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Foxbat fastest IAF aircraft,
can fly in stratosphere at speed exceeding three Mach
New Delhi, April 24, 2005 (Express News Service)
The Indian Air Force can soon
breathe easy on an aircraft it had worked hard to keep off
the radar since a small fleet was acquired from Russia in
the early 1980s.
Its squadron of five MiG-25
Foxbat spy planes, based in Bareilly, will be retired next
year. But the Force will continue to guard the legacy of its
quarter century of service thousands of highly-sensitive
black and white photographs of foreign war assets and border
territories, taken from each planes two high-powered
spy cameras.
The IAFs proposed Aerospace
Command, when approved, will take over the Foxbats job,
using satellites and high-altitude surveillance platforms.
The Foxbat is the only IAF jet
that operates in the stratosphere at speed exceeding three
Mach, making it the fastest aircraft in the Force. Its mission
profile, however, has been scaled down drastically. Operating
out of Bakshi-ka-Talab by the 102 Squadron, codenamed Trisonics,
the Foxbats are now used for training sorties.
The aircraft threw up a huge
advantage for the IAF when it was acquired in the 1980s, as
it could not be detected by Pakistani and Chinese ground radars.
It flew at heights just below outer space, making it physically
invisible to enemy eyes and ears. Now, long-range surveillance
radars have compromised the Foxbats effectiveness.
Foxbat missions were highly
specific, the photographs taken by two left-to-right rotating
cameras (600mm and 1,300mm) rapidly recorded assets under
the planes flight-path.
The aircraft continues to be
one of the IAFs most closely-guarded secrets. MiG-25
pilots are not allowed to discuss the nature of missions they
went on in the first decade of service. However, some admit
that these included high-speed, high-altitude missions into
foreign air space.
The Army also often requested
the Foxbats services in the 1980s to plug holes in intelligence
on Pakistani armoured divisions and strategic reserves closer
to the border.
In May 1997, a MiG-25 had famously
broken into Pakistani air space. A MiG-25 pilot says the mission
would have remained a secret if the pilot had not accelerated
to supersonic speed the sound immediately alerting
the ground surveillance staff. But its altitude and speed
still allowed the aircraft to evade Pakistans F-16s
and plunge back into Indian airspace.
Sources said an unspecified
number of Foxbats have already been retired and the remaining
will be gone next year.
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