logo
Tension after Pahalgam: India's air defence leapfrogs Pakistan's China-fed teeth

Tension after Pahalgam: India's air defence leapfrogs Pakistan's China-fed teeth

First Post05-05-2025
Amid rising tensions, India is building a next-generation air defence architecture that surpasses Pakistan's China-dependent systems in range, resilience and indigenous innovation read more
Following the Pahalgam terror attack on April 22 and relentless military drills and small arms exchanges for 10 consecutive nights along the Line of Control (LoC), tensions have heightened significantly between India and Pakistan. This has fuelled speculation over whether a full-scale war is on the horizon between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.
There is still no clarity on what form such a conflict might take — whether it would involve ground troops, artillery, mechanised infantry, naval forces, airpower or a combination of all. Regardless of the scope, air defence remains a vital component of any military strategy, essential for protecting both human and material assets.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Amid these evolving geopolitical challenges, India's air defence strategy is undergoing a significant transformation. With adversaries like China and Pakistan advancing their offensive capabilities, India is reassessing how to safeguard its airspace best.
While there was once considerable interest in Israel's Iron Dome — widely regarded as a highly effective air defence system — its recent vulnerabilities in Israel's simultaneous conflicts with the Houthis, Hamas, and Hezbollah have raised concerns about its applicability to India's threat environment.
Previously considered nearly impenetrable, the Iron Dome came under renewed scrutiny after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack, during which approximately 5,000 rockets were launched in just 20 minutes, overwhelming the system and exposing its limitations, according to Newsweek.
Looking at the Iron Dome: Interest and rejection
India's interest in the Iron Dome dates back to 2010, according to Pieter Wezeman, a senior researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), who shared with Newsweek that India was among several countries evaluating the system. However, the interest never materialised into a purchase.
Other countries like Romania, Cyprus and Azerbaijan also considered buying the Iron Dome, but actual deliveries were either unconfirmed or never occurred.
One key reason for India's hesitation was its already ongoing development of indigenous systems like the Prithvi Air Defence (PAD), Advanced Air Defence (AAD) and Akash missile systems. As The Eurasian Times noted, India was inclined towards self-reliant solutions that could address the country's distinct threat landscape—a sentiment echoed by Indian defence officials who emphasised the mismatch between Israel's needs and India's.
Air Marshal (Retd) Anil Chopra, head of the Centre for Air Power Studies, told The Print that while he had once supported acquiring an Iron Dome-like system, it no longer made sense with India inducting the S-400 missile system and evaluating the US-made NASAMS-II for the protection of critical infrastructure like the national capital.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Building the indigenous shield
India's multi-layered air defence doctrine now rests on a blend of indigenous and imported technologies, aiming to address a wide spectrum of aerial threats—from low-flying drones to ballistic missiles. The PAD and AAD systems are among the foundational elements which provide interception at high and low altitudes, respectively.
The Akash system, a medium-range surface-to-air missile platform, is another key component, capable of engaging multiple targets at various altitudes.
In parallel, India has made strategic imports like the S-400 Triumf system from Russia. Signed in October 2018, the deal faced resistance from the United States, but India proceeded regardless.
As reported by The Eurasian Times, the S-400 significantly boosts India's interception capabilities with a tracking range of 600 kilometres and the ability to engage 80 targets simultaneously, including ballistic and cruise missiles, drones and fighter jets up to 400 kilometres away.
Additionally, India has also expressed interest in acquiring the US-made NASAMS-II (National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System), although no formal procurement has occurred yet.
Enter Project Kusha
The most ambitious component of India's air defence future is Project Kusha—a DRDO-led initiative to develop a long-range air defence system with capabilities mirroring and even surpassing the Iron Dome. This system will be capable of intercepting stealth aircraft, drones, cruise missiles and precision-guided munitions at ranges up to 350 kilometres.
Project Kusha aims to incorporate multiple layers of interception through different missile types designed to hit targets at 150, 250 and 350 kilometres respectively. It will also include long-range surveillance and fire control radars and offer high kill probabilities: not less than 80 per cent for single launches and 90% for salvo launches.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The system is designed to target high-speed threats with low radar cross-sections and can engage fighter-sized targets at 250 kilometres and larger aircraft like AWACS at 350 kilometres. With funding of Rs 21,700 crore already approved, this project marks a significant step in India's pursuit of an 'Aatmanirbhar Bharat' or self-reliant defence industry.
According to DRDO sources quoted in Firstpost, the Project Kusha system will fill a critical capability gap by providing strategic and tactical cover to vulnerable zones, especially important given the missile deployments observed across the Indo-Tibetan border by China.
The Pakistan factor
No analysis of India's air defence environment is complete without understanding the systems fielded by Pakistan. According to the Indian Defence Research Wing, although Pakistan has made strides in modernising its air defences, its systems still lag behind India's in terms of technological sophistication, integration and reach.
The backbone of Pakistan's high-altitude defence is the Chinese-supplied HQ-9P and HQ-9BE systems with ranges of 100 to 200 kilometres and interception capabilities up to Mach 14. As detailed in the Pakistan Army's SAM Systems brief, these systems primarily protect strategic zones like Karachi and Rawalpindi and are believed to use HT-233 phased-array radars.
Pakistan's medium-range capabilities are built around the LY-80 and LY-80E systems, which offer coverage between 40 and 70 kilometres and target speeds of up to Mach 2.5. These systems, although effective against subsonic threats, are reportedly inadequate against India's supersonic BrahMos missile, which travels at Mach 3+.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
For short-range threats, Pakistan relies on a mix of Chinese and older Western systems like the FM-90 (15 km), French Crotale and MANPADS such as the Anza series and RBS-70 NG. However, these systems have limited radar coverage, outdated command guidance and lack the multi-target engagement capability of systems like India's Barak-8.
While Pakistan's air defence architecture is improving, especially with the induction of HQ-9P and LY-80EV variants, it remains heavily reliant on Chinese technology and lacks the indigenous depth that India is now investing in through DRDO and Project Kusha.
Strategic lessons from Iron Dome for India
Despite its limitations, Israel's Iron Dome has proven effective in intercepting thousands of incoming threats and it still maintains a claimed 90 per cent effectiveness rate under normal operational conditions, as reported by The Eurasian Times. The system comprises three to four launchers and a radar, protecting areas of up to 60 square miles. However, its high cost—with each Tamir interceptor costing approximately $20,000 to destroy much cheaper rockets—has been a point of criticism.
India has taken valuable cues from these operational lessons. Unlike Israel, which operates in a smaller geographical area with largely asymmetrical threats, India must deal with a wide array of conventional and strategic challenges across a massive territory. This has led to a preference for scalable, multi-tiered solutions with a focus on both cost-effectiveness and technological sophistication.
In this context, DRDO's push to develop multiple types of interceptors for varying threat levels coupled with the integration of indigenous radars and sensors reflects a lesson well learned from Israel's Iron Dome experience.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Building a self-reliant, multi-layered shield
India is crafting a uniquely tailored air defence architecture that draws inspiration from global systems like the Iron Dome but is firmly rooted in its own strategic imperatives. Through programmes like Project Kusha, integration of the S-400 and a robust portfolio of indigenous missile systems, India is creating a defence ecosystem that can meet the challenges posed by both conventional military threats and emerging asymmetric warfare.
India's focus on multi-layered, high-performance and indigenously developed systems reflects a forward-looking approach to national security. The era of Iron Dome-inspired thinking is here, but in India, it comes with a distinct identity and strategic vision.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Parliament Monsoon Session Live: China-Pak tango as UPA gave up POK, Jaishankar calls Congress 'China guru'
Parliament Monsoon Session Live: China-Pak tango as UPA gave up POK, Jaishankar calls Congress 'China guru'

India Today

time25 minutes ago

  • India Today

Parliament Monsoon Session Live: China-Pak tango as UPA gave up POK, Jaishankar calls Congress 'China guru'

Congress MP and Leader of the Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday took a sharp dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi over US President Donald Trump's repeated claims of brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan by threatening trade tariffs. "It is obvious, Prime Minister has not said that Trump is lying. Everyone knows that he is not able to speak. That is the reality. If PM Modi speaks, then he (Donald Trump) will say things openly and keep the entire truth. That is why he (PM Modi) is not able to speak," Rahul Gandhi said while speaking to reporters outside Parliament. External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Wednesday launched a sharp attack on the Congress party during the Rajya Sabha debate on Operation Sindoor, accusing the UPA government of passivity on Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) and enabling closer military ties between China and Pakistan. "The China-Pakistan tango is a direct result of the UPA government's inaction. They gave up on PoK, and the consequences are visible now," the Minister said. External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Wednesday categorically denied any phone conversation between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump during the height of Operation Sindoor, countering speculation and misinformation about alleged diplomatic interventions. "Main unko kehna chahta hoon, woh kaan kholke sun le (I want to tell them (Opposition) and they must listen to it clearly) — from April 22 to June 16, there was not a single phone call between President Trump and Prime Minister Modi,' Jaishankar said in the Rajya Sabha. #WATCH | "...Main unko kehna chahta hoon, woh kaan kholke sun le. 22 April se 16 June tak, ek bhi phone call President Trump aur Prime Minister Modi ke beech mein nahi hua." says EAM Dr S Jaishankar during discussion on Operation Sindoor in Rajya Sabha — ANI (@ANI) July 30, 2025 External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Wednesday told the Rajya Sabha that several countries had reached out to India when Operation Sindoor began, seeking clarity on the situation and its likely duration. However, New Delhi made it clear that there was no room for third-party mediation. "When Operation Sindoor commenced, a number of countries were in touch with us to assess how serious the situation was and how long it might continue," Jaishankar said during the debate in the Upper House. "We conveyed the same message to all of them — that we are not open to any mediation. Anything between India and Pakistan will only be dealt with bilaterally," he added. External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Wednesday said in the Rajya Sabha that United States Vice President JD Vance had warned Prime Minister Narendra Modi of a potential Pakistani attack during a phone call on May 9. Speaking during the debate on Operation Sindoor in the Upper House, Jaishankar said, 'On May 9, US Vice President JD Vance called Prime Minister Modi and conveyed concerns about a possible Pakistani attack. PM Modi firmly responded that any such provocation would be met with a strong and decisive response from India". External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Wednesday informed the Rajya Sabha that the United Nations has, for the first time, officially acknowledged The Resistance Front (TRF) — a Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) offshoot — in its latest report. Speaking during the ongoing Monsoon Session of Parliament, Jaishankar said, "The United Nations report has mentioned The Resistance Front for the first time. This is the group responsible for the recent terror attack in Pahalgam". Amid loud protests from the Opposition benches, External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Tuesday said that under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership, India has succeeded in placing the issue of terrorism firmly on the global agenda. "Under PM Modi's leadership, we have put terrorism on the global agenda," the External Affairs Minister said. External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Tuesday said that the Narendra Modi-led government has corrected what was long considered irreversible — 'mistakes' made by India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Speaking during the Rajya Sabha debate on Operation Sindoor in the ongoing Monsoon Session of Parliament, Jaishankar remarked, "We were told for 60 years that Nehru's mistakes cannot be corrected. But the Narendra Modi government showed that they can". Citing two major policy shifts, he said, "Article 370 was corrected, the Indus Water Treaty is being corrected". External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Tuesday launched a scathing attack on the Congress party during the Rajya Sabha discussion on Operation Sindoor, accusing it of having "normalised terrorism" during its years in power and consistently portraying Pakistan as a victim on the global stage. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday launched a sharp critique of the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, accusing the then Indian leadership of prioritising Pakistan's interests over those of Indian farmers and mistaking appeasement for peace. Speaking during the ongoing Monsoon Session in the Rajya Sabha, Jaishankar said, "The then Prime Minister said let us do this treaty because the Indian government should consider the interests of Pakistani Punjab. Not a word was spoken about the interests of our own farmers in Kashmir, Punjab, Rajasthan, and Himachal Pradesh". External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Tuesday told the Rajya Sabha that India will continue to keep the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance until Pakistan permanently ends its support for terrorism. "The Indus Water Treaty will be held in abeyance until Pakistan irrevocably gives up its support of terrorism. Blood and water will not flow together," the Minister said. #WATCH | Delhi | On Indus Water Treaty, EAM Dr S Jaishankar says, "... The Indus Water Treaty will be held in abeyance until Pakistan irrevocably gives up its support of terrorism... Blood and water will not flow together..." — ANI (@ANI) July 30, 2025 During the discussion on Operation Sindoor in the Rajya Sabha, External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Tuesday described the Indus Waters Treaty as a "very unique" and "extraordinary" agreement, emphasising the historical context behind India's decision to hold it in abeyance. 'The Indus Water Treaty, in many ways, is a unique agreement. I cannot think of any other agreement in the world where a country has allowed its major rivers to flow into another country without retaining rights over them,' Jaishankar said. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wedhesday asserted in Rajya Sabha that India's decision to hold the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance after the deadly Pahalgam terror attack was a necessary and significant step in response to Pakistan's continued support for cross-border terrorism. "Holding the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance was an important step taken by India. I would want to repeat what Prime Minister Narendra Modi said: Blood and water will not flow together. There can be no engagement with Pakistan unless it dismantles the terror infrastructure operating from its soil," Jaishankar said. Congress MP Karti Chidambaram on Tuesday dismissed Prime Minister Narendra Modi's claim that former Home Minister P Chidambaram had given a "clean chit" to Pakistan, calling it a deliberate misrepresentation. "It is a very mischievous twist. If you listen to the former Home Minister's 22-minute speech in the Rajya Sabha and his 40-minute news interview, all he asked was where the terrorists were from. Were they homegrown, or did they come from Pakistan? If they were homegrown, they would have received training from Pakistan, or they would have come from Pakistan directly. In both cases, Pakistan's hand is clear. Nobody is questioning Pakistan's role... The only question was whether they were homegrown or came from across the border," Karti Chidambaram said. Amid Opposition uproar over the Special Investigation Report (SIR) related to voter roll revisions in Bihar, JDU MP Sanjay Kumar Jha on Tuesday defended the door-to-door survey being conducted in the state. "A survey is being conducted door-to-door in Bihar. This was also done in 2003. This is not the first time... Revising the voter list and conducting elections is the job of the Election Commission... The opposition knows what the outcome of the elections in Bihar will be," Jha said while speaking to news agency ANI outside Parliament. BJP MP Kangana Ranaut on Tuesday said Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave a "befitting reply" in Parliament to those questioning India's handling of the ceasefire with Pakistan. "He gave a befitting reply to all those who were trying to mislead people. They gave an open challenge to PM Modi to say that there was no intervention of any other country, and PM Modi said it in the House that no world leader has intervened between India and Pakistan for the ceasefire," Ranaut said while speaking to reporters outside Parliament. #WATCH | Delhi: On PM Modi's statement that no world leader has intervened between India and Pakistan, BJP MP Kangana Ranaut says, "He gave a befitting reply to all those who were trying to mislead people. They gave an open challenge to PM Modi to say that there was no… — ANI (@ANI) July 30, 2025 The Rajya Sabha was adjourned till 12 pm, within minutes of it beginning on Tuesday, following a ruckus by Opposition members over the alleged irregularities in the voter list clean-up exercise in Bihar. Opposition parties raised strong objections to what they claimed was a targeted and arbitrary deletion of names from the electoral rolls, particularly in minority and marginalised communities. The Rajya Sabha is set to begin a detailed discussion on Operation Sindoor at 12.00 pm today, with proceedings scheduled to continue until 6:00 PM, as per the current agenda. Ahead of the discussion, Trinamool Congress MP Derek O'Brien raised concerns over the government's reluctance to commit to a debate on the Special Investigation Report (SIR), despite two weeks of the Parliament session still remaining. His remarks triggered uproar in the House. Several key speakers are expected to participate in today's debate, including External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, Leader of the House JP Nadda, BJP MPs Satnam Singh Sandhu, Kavita Patidar, and Sudhanshu Trivedi. From the Opposition, Congress MP Renuka Chowdhury, TMC's Dola Sen, and RJD's Manoj Jha are among those listed to speak. According to sources, over 70 members had initially registered to speak during the debate, but only around 24 to 25 were able to present their views in the previous session. Congress MP Manickam Tagore on Tuesday questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reluctance to name former US President Donald Trump in Parliament, amid repeated claims by Trump that he was responsible for brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan. "Yesterday, for the 28th time, US President Donald Trump has claimed that he has made the ceasefire is PM Modi afraid to take Donald Trump's name in Parliament? Why is he not ready to do this? It is the duty of PM Modi to make the statement in the Rajya Sabha that Donald Trump is lying," Tagore said. A day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's speech in the Lok Sabha, BJP MP Nishikant Dubey launched a sharp attack on the Nehru-Gandhi family, accusing them of compromising India's sovereignty in the past. "This is not the Gandhi family. I said yesterday that Nehru ji fought the war in 1962 along with America. We gave our Charbatia airport to them for use and signed an agreement with them in 1963. Nuclear devices are stored in Nanda Devi, due to which the entire Himalayan region of Uttarakhand, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh is facing problems because we allowed America to store its nuclear equipment. We supported America in the Vietnam War. The entire Gandhi family has sold this country," Dubey said.

Trump says US, Israel to run more Gaza food centres, offers few details
Trump says US, Israel to run more Gaza food centres, offers few details

Business Standard

time33 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Trump says US, Israel to run more Gaza food centres, offers few details

President Donald Trump said Tuesday that the US will partner with Israel to run new food centres in Gaza to address the worsening humanitarian crisis there, but he and US officials offered few additional details about the plan or how it would differ from existing food distribution centres. Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned from a trip to Scotland that Israel would preside over the new food centres to make sure the distribution is proper. We're going to be dealing with Israel, and we think they can do a good job of it," Trump said. The opaque details come as the Trump administration is facing calls at home and abroad to do more to address the hunger crisis in Gaza. The U.S.'s close ally, Israel, is at the center of an international outcry as more images of emaciated children continue to emerge. That pressure comes after the U.S. pulled out of talks last week to try to broker a ceasefire in the 21-month Israel-Hamas war, accusing Hamas of acting in bad faith. But Trump this week broke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, disagreeing publicly with him about starvation in Gaza and citing the pictures of hungry people. The White House described it as a new aid plan to help people in Gaza obtain access to food and promised that details would emerge. It did not elaborate. State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce said Tuesday that she didn't know "the framework of how the new aid distribution would work. I'm waiting for the president to return. I don't want to get ahead of him, Bruce said. Democrats in Congress have implored the Trump administration to step up its role in addressing the suffering and starvation in Gaza. More than 40 senators signed a letter Tuesday urging the Trump administration to resume ceasefire talks and sharply criticizing the Israeli-backed American organization that had already been created to distribute food aid. Sen. Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, questioned why the U.S. was not allowing long-standing aid groups to run food centers. I'm glad that the president is saying that this is a problem. But if we want to solve the problem, turn to the folks who have been doing this for decades," Kaine said. The few details Trump provided about the new food centers appeared similar to a program that was already rolled out in May, after Israel had blocked all food, medicine and other imports for 2 months. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli-backed American contractor, opened four food distribution sites that month. Israel and GHF said that system was needed to prevent Hamas from siphoning off aid. The United Nations, which has been distributing food in Gaza throughout the war when allowed, denies any significant diversion of aid by Hamas. Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces while heading to the GHF sites, according to witnesses, health officials and the U.N. human rights office. Israel says its forces have only fired warning shots at people who approach its forces, and GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray and fired occasional shots in the air to prevent dangerous crowding. The aid sites are in Israeli military zones, which is off limits to independent media. The U.N. refuses to cooperate with GHF, saying its model violates humanitarian principles by forcing Palestinians to travel long distances and risk their lives for food and because it allows Israel to control aid and use it to further mass displacement. Trump said Tuesday that he last spoke to Netanyahu two days earlier and that the Israeli leader wants to distribute food in a proper manner. I think Israel wants to do it, Trump said. And they'll be good at doing it. The president, for the second day in a row, remarked on the images of starving people and kids in Gaza, which seemed to prompt him this week to announce the new plan and his break with Netanyahu. Trump said Tuesday that everyone who saw the images coming out of Gaza would declare it terrible unless they're pretty cold-hearted or, worse than that, nuts. Those are kids that are starving. They are starving, Trump said. They've got to get them food. And we're going to get them food. The shift brings Trump closer to some in his MAGA base, who have rejected the Republican Party's long-standing, unequivocal support for Israel and see aid money flowing to the country as yet another misguided foreign intervention. They include Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a staunch Trump ally, who has echoed the rhetoric of progressive Democrats in recent days. I can unequivocally say that what happened to innocent people in Israel on Oct. 7th was horrific. Just as I can unequivocally say that what has been happening to innocent people and children in Gaza is horrific. This war and humanitarian crisis must end! she wrote on Sunday on X. On Monday night, she went further, calling what is happening in Gaza genocide. But Greene's comments do not represent MAGA as a whole. On Monday, podcaster Charlie Kirk, who leads the powerful Turning Point network, railed against what he deemed a propaganda campaign trying to make it seem as if Israel is intentionally starving the people of Gaza.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store