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India’s missile defence system can bankrupt Pakistan

India’s missile defence system can bankrupt Pakistan
30 May 2016 RAKESH KRISHNAN SIMHA
By ratcheting up spending in ballistic missile defence, India can apply the squeeze on the Pakistani economy.

SCO to consider Iran's accession after India, Pakistan
aad_launch_crop.jpg

India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. Source:wikipedia.org

India’s claim that its indigenously designed ballistic missile defence (BMD) system – successfully tested on May 15 – can defend the country from a nuclear attack is being contested by a Russian expert.

According to Petr Topychkanov, Associate at the Carnegie Moscow Centre’s Non-Proliferation Programme, despite heavy investments in developing BMD systems, India may not be able to fully defend itself in a conflict from strikes by Pakistani missiles.

“Even in 10 years and with the huge budgets that India plans to spend on the development of nuclear weapons and capabilities, it is difficult to imagine it will be able to defend its territory from possible strikes from Pakistan in case of conflict,” he says.

Topychkanov’s observation isn’t wrong. Although India is now only the fourth country after Russia, Israel and the US to successfully test a BMD system, it is currently taking baby steps in ballistic missile development. BMD technologies are complicated and it will take years – and perhaps decades –before India gets a reliable system.

Even the superpowers with huge economic and technological resources at their disposal did not erect iron domes over their territories. During the Cold War, despite thousands of Russian nuclear-tipped missiles pointed at its cities and strategic nerve centres, the US abandoned its lone BMD site, in North Dakota. The Russians also built just one system, over Moscow, with the difference that it stands to this day.

In fact, Dmitri Rogozin, Russian Deputy Prime Minister responsible for the military-industrial complex, has declared: “Missile defence is an illusion – no matter how much money you invest in it.”

But Topychkanov’s opinion doesn’t provide the complete picture. India’s BMD programme is not a zero-sum project that will either protect the country or won’t. Rather, it is part of a strategic escalation that will have far-reaching geopolitical impact, especially on Pakistan.

Playing strategic chicken
A detailed study titled 'On the Strategic Value of Ballistic Missile Defence' by the French Institute of International Relations explains how BMD works to unhinge the enemy’s strategy. According to the study, BMD:

  • Creates uncertainty about the outcome of an attack in the mind of the attacker.
  • Increases the raid size required for an attack to penetrate, thereby, undermining a strategy of firing one or two and threatening more thus reducing coercive leverage.
  • Provides some assurance against risks of precipitate action by the aggressor.
  • Buys leadership time for choosing and implementing courses of action, including time for diplomacy.
  • Reduces the political pressure for pre-emptive strikes.
In short, a robust missile defence system helps to put the burden of escalation in an emerging crisis on to the adversary. When a crisis has become a hot war, then missile defence again has various strategic values. It:

*Helps to preserve freedom of action by selectively safeguarding key military and political assets.

*Increases time and opportunity to attack adversary's missile force with kinetic and non-kinetic means, potentially eliminating his capacity for follow-on attacks or decisive political or military effects.

Pakistan’s conundrum
India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. The Indian Army’s Cold Start strategy, for instance, has put huge pressure on the Pakistani economy by forcing Islamabad to crank up the production of nuclear weapons as well as delivery systems such as ballistic, cruise and tactical missiles.


The latest Indian test is likely to create more insecurity in the Pakistani military establishment. A report by the World Politics Review, states: “India’s pursuit of strategic technologies, including BMD capabilities, has created extreme paranoia in the Pakistani defence and security establishment. Pakistan has already drastically increased its nuclear arsenal in recent years in response to India’s BMD efforts.”

Pakistan is not content with having an adequate number of nuclear weapons to deter India from launching an attack. It wants to match India nuke for nuke. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists saysPakistan is on course to have the world’s fifth-largest inventory of nuclear weapons, and is spending more than $2.5 billion on nuclear weapons annually.

Given the Pakistani obsession with matching India weapon for weapon, it is likely Islamabad will try and develop a Made in Pakistan BMD. At the same time, it will attempt to buy systems from outside as a hedge against failure.

Either way the impact on the Pakistani economy will be immense. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute lists India as the fifth largest military spender with an annual budget of $51 billion. In contrast Pakistan's military budget is a paltry $7.6 billion. In overall economic terms, India's GDP of $2 trillion is the seventh largest and dwarfs Pakistan's $269 billion economy which is ranked 41st in the world.

Considering such economic disparities, there’s no way Pakistan can match India missile for missile. Overspending on defence could well bankrupt Pakistan, especially in the backdrop of western economies no longer having the inclination or the capacity to bail it out as they did in the past.

Will Islamabad take the bait?
Pakistan’s military leadership is obsessed with growing its atomic arsenal to the detriment of its economy. Terrence P. Smith of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies says that for Pakistan, nuclear weapons have become a “psychological equaliser”.

Says the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists: “In working to double the size of its already substantial nuclear arsenal, Pakistan continues to place a disproportionate focus on its nuclear programme ahead of other key security concerns. This behaviour is far from new. In 1972, Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto famously proclaimed, ‘Even if we have to eat grass we will make nuclear bombs’. Four decades later, Pakistan continues to pursue this strategy of nuclear build-up at any cost, thereby diverting resources away from other programmes that could attempt to address the country’s internal security and economic threats.”

India’s BMD could be the proverbial straw that breaks the back of the Pakistani camel.

Spinoffs for India
In 2013, a BMD radar in Armavir, in southern Russia, detected the launch of two ballistic missiles in the Mediterranean Sea, which later turned out to be part of Israel’s test of its missile defence shield. Russia has also begun testing a new radar, designed to detect highly manoeuverable aerial targets, including cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, at a range of up to 3,000 km. India’s BMD research could also take it

While any military spending is wasteful, it is a bit like paying insurance premiums – it hurts, but when there’s a crisis you are glad you had a policy. Besides the obvious benefits, missile defence research could have lucrative spinoffs. Russia’s extensive R&D in strategic missile defence led to the development of battlefield missile defence systems such as the S-300, S-400 and S-500, of which the first two are in great demand worldwide. Similarly, India can be an exporter of low cost battlefield missile defence systems.

In 2012 Russian President Vladimir Putin, explained how Russia’s defence sector could pull the rest of the economy out of the woods. “The renewal of the military industrial complex will become a locomotive that will pull the development of various industries: metallurgy, mechanical engineering, the chemical and radio-electronic industries, the entire [information technology] and telecommunications range. The task is to multiply Russia’s economic power, create an army and military-industrial complex that will secure Russia’s sovereignty, the respect of our foreign partners and lasting peace.”

Similar benefits could accrue to India through investments in BMD and the wider defence industry.

http://in.rbth.com/blogs/stranger_t...e-defence-system-can-bankrupt-pakistan_598529
The biggest mistake one can make is thinking their enemy is a fool. Now this is a mistake unfortunately India makes every now and then. There are several posters here on PDF that brag about how large IN is and how small PN is in comparison but when you ask them to compare the coastal area IN has to defend as compared to what PN has to defend they go silent. Then there was the claim that S-400 would be the final nail in PAF's coffin. There as well I asked them a simple question that, why do you think that Pakistan was a fool to invest in UAVs and UCAVs? And have you every thought how would S-400 tackle a airspace saturated with drones?

Now once again to all those, Pakistan's think tank does not consist of bunch of fools they are there to device a counter plan for every plan our enemy can have. Last time in 2002 it was the cold start doctrine that was shown what its fate would be, when PA waited 3 long weeks for IA to come and fight.
 
well its obivous india is ahead of them but the pakistanis wont be complaing much. heck their missile can reach all of india with abm countermeasures cruise missiles and supposedly slcm's they only need abm' for the agni 2/3 and the shorter range prithvi missile. where the hq-19 would come in and the hq-9 for long aircraft.
so they coverd most aspects and all offensive missiles they only need abm's and long range sams which can be purchased of the shelf. once the economy is healthy then you can look at slbm's but thats beyond 2025


OK sir i rest my case and got the answer but not using your nations flag is a sign of inferiorty complex low self esteem and for a senior meber its not good ... cheers mate no offence

Our missile systems is very complicated and once someone post here in PDF that we MIRV but we didn't disclose that till yet. In this case SAMS fails to defend the target and even if SAMS stop the missiles than it will be more worse case because Nuclear blast on air will be more dangerous and its impact will become three times more then blast in ground. So basically SAMS are useless case in Indo-Pakistan. In Russia and US case they have time to response due geographic locations of two countries.
 
India’s missile defence system can bankrupt Pakistan
30 May 2016 RAKESH KRISHNAN SIMHA
By ratcheting up spending in ballistic missile defence, India can apply the squeeze on the Pakistani economy.

SCO to consider Iran's accession after India, Pakistan
aad_launch_crop.jpg

India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. Source:wikipedia.org

India’s claim that its indigenously designed ballistic missile defence (BMD) system – successfully tested on May 15 – can defend the country from a nuclear attack is being contested by a Russian expert.

According to Petr Topychkanov, Associate at the Carnegie Moscow Centre’s Non-Proliferation Programme, despite heavy investments in developing BMD systems, India may not be able to fully defend itself in a conflict from strikes by Pakistani missiles.

“Even in 10 years and with the huge budgets that India plans to spend on the development of nuclear weapons and capabilities, it is difficult to imagine it will be able to defend its territory from possible strikes from Pakistan in case of conflict,” he says.

Topychkanov’s observation isn’t wrong. Although India is now only the fourth country after Russia, Israel and the US to successfully test a BMD system, it is currently taking baby steps in ballistic missile development. BMD technologies are complicated and it will take years – and perhaps decades –before India gets a reliable system.

Even the superpowers with huge economic and technological resources at their disposal did not erect iron domes over their territories. During the Cold War, despite thousands of Russian nuclear-tipped missiles pointed at its cities and strategic nerve centres, the US abandoned its lone BMD site, in North Dakota. The Russians also built just one system, over Moscow, with the difference that it stands to this day.

In fact, Dmitri Rogozin, Russian Deputy Prime Minister responsible for the military-industrial complex, has declared: “Missile defence is an illusion – no matter how much money you invest in it.”

But Topychkanov’s opinion doesn’t provide the complete picture. India’s BMD programme is not a zero-sum project that will either protect the country or won’t. Rather, it is part of a strategic escalation that will have far-reaching geopolitical impact, especially on Pakistan.

Playing strategic chicken
A detailed study titled 'On the Strategic Value of Ballistic Missile Defence' by the French Institute of International Relations explains how BMD works to unhinge the enemy’s strategy. According to the study, BMD:

  • Creates uncertainty about the outcome of an attack in the mind of the attacker.
  • Increases the raid size required for an attack to penetrate, thereby, undermining a strategy of firing one or two and threatening more thus reducing coercive leverage.
  • Provides some assurance against risks of precipitate action by the aggressor.
  • Buys leadership time for choosing and implementing courses of action, including time for diplomacy.
  • Reduces the political pressure for pre-emptive strikes.
In short, a robust missile defence system helps to put the burden of escalation in an emerging crisis on to the adversary. When a crisis has become a hot war, then missile defence again has various strategic values. It:

*Helps to preserve freedom of action by selectively safeguarding key military and political assets.

*Increases time and opportunity to attack adversary's missile force with kinetic and non-kinetic means, potentially eliminating his capacity for follow-on attacks or decisive political or military effects.

Pakistan’s conundrum
India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. The Indian Army’s Cold Start strategy, for instance, has put huge pressure on the Pakistani economy by forcing Islamabad to crank up the production of nuclear weapons as well as delivery systems such as ballistic, cruise and tactical missiles.


The latest Indian test is likely to create more insecurity in the Pakistani military establishment. A report by the World Politics Review, states: “India’s pursuit of strategic technologies, including BMD capabilities, has created extreme paranoia in the Pakistani defence and security establishment. Pakistan has already drastically increased its nuclear arsenal in recent years in response to India’s BMD efforts.”

Pakistan is not content with having an adequate number of nuclear weapons to deter India from launching an attack. It wants to match India nuke for nuke. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists saysPakistan is on course to have the world’s fifth-largest inventory of nuclear weapons, and is spending more than $2.5 billion on nuclear weapons annually.

Given the Pakistani obsession with matching India weapon for weapon, it is likely Islamabad will try and develop a Made in Pakistan BMD. At the same time, it will attempt to buy systems from outside as a hedge against failure.

Either way the impact on the Pakistani economy will be immense. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute lists India as the fifth largest military spender with an annual budget of $51 billion. In contrast Pakistan's military budget is a paltry $7.6 billion. In overall economic terms, India's GDP of $2 trillion is the seventh largest and dwarfs Pakistan's $269 billion economy which is ranked 41st in the world.

Considering such economic disparities, there’s no way Pakistan can match India missile for missile. Overspending on defence could well bankrupt Pakistan, especially in the backdrop of western economies no longer having the inclination or the capacity to bail it out as they did in the past.

Will Islamabad take the bait?
Pakistan’s military leadership is obsessed with growing its atomic arsenal to the detriment of its economy. Terrence P. Smith of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies says that for Pakistan, nuclear weapons have become a “psychological equaliser”.

Says the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists: “In working to double the size of its already substantial nuclear arsenal, Pakistan continues to place a disproportionate focus on its nuclear programme ahead of other key security concerns. This behaviour is far from new. In 1972, Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto famously proclaimed, ‘Even if we have to eat grass we will make nuclear bombs’. Four decades later, Pakistan continues to pursue this strategy of nuclear build-up at any cost, thereby diverting resources away from other programmes that could attempt to address the country’s internal security and economic threats.”

India’s BMD could be the proverbial straw that breaks the back of the Pakistani camel.

Spinoffs for India
In 2013, a BMD radar in Armavir, in southern Russia, detected the launch of two ballistic missiles in the Mediterranean Sea, which later turned out to be part of Israel’s test of its missile defence shield. Russia has also begun testing a new radar, designed to detect highly manoeuverable aerial targets, including cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, at a range of up to 3,000 km. India’s BMD research could also take it

While any military spending is wasteful, it is a bit like paying insurance premiums – it hurts, but when there’s a crisis you are glad you had a policy. Besides the obvious benefits, missile defence research could have lucrative spinoffs. Russia’s extensive R&D in strategic missile defence led to the development of battlefield missile defence systems such as the S-300, S-400 and S-500, of which the first two are in great demand worldwide. Similarly, India can be an exporter of low cost battlefield missile defence systems.

In 2012 Russian President Vladimir Putin, explained how Russia’s defence sector could pull the rest of the economy out of the woods. “The renewal of the military industrial complex will become a locomotive that will pull the development of various industries: metallurgy, mechanical engineering, the chemical and radio-electronic industries, the entire [information technology] and telecommunications range. The task is to multiply Russia’s economic power, create an army and military-industrial complex that will secure Russia’s sovereignty, the respect of our foreign partners and lasting peace.”

Similar benefits could accrue to India through investments in BMD and the wider defence industry.

http://in.rbth.com/blogs/stranger_t...e-defence-system-can-bankrupt-pakistan_598529
Every claim made in this article is illogical and skewed? Is it Pakistan that is scared of Indian weapons or is it just the opposite? Past 60 years' history indicates that the latter is the true case. Just look at the fact that every single time Pakistan gets a weapon system, Indian leaders starting with junior ministers to their president start moaning. Their non-stop hue and cry exposes their deep inner insecurity.

Is India’s Cold Start doctrine making the world a safer place? Only a retard would try to prove that. Cold start is a offensive strategy designed to blackmail Pakistan. It is an extremely dangerous war tool that can make Indians miscalculate and push the region into a nuclear conflagration. Indian Cold Start doctrine is a grave threat to global peace. How can such an offensive and stupid strategy promote global peace? You need to drink urine for years to reach that illogical conclusion.

And pushing Pakistan into bankruptcy? They couldn't do that when we literally had no means and we were technologically dependent on others. Now that we can defeat Indian BMDS with relatively modest effort, these idiots are thinking to push us into bankruptcy. Such utter ignorance has not been exhibited by Indians for the first time. They have been doing miscalculation since long. I hope the world hasn't forgotten Indian leaders crying (as shown live on TV) in their parliament after nuke explosions on May 28th. These ignorant beast were in hell of a shock then because they firmly believed that Pakistan was just bluffing to have nukes (while the whole world knew the reality).

Indians are like monkeys have lighter in their hands. It's extremely dangerous combination for the world peace.
 
how do we know the babur and the raad is good how many failed launches have they not told us about?
Those projects never consumed Billions of $ .........
And Babur Tests are well and good, Ra'ad is creating bit problem which will be addressed soon ............
im not taking sides i have told of a pakistani user for trolling. i am saying my opinion
look at post 5 where i quoted the pakistani member
Welcome back ...............
Where were you this whole time?
 
Our missile systems is very complicated and once someone post here in PDF that we MIRV but we didn't disclose that till yet. In this case SAMS fails to defend the target and even if SAMS stop the missiles than it will be more worse case because Nuclear blast on air will be more dangerous and its impact will become three times more then blast in ground. So basically SAMS are useless case in Indo-Pakistan. In Russia and US case they have time to response due geographic locations of two countries.
instead look to whome the question was asked and why before posting your remark ... sir

whats the point i was making with @Blue Marlin before wrting all that you dont have an obligation to say anything without reading the question and to whome it was asked in the first place ... got it !!!
 
India’s missile defence system can bankrupt Pakistan
30 May 2016 RAKESH KRISHNAN SIMHA
By ratcheting up spending in ballistic missile defence, India can apply the squeeze on the Pakistani economy.

SCO to consider Iran's accession after India, Pakistan
aad_launch_crop.jpg

India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. Source:wikipedia.org

India’s claim that its indigenously designed ballistic missile defence (BMD) system – successfully tested on May 15 – can defend the country from a nuclear attack is being contested by a Russian expert.

According to Petr Topychkanov, Associate at the Carnegie Moscow Centre’s Non-Proliferation Programme, despite heavy investments in developing BMD systems, India may not be able to fully defend itself in a conflict from strikes by Pakistani missiles.

“Even in 10 years and with the huge budgets that India plans to spend on the development of nuclear weapons and capabilities, it is difficult to imagine it will be able to defend its territory from possible strikes from Pakistan in case of conflict,” he says.

Topychkanov’s observation isn’t wrong. Although India is now only the fourth country after Russia, Israel and the US to successfully test a BMD system, it is currently taking baby steps in ballistic missile development. BMD technologies are complicated and it will take years – and perhaps decades –before India gets a reliable system.

Even the superpowers with huge economic and technological resources at their disposal did not erect iron domes over their territories. During the Cold War, despite thousands of Russian nuclear-tipped missiles pointed at its cities and strategic nerve centres, the US abandoned its lone BMD site, in North Dakota. The Russians also built just one system, over Moscow, with the difference that it stands to this day.

In fact, Dmitri Rogozin, Russian Deputy Prime Minister responsible for the military-industrial complex, has declared: “Missile defence is an illusion – no matter how much money you invest in it.”

But Topychkanov’s opinion doesn’t provide the complete picture. India’s BMD programme is not a zero-sum project that will either protect the country or won’t. Rather, it is part of a strategic escalation that will have far-reaching geopolitical impact, especially on Pakistan.

Playing strategic chicken
A detailed study titled 'On the Strategic Value of Ballistic Missile Defence' by the French Institute of International Relations explains how BMD works to unhinge the enemy’s strategy. According to the study, BMD:

  • Creates uncertainty about the outcome of an attack in the mind of the attacker.
  • Increases the raid size required for an attack to penetrate, thereby, undermining a strategy of firing one or two and threatening more thus reducing coercive leverage.
  • Provides some assurance against risks of precipitate action by the aggressor.
  • Buys leadership time for choosing and implementing courses of action, including time for diplomacy.
  • Reduces the political pressure for pre-emptive strikes.
In short, a robust missile defence system helps to put the burden of escalation in an emerging crisis on to the adversary. When a crisis has become a hot war, then missile defence again has various strategic values. It:

*Helps to preserve freedom of action by selectively safeguarding key military and political assets.

*Increases time and opportunity to attack adversary's missile force with kinetic and non-kinetic means, potentially eliminating his capacity for follow-on attacks or decisive political or military effects.

Pakistan’s conundrum
India’s development of a missile defence system will complicate the Pakistani military’s war planning. The Indian Army’s Cold Start strategy, for instance, has put huge pressure on the Pakistani economy by forcing Islamabad to crank up the production of nuclear weapons as well as delivery systems such as ballistic, cruise and tactical missiles.


The latest Indian test is likely to create more insecurity in the Pakistani military establishment. A report by the World Politics Review, states: “India’s pursuit of strategic technologies, including BMD capabilities, has created extreme paranoia in the Pakistani defence and security establishment. Pakistan has already drastically increased its nuclear arsenal in recent years in response to India’s BMD efforts.”

Pakistan is not content with having an adequate number of nuclear weapons to deter India from launching an attack. It wants to match India nuke for nuke. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists saysPakistan is on course to have the world’s fifth-largest inventory of nuclear weapons, and is spending more than $2.5 billion on nuclear weapons annually.

Given the Pakistani obsession with matching India weapon for weapon, it is likely Islamabad will try and develop a Made in Pakistan BMD. At the same time, it will attempt to buy systems from outside as a hedge against failure.

Either way the impact on the Pakistani economy will be immense. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute lists India as the fifth largest military spender with an annual budget of $51 billion. In contrast Pakistan's military budget is a paltry $7.6 billion. In overall economic terms, India's GDP of $2 trillion is the seventh largest and dwarfs Pakistan's $269 billion economy which is ranked 41st in the world.

Considering such economic disparities, there’s no way Pakistan can match India missile for missile. Overspending on defence could well bankrupt Pakistan, especially in the backdrop of western economies no longer having the inclination or the capacity to bail it out as they did in the past.

Will Islamabad take the bait?
Pakistan’s military leadership is obsessed with growing its atomic arsenal to the detriment of its economy. Terrence P. Smith of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies says that for Pakistan, nuclear weapons have become a “psychological equaliser”.

Says the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists: “In working to double the size of its already substantial nuclear arsenal, Pakistan continues to place a disproportionate focus on its nuclear programme ahead of other key security concerns. This behaviour is far from new. In 1972, Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto famously proclaimed, ‘Even if we have to eat grass we will make nuclear bombs’. Four decades later, Pakistan continues to pursue this strategy of nuclear build-up at any cost, thereby diverting resources away from other programmes that could attempt to address the country’s internal security and economic threats.”

India’s BMD could be the proverbial straw that breaks the back of the Pakistani camel.

Spinoffs for India
In 2013, a BMD radar in Armavir, in southern Russia, detected the launch of two ballistic missiles in the Mediterranean Sea, which later turned out to be part of Israel’s test of its missile defence shield. Russia has also begun testing a new radar, designed to detect highly manoeuverable aerial targets, including cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, at a range of up to 3,000 km. India’s BMD research could also take it

While any military spending is wasteful, it is a bit like paying insurance premiums – it hurts, but when there’s a crisis you are glad you had a policy. Besides the obvious benefits, missile defence research could have lucrative spinoffs. Russia’s extensive R&D in strategic missile defence led to the development of battlefield missile defence systems such as the S-300, S-400 and S-500, of which the first two are in great demand worldwide. Similarly, India can be an exporter of low cost battlefield missile defence systems.

In 2012 Russian President Vladimir Putin, explained how Russia’s defence sector could pull the rest of the economy out of the woods. “The renewal of the military industrial complex will become a locomotive that will pull the development of various industries: metallurgy, mechanical engineering, the chemical and radio-electronic industries, the entire [information technology] and telecommunications range. The task is to multiply Russia’s economic power, create an army and military-industrial complex that will secure Russia’s sovereignty, the respect of our foreign partners and lasting peace.”

Similar benefits could accrue to India through investments in BMD and the wider defence industry.

http://in.rbth.com/blogs/stranger_t...e-defence-system-can-bankrupt-pakistan_598529


indians said exactly the same back in the early 90s with regards to us becoming a nuclear weapons state. That's when our economy was probably much weaker than it is now. With the successful initiation and rise of CPEC and other programs the above notion has already failed. That india fantasy of 1998 died and so will this one.
 
S-400 is a game changer there is nothing like this on offer in the west, but 5-6 batteries is not enough to protect the entire country. My feeling is that the NCR region and Mumbai will be selected for primary and maybe later more will be bought but these systems are expensive.

S400-Missile-Air-Defense-System.jpg
 
instead look to whome the question was asked and why before posting your remark ... sir

whats the point i was making with @Blue Marlin before wrting all that you dont have an obligation to say anything without reading the question and to whome it was asked in the first place ... got it !!!

If you check your remarks i liked your answer and it is very true in various directions and i just add few more points and nothing else
 
These and the Israeli Spyder missile with Akash will be used to protect our ground assets/bases/cities
 
Those projects never consumed Billions of $ .........
And Babur Tests are well and good, Ra'ad is creating bit problem which will be addressed soon ............

Welcome back ...............
Where were you this whole time?
true it did not cost much as quit a lot of the tech was avaliable


been busy with work
 
Stupid article, India is trying to catch up with China and bankrupting itself rather Pakistan trying to match India. All of Indias big ticket military purchases and projects have failed so will this one. Pakistan didn't take the bait with Rafaele or the Russian fifth generation so called JV and India after blowing all the hot air is back to matching LCA with JF17. S400 deal is not even on paper, talk about it when it's done. Pathetic Indian media and more pathetic are those Pakistanis who take such articles seriously. In fact India are wasting money on developing these non-functional interceptors. Pakistani warheads are not the old Russian scuds, they are maneuverable war heads even the American Patriots missile cannot intercept them. They are trying to play the star war games that Reagan played with the Russians.
 
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This is a Plain of Western Country and Other Richest Country they not want to make peace or maby want peace but also they want to sales their weapons and technology so they find INDIA because India need more more power because he want to fight with china or maby not but he is thinking and also with Pakistan thats why INDIA not Like Chines Mobile which all member red in news India Block Chines Mobile Import if Pakistan India and China Japan and South Korea and North Korea and Iran Sudia Arabia Becomes friends who will takes Weapons then these richest country will loss money and they will become poor country because US Budget depends on Weapons Sales Pic Attached hope you understand
300px-Biggest_arms_sales_2013.png
 
Example of how Pakistan has matched India at costs which are fraction of what India has spent.

Nuclear Weapons: India took the very expensive Plutonium approach to their first nuclear weapon by building a reactor and an enrichment plant. Billions of dollars spent. Pakistan took the Uranium approach thanks to AQ Khan, bought most of the component in the open market and now it has capability for both Plutonium and Uranium weapons

Cold Start: India spent billions of dollar to implement its Cold Start doctrine and Pakistan spent a few million dollars to checkmate it with Nasr

Second Strike Capability: India spends billions in developing and leasing nuke subs and sub launched missiles. Although not declared there are indications Pakistan has mated its Babur to AIP subs as an interim but still very capable counter.

Many more example - the crux of this article is how India is still so fixated with Pakistan
 
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Nukes Can be used as Emp devices
Which will Hurt Both Pakistan and India
People tend to forget the thousands of mile between India and Pakistan which don't exist
It
Many things Come in Play is Pakistan and india are on crazy mode and try to use majority of there assets against each other
In this one its bye bye Sub continent
Simple If even someone survives first wave
Radio fall, shock waves , radiation will just kill everything two major areas
1 Himalaya mountain water source
2 Food producing populated areas e.g Punjab
If these two are affected end game

Now is it a limited game then it will effect the area which is the ground zero
Just checking the History and gear majority of third world countries aren't that ready for radioactive or bio warfare majority of these forces will just be affected

People tend to assume Nukes are just new bullets which you shoot and thats it but forget aftermath of that
So India and Pakistan wont be going full fledged war crazy
Limited skirmishes will that makes just india and pakistan special nut cases
 
Only place that could ever happen is some clueless cartoon movie i.e. Bollywood Movie
 

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