Indian and
Pakistani warplanes engaged in an air battle over Kashmir just a day
after New Delhi’s alleged attack on a jihadist camp on the Pakistani
side of the Line of Control on 26 February. The dogfight led to the
downing of an Indian Air Force (IAF) MiG-21 Bison and a Pakistani F-16.
Advanced
Russian-made Su-30 fighter jets of the Indian Air Force (IAF) did not
take part in the 27 February dogfight with Pakistani warplanes due
to red tape-related problems, the Hindu reports.
“Owing to the bureaucratic delays, we could not
develop blast pens [reinforced shelters] for Su-30 MKIs near the Line
of Control [LoC]. The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) sanctioned the
project only at the end of 2017”, the newspaper cited a defence source
as saying.
A new escalation of Indian-Pakistani tensions culminated on 27 February, when the IAF’s MiG-21 Bison and the PAF’s F-16 were downed in a dogfight over Kashmir, a day after the IAF conducted an assault on an alleged terrorist base in the Pakistan-administered part of Kashmir, reportedly destroying several facilities.
The air raid followed a suicide attack claimed by the Pakistan-based terrorist organisation Jaish-e-Mohammad on 14 February that killed more than 40 Indian soldiers.EditorIndia blamed Pakistan for harbouring and protecting terrorists, and accused Islamabad of having a "direct hand" in the deadly incident – accusations that Pakistan vehemently denies.
The SU-30 MKI, NATO reporting name Flanker-H, is the IAF’s elite fighter-bomber developed by Russia's Sukhoi Aviation Corporation. The IAF got the first batch of such warplanes from Russia in 1996 and has since contracted 272 aircraft.
sputniknews
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