by Shahid Raza

India’s S-400 Triumf: Myths And Countermeasures

India, the world’s largest importer of weapons has a history of rolling geopolitics and weapon purchases together as a balancing act, which was at display during the official visit of President Putin to New Delhi. The media coverage of the visit was dominated by a $5.43 billion deal for five S-400 Triumf Air Defence Systems, which Pakistan believes will destabilise the strategic balance in South Asia.

The Indian media constructed a narrative that this particular system would bring India into a dominant position over Pakistan by enabling it to shoot down the Pakistani aircraft and missiles in an event of a war inside Pakistan’s territory. Some Indian pundits also declared that the S-400 system would become a critical piece of India’s so-called ‘old Start limited warfare doctrine’– when the system is delivered in 2020-2021. The Indian information war over this purchase alarmed many in Pakistan, separating ‘myth from reality’ regarding this deal.

Capabilities

The S-400 Triumf, known to NATO as the SA-21 Growler is a further development of Russia’s S-300 PMU-2 Air Defence System, which was designed in the 1990s by the Russian Almaz Central Design Bureau. The S-400 is the most advanced and capable Russian Air Defence System that went operational with the Russian Aerospace Defence Forces in 2007 and has recently been deployed in Syria to protect Russian military assets. The S-400 is currently operated by Russia and China, while the deals are being negotiated with Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Qatar, Egypt, and Algeria.

This means that the S-400 sites can be attacked and destroyed once they have been identified through various human and remote sensing methods of intelligence gathering.

The S-400 is a complete weapon system with a dedicated sensor architecture, fire control system and 4 types of different missiles designed for different ranges and different types of airborne targets. The 40N6E missile has a range of 380 km, the 48N6 missile 250 km, the 9M96E2 missile 120 km, and the 9M96E missile 40 km, while the 96L6 and 92N6 radars of S-400 system claim a maximum detection range of 570km for a B-52 bomber sized target.

The S-400 can also integrate other Russian made Air Defence Systems (ADS) like S-300 family, Pantsir-S1, Tor-M2, and BUK family etc. into its own data link, enabling them to function in a network-centric environment. If the official specifications are taken at their face value, the S-400 is the best Air Defence System available in the market today and represents a great challenge for the Pakistan Air Force.

Myth Vs Reality

Having stated the officially claimed capabilities by the S-400 manufacturer, not to forget every weapon system has its weaknesses and S-400 is no exception, therefore it is important to read the fine print before drawing up any conclusions on the real battlefield relevant capabilities of this system. Here are some of the key things to consider in this regard.

  • The radar field of view is severely interrupted by geographic hurdles like, jungles, hills, mountains etc. and results in a reduction of maximum radar range. To counter this, S-400 system relies on a mast assembly which can be either 24 or 40 meters tall. The process of installing radars and sensors on these mast assemblies takes up to 90 minutes. While the mast assembly does help attain maximum radar field of view, it eliminates the capability of the S-400 system to shoot and scoot, making it a relatively easy target for counter strikes.

  • The primary weapon of the S-400 system is the 48N6 missile with a range of almost 240 km and not 400 km as exaggerated by the Indian media. It carries a 180 kg warhead and can’t intercept a ballistic missile above 27 km altitude. Most modern ballistic missiles have a much higher apogee and warheads travel at a hypersonic speed during the terminal dive phase. It means that the maximum speed of S-400’s main weapon is much slower than the target it is trying to intercept.

  • The 40N6E missile with a reported range of 380 km has not been seen in public and is not believed to be in service yet, even in Russia. Expert analysis suggests that its ability to defend against ballistic missiles will be limited. This missile is the root of Indian media’s ill-informed speculations about its falsely alleged 400 km range. Key in point, the stated 380 km range is the maximum distance this missile can travel and not its effective combat relevant range. There’s also no indication that Russia will agree to sell this missile to India, if and when it is ready.

  • Contrary to Indian media reports, the 92N6 radar can only command and control 12 missiles aimed at 6 targets and is capable of tracking 100 targets at a time.

  • The travel time of an intercontinental ballistic missile between the United States and Russia is approximately 30 minutes but because India and Pakistan share a land border, the travel time of a ballistic missile will be less than 5 minutes which will not leave any room to react. Even if a nuclear-tipped missile is intercepted, the nuclear fallout will have devastating consequences for the human population in the area of interception.

  • The S-400 missile has a shelf life of only 10 years, which means that India would need to replace the missiles in 2030, without getting any value from them if they are not used in a war to gain a tactical advantage. Considering that India’s $5.4 billion weapon system will retire within just 10 years, the deal seems a waste of money and resources.

Countermeasures

Pakistan’s official response to Indian S-400 purchase was; “To develop capabilities which render any Ballistic Missile Defence system ineffective and unreliable”. The best counter strategy to the S-400 deployment is to develop a set of capabilities designed to attack and destroy the Indian ADS during a war.

The industrial capability of Pakistan to produce ballistic and cruise missiles systems should be leveraged to develop a strike package made up of decoys and missiles with enhanced speed and accuracy. Pakistan already has different types of missiles like the Ghauri, Shaheen-1A, Ghaznavi, Abdali, CM-400 AKG, Raad Air Launched Cruise Missile and Babur Cruise Missile System which possess enough standoff range to be fired from a safe distance and can be deployed to preemptively destroy the Indian Air Defence Sites including the S-400 installations.

If Pakistan cannot ensure the survival of its nuclear delivery vehicles– as it doesn’t possess such capability yet– the situation will surely hamper the strategic stability in the South Asian region.

The S-400 system will be deployed by India to protect its important static installations and is unlikely to be used as a mobile Air Defence System. This means that the S-400 sites can be attacked and destroyed once they have been identified through various human and remote sensing methods of intelligence gathering.

Apart from the existing weapon systems possessed by Pakistan, the SY-400 short-range precision-attack ballistic missile system and the YJ-12 air-launched missile can be acquired from China, enabling Pakistan to form another tier of its Destruction of Enemy Air Defences (DEAD) strategy. Both of these weapons were designed to penetrate sophisticated Enemy Air Defences (EAD) to strike targets as far as 400 km away; considering the maximum range of the S-400’s mainstay missile is 240 km, these weapons are well suited for counter battery fire operations.

Another cost-effective solution can be to purchase local production rights for the Chinese A-300 Multiple Rocket Launcher System, which can deliver 8X 400 mm GPS, Inertial guided rockets carrying 150kg warhead each, with Circular Error Probability (CEP) of 30 to 45 meters at a maximum effective range of 290 km. This weapon system can fire its payload in just less than 50 seconds and can be replenished within 8 minutes.

It will force India to deploy the S-400 system at least 300 km away from Pakistan’s border, unless they want to lose their multi-billion-dollar system to Pakistan’s relatively cheaper and expendable rocket systems, making the S-400 all but redundant – by almost eliminating its much touted ability to shoot down Pakistani aircrafts and missiles flying inside our own airspace.

A number of former F-16 pilots from the Pakistan Air Force consulted –to better understand the subject from a war fighter’s point of view– mentioned that the early detection of the S-400 sites using human, electronic and remote sensing intelligence gathering assets could successfully suppress the S-400.

Developing radiation homing seekers (to guide the cruise missiles to destroy the enemy radar sites), an Electronic Warfare variant of the JF-17B thunder fighter aircraft and our own Defence Network can better protect military and economic assets during war times. Pakistan’s most immediate concern is the threat posed to its ballistic missiles. If Pakistan cannot ensure the survival of its nuclear delivery vehicles– as it doesn’t possess such capability yet– the situation will surely hamper the strategic stability in the South Asian region.

It could, in fact, harm the Russian bid to sell the MiG-35 and Su-57 fighter aircraft to India in the future, which could ultimately see Russia, lose out on billions of dollars of future military sales to India.

In order to counter this threat, Pakistan should leverage its own strengths and invest in disruptive and offensive technologies like the Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicles (MIRV) like the one demonstrated by Pakistan’s Ababeel Ballistic Missile and also develop a Hypersonic Glide Vehicle (HGV), instead of investing large sums of funds into purchasing a Ballistic Missile Defence System of its own.

The MIRV and HGV technologies combined with an improved intelligence-gathering network and a multi-layered Destruction of Enemy Air Defences (DEAD) architecture can ensure the delivery of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons to their intended targets for decades to come – all at a sustainable cost.

Forecast

Although India’s S-400s are being purchased to counter the Chinese airpower buildup in the Tibetan plateau region, it still presents a danger to Pakistan Air Force and Pakistan’s Strategic Missile forces, therefore Pakistan will have to come up with a comprehensive counter-strategy.

India will also have to settle for an expensive offset weapons deal with the United States worth billions of dollars to earn a waiver from the CAATSA act. It could, in fact, harm the Russian bid to sell the MiG-35 and Su-57 fighter aircraft to India in the future, which could ultimately see Russia, lose out on billions of dollars of future military sales to India.

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