Saturday, June 13, 2026
ADVT 
India

'...We Had Technology On Our Side': Air Force Chief BS Dhanoa On Balakot Strike

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Apr, 2019 06:21 PM

    Technology was on India's side in the Balakot air strikes, Air Chief Marshal BS Dhanoa said on Monday, asserting that the results would have been further tilted in the country's favour if Rafale jets were inducted in time.


    The Indian Air Force chief was addressing a gathering at a seminar on aerospace power of the future and the impact of technology.


    "In the Balakot operation, we had technology on our side, and we could launch precision stand of weapons with great accuracy. In the subsequent engagements, we came out better because we upgraded our MiG-21s, Bisons, and Mirage-2000 aircraft," he said.


    "The results would have been further skewed in our favour had we inducted the Rafale aircraft in time," Air Chief Marshal Dhanoa said.


    The Air Force struck a Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist training camp in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir's Balakot area on February 26, in response to the February 14 Pulwama terror attack in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed.


    The Pakistan Air Force retaliated the next day by unsuccessfully targeting various military installations in Jammu and Kashmir.


    Air Chief Marshal Dhanoa said in his speech, "In the proposed induction of the Rafale and S-400 surface-to-air missile system, in the next two-four years, once again the technological balance will shift in our favour, like it was in 2002 during Operation Parakaram during the last stand-off."


    India inked an inter-governmental agreement with France in September 2016 for the procurement of 36 Rafale fighter jets at a cost of around Rs. 58,000 crore. The delivery of the jets -- capable of carrying a range of potent weapons and missiles -- is scheduled to begin from September.


    In October last year, India and Russia signed a multibillion dollar deal for S-400 ''Triumf'' long-range air defence missile systems. It has the capability to destroy incoming hostile aircraft, missiles and even drones at ranges of up to 400 km.


    The seminar on ''Aerospace power in the 2040s: Impact of Technology'' was held at Subroto Park here to mark the birth centenary of the late Marshal of the IAF Arjan Singh.


    The event was hosted by the IAF along with the Centre for Air Power Studies (CAPS), an autonomous defence research and analysis body.


    "Among all arms of the military, technology affects us the most.. land forces mainly fight with men, naval and air force officers operate machines and in the Air Force this technology has to be packed in smaller machines and subject to extreme temperature and pressure conditions," the IAF chief said.


    And, air power is more sensitive to technological change, he said.


    Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman last week complimented the IAF for its "flawless execution" of the February 26 Balakot operation and subsequent thwarting of the Pakistani response while addressing top IAF commanders.


    At the event on April 11, Mr Dhanoa emphasised on further enhancing the IAF's capability in the field of space, cyber, artificial intelligence and drone technology to further boost its overall combat capability.


    Various IAF veterans, at the seminar paid tribute to Singh, who led the Indian Air Force during the 1965 India-Pakistan war, died in September 2017 at the age of 98.


    An icon in the country's military history, Mr Singh led a fledgling IAF in the 1965 Indo-Pak war when he was just 44 years old.


    Born on April 15, 1919, in Lyallpur in Punjab in undivided India, his father, grandfather and great grandfather had served in the cavalry.


    "This event is a fitting tribute to IAF Marshal Arjan Singh," Air Chief Marshal Dhanoa said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Amarinder Singh Asks Centre To Discuss Kartarpur Corridor With Pakistan

    Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has urged the Centre to seek access for Sikh pilgrims to the Kartarpur Sahib shrine in Pakistan, an issue which his minister Navjot Sidhu said figured briefly during his visit to Islamabad.

    Amarinder Singh Asks Centre To Discuss Kartarpur Corridor With Pakistan

    Thanks But No, Says India To Foreign Aid For Kerala Floods

    Thanks But No, Says India To Foreign Aid For Kerala Floods
    India on Wednesday politely declined financial aid from other countries to flood-devastated Kerala where 370 people have died so far.

    Thanks But No, Says India To Foreign Aid For Kerala Floods

    Now AAP's Ashish Khetan Quits, Week After Ashutosh's Exit

    Now AAP's Ashish Khetan Quits, Week After Ashutosh's Exit
    Ashish Khetan on Wednesday announced his resignation from the party, a step that comes a week after another leader, Ashutosh, took a similar decision.

    Now AAP's Ashish Khetan Quits, Week After Ashutosh's Exit

    No One Questions Modi: Row Over Navjot Sidhu's Pakistan Visit Doesn't Subside, Imran Defends Him

    No One Questions Modi: Row Over Navjot Sidhu's Pakistan Visit Doesn't Subside, Imran Defends Him
    Patra asked why Sidhu hugged Bajwa as the Pakistani Army was behind the butchering of Indian soldiers and the attempt to revive the Khalistani movement. 

    No One Questions Modi: Row Over Navjot Sidhu's Pakistan Visit Doesn't Subside, Imran Defends Him

    Sun Finally Shines Over Kerala, UAE Pledges $100 Million

    For the first time in many days, the sun shone brightly over Kerala on Tuesday even as hundreds of thousands remained in relief camps while many who returned home broke down after seeing the enormity of the destruction.

    Sun Finally Shines Over Kerala, UAE Pledges $100 Million

    UP Farmer Kills Wife, Daughters, Puts Bodies In Fridge, Suitcase; Hangs Self

    UP Farmer Kills Wife, Daughters, Puts Bodies In Fridge, Suitcase; Hangs Self
    In a macabre incident, a family of five members was found dead inside a room in Allahabad, which appears to be a case of the man killing his wife and three daughters and then hanging himself.

    UP Farmer Kills Wife, Daughters, Puts Bodies In Fridge, Suitcase; Hangs Self