With minimal effect....
No, Syrian airforce don't have much and it was more a warning shot. They destroyed a lot of buildings. Imagine Greece storage of weapons and fighters...
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With minimal effect....
If you think BM will destroy a 200 fighter jets AF on the ground and win a war, good luck with that.I ve said my piece.You don't need to destroy an entire airbase. You can just deny them operation by cratering the runways and taxi-ways first and then target the aircraft (shelters) individually. That is entirely in the realm of possibilities of today's technology. The Chinese have converted their dumb artillery rockets to 300-400 km ranged pin-point strike weapons. Something that was unimaginable 30 years ago and impossible 10 years ago.
The Iranians have proven their accuracy both in tests, exercises and IRL operations. Taking Russia as an example is bad because of the INF treaty that prevented them from producing BM and SSM with a range of 500-5500km. You should take the Chinese as an example of what conventional BM and SSM can do.
The INF treaty has prevented Russia and the US from developing BM and continued their reliance of conventional airpower. But now that it has been scrapped, the race is on with the US developing conventional BM again.
They were flying aircrafts from that base hours later....
Numbers matter. Unless Greece acquires in excess of 70 fighter jets combined...there'd be hardly any impactSo Greece is getting Rafales, upgrading it’s F-16s to Viper level and also getting F-35s.
In a few years they would have an air force that is on an absolutely higher lever than TuAF. Unfortunately Turkey can’t do anything to even try to match their upgrades and acquisitions.
The only way now is to just go Iran’s way and develop and produce as many missiles and rockets as possible, with as big of a range and as destructive as possible. Even if we don’t have the planes to match them in the air we should have enough missiles to overwhelm their air defenses and destroy their bases and infrastructure preemptively.
They were flying aircrafts from that base hours later....
When you hear people talking about Ballistic missiles as an answer to a proper AF,you know that you're in a Iranian style comedy, which I see getting very popular through the ME...
You have to consider the prices the Greeks are getting these Rafales for, which seem to be a true bargain, plus quite a quick induction into their AF.Rafale is total waste of money. They cost similar to F-35 but much less potent. Plus additional aicraft will give a maintenance headache.
Bear in mind the CCIP upgrade provides 30% extra detection range compared to the current Greek Vipers. TAF has 192 F-16 with AN/APG-68v9 while HAF only has at max 40.For every action there is a reaction. To think that TuAF will sit on it’s laurels while Greece improves its airforce is wrong logic.
The “Ozgur” project will be in place with new Aesa radars fitted on enough planes to counteract the Greek move. Rb2e radar Rafale uses is a small diameter radar and also the an/apg83 on the f6v70 both hopefully will not be as powerful as the GaN based Aesa radar Aselsan is developing. Once fitted on our f16’s there may be close to 30 km detection difference between our planes‘ and Greek planes’ radars in our favour.
Going forward if push comes to shove , we will modernise all the block 40 f16’s as well.
Rafale is total waste of money. They cost similar to F-35 but much less potent. Plus additional aicraft will give a maintenance headache.
Bear in mind the CCIP upgrade provides 30% extra detection range compared to the current Greek Vipers. TAF has 192 F-16 with AN/APG-68v9 while HAF only has at max 40.
I wonder what India thinks seeing this price tag for the Greeks.....They pay like 3.9 billion € for 18 jets...The Rafale doesn't benefit from the economy of scale of the F-35,only 201 have been produced out of 321 aicrafts ordered. France being the biggest customer with 152 in service out of 225 currently planned,while thousands of F-35 are planned and more than 500 already produced.
The F-35 might actually be cheap to buy,but not to maintain,given its high maintenance and flying hours costs. So much that several European clients are going to reduce their flying hours so their budget doesn't skyrocket.
Greece got 18 Rafale of the latest F3R standard for an estimated cost (this isn't the final official cost) €1,7 billion,including training,maintenance,spares etc. The Greeks are accustomed to Dassault aircrafts given they operate and have operated for decades Mirage F1,Mirage 2000....
I wonder what India thinks seeing this price tag for the Greeks.....They pay like 3.9 billion € for 18 jets...