6️⃣ Media Hyperbole vs Operational Metrics
Zee News described Tejas as a “Super Eye in the Sky” with radar that makes China and Pakistan “lose their edge.”
That is media theater.
Radar integration matters. AESA matters. But air superiority depends on:
• Sortie generation rate
• Mean Time Between Failure
• Maintenance turnaround time
• BVR missile integration
• Electronic warfare resilience
• Networked command structure
No single radar announcement reshapes regional deterrence overnight.
When radar headlines coincide with safety disputes and delivery delays, credibility tension intensifies.
7️⃣ The “Defenseless” Narrative — Where Analysis Must Stay Responsible
Claims that HAL’s incompetence has “left India defenseless” are rhetorically powerful — but analytically excessive.
India fields:
• Rafale
• Su-30MKI
• Mirage variants
• Integrated air defense systems
Tejas is one pillar, not the entire structure.
However — and this is important — production delays in a replacement program for aging MiG-21s do create transitional strain. Replacement timelines matter. Squadron arithmetic matters.
Air deterrence is not binary. It is layered.
8️⃣ Pakistan’s Parallel Trajectory
While Tejas matures, Pakistan’s JF-17 program has evolved through block upgrades, radar improvements, and missile integration. Regional competition is iterative.
Modernization in South Asia is continuous, not episodic.
No single accident shifts balance.
No single denial restores perception.
Sustained operational consistency determines confidence.
