations and conclusions made regarding the IAF and the Fishbed in the media (and to an extent here) are either beside the point or plainly wrong. Brooks snip |
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