There is a need to expand the surveillance envelope, called the deputy air chief. Bharat News

There is a need to expand the surveillance envelope, called the deputy air chief. Bharat News

A top military officer said on Wednesday that Operation Sindoor has thrown the lesson that modern war has fundamentally changed the relationship between distance and vulnerability, thanks to technology, a top military officer said on Wednesday, while also highlighted the significant importance of deep monitoring in contemporary war.

Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit, head of integrated defense employees, said the current principles of war are being challenged and new people are emerging.

“Earlier, the horizon had identified the immediate danger range. Today, accurately-directed monks such as Scalp, BrahMos and Hammer have almost wasted geographical obstacles, as strikes (visual range air to air missiles) and supersonic AGMs with the BVR AAM have become normal.

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He said that when weapons may target hundreds of kilometers away with pinpoint accuracy, the traditional concepts of front, back and flax, fighter areas and depth areas all become irrelevant.

“What we call the front and theater merge into one. It demands a new reality that we pursue our surveillance envelopes that beyond what the previous generations imagined,” he said that we should also find out, identify and track potential hazards, when they are in our borders, air areas and base, which are also in the administrator. “It was also present earlier as a concept, but today we have a means of feeling it,” he said. “When hypersonic missiles can cover a distance of hundreds of kilometers in minutes and drone self in reaching their goals before traditional decision making procedures, real-time or closely can be monitored by time … it is necessary to survive.”

Military