Indian Air Force: A Legacy of Failure and Self-Destruction

Indian Air Force: A Legacy of Failure and Self-Destruction

July 16, 2025 Off By Sharp Media

In Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), the Indian Air Force (IAF) has become a symbol of negligence, mismanagement, and systemic decay. With a staggering 534 jets downed and 152 pilots lost in peacetime, India’s so-called air superiority is nothing more than a tragic tale of self-destruction. India doesn’t need external enemies; its own outdated jets do the job perfectly.

A Record That Shames

India’s claims of air superiority are built on a tragic record. More Indian pilots die in crashes than in combat, with the MiG-21 becoming the deadliest weapon in the IAF’s arsenal not against enemies, but its own men. These flying coffins, poorly maintained and obsolete, claim lives while the Indian government turns a blind eye to the crisis within its ranks. The tragic irony is that MiG-21 jets, once symbols of strength, now serve only to take down Indian pilots.

Corruption, Poor Training, and Neglect

The loss of 152 pilots is a direct result of poor training, corrupt procurement, and a broken defense system. India’s refusal to modernize its fleet and invest in pilot safety has left its air force vulnerable, with pilots sacrificed to cover up a failing infrastructure. Corruption and mismanagement have led to rusting jets and unsafe flying conditions, costing countless lives in the name of national defense.

Memorials Over Medals

India’s self-proclaimed “Make in India” initiative is a farce. Instead of creating cutting-edge aircraft, India is making pilot graves. The focus is not on modernizing its air force, but on maintaining a false image of power. With each lost pilot, India creates more memorials than medals, while spending billions on replacing wreckage rather than ensuring the safety of its pilots.

Masters of Self-Destruction

The IAF has turned fighter jets into kamikaze missions, not by design, but by neglect. The 534 crashes and 152 pilots lost are not the result of enemy action but of India’s failure to address its military’s decay. This is self-destruction on a massive scale, where no enemy is needed to bring India down.

Conclusion

India’s air force is not a force to be reckoned with; it is a catastrophic failure. The deaths of pilots and the crashes of jets expose a military infrastructure in disarray. India’s self-inflicted wounds are a result of complacency, corruption, and neglect. The time has come for India to face the truth: its air force is a laughing stock, and its claims of superiority are built on the broken bodies of its own men.