- India
reportedly signed a $1.2 billion deal for ~300 Russian R-37M long-range
air-to-air missiles for Su-30MKI fighters.
- This
move is seen as a counter to Pakistan’s acquisition of Chinese PL-15
missiles with J-10C fighters.
- The
instinct behind the procurement stems from Operation Sindoor, which
exposed India’s range gap against Pakistan.
Russia’s Experience with R-37M
- Designed
for very-long-range engagements, the R-37M theoretically poses a major
threat.
- However,
Russia has achieved only a handful of kills in four years of conflict with
Ukraine despite frequent launches.
- Colonel
A Yu Stepkin highlights constraints: Western military aid, Ukrainian air
defences, Western reconnaissance support, and Russia’s own limited ISR
capabilities.
- Key
insight: Information imbalance, not missile range, is the decisive factor.
The Sensor-Network Factor
- Former
IAF pilot Sameer Joshi explains that missile range is not a single number
but varies depending on target awareness.
- Three
ranges defined:
- Kinematic
range: ~300 km (straight-flying target).
- Effective
range vs reacting target: ~120 km.
- No-escape
zone: 30–40 km.
- Cueing
from off-board sensors (AEW&C, ISR, datalinks) enables “ghost
arrivals” — surprise launches with minimal warning.
- Without
cueing, kill probabilities collapse dramatically.
Ghost Arrival Concept
- The
true value of long-range missiles lies in denying warning to the target.
- A
stealth fighter using off-board sensor tracks can deliver a missile with
little reaction time.
- Russia’s
failure in Ukraine shows the opposite: Western ISR alerts Ukrainian pilots
early, halving missile effectiveness.
- Lesson:
Network superiority, not missile range, determines outcomes.
Pakistan’s Network Advantage
- Pakistan
has systematically built a Chinese-integrated kill web:
- PL-15
and HQ-9 missiles, J-10C fighters, long-range radars.
- Negotiations
for KJ-500 AEW&C and J-35A fighters.
- Nine
Saab Erieye AEW&C aircraft already operational.
- China
provides live operational support, including embedded officers and
technical assistance.
- This
integration ensures Pakistan’s long-range missiles are backed by a robust
sensor network.
India’s Limitations
- India
fields only six AEW&C platforms (three Phalcon A-50EI, three Netra
Mk-1).
- Operational
issues: unserviceability, crew shortages, poor maintenance, and slow
progress on future AWACS programmes.
- New
projects (Netra Mk-1A, AWACS India) face delays and may not deliver before
the 2030s.
- Without
sufficient network architecture, long-range missiles alone cannot
guarantee superiority.
Key Takeaway
- The
competition is not between missile models (R-37M vs PL-15) but between sensor
networks, ISR systems, datalinks, and battle management architectures.
- India’s
challenge: build a resilient kill web to enable ghost arrivals and deny
them to adversaries.
- A
missile is only as effective as the network that supports it.