03. Air Superiority is More than Steel-AirHQ-Oped thumbnail-July-2025-APP-PUB

Air Superiority in the Cognitive Domain

In modern warfare, air superiority is not confined to technological dominance, large numbers and signature management; it is a contest of perception, will, psychological dominance and dynamic leadership. This fact was amply highlighted during the four-day Indo-Pak aerial conflict of May 2025. Despite facing a numerically superior and technologically versatile Indian Air Force (IAF), the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) exploited psychological operations, strategic signalling and meticulous escalation control to accomplish comprehensive strategic ascendancy.

Gaining Initiative from the Outset

PAF’s ‘Offensive Defence” right at the opening aerial gambit forced IAF into a psychologically defensive crouch. Within an hour, IAF’s offensive collapsed under pressure as PAF shot down six frontline IAF platforms, including Rafale jets, SU-30 and Mig-29, employing a combination of Beyond Visual Range (BVR) missile engagements, integrated air defence networks, and real-time intelligence. These kills were achieved without suffering any losses by the PAF, creating an immediate shockwave within the Indian military and public circles.

Combat Losses and Morale Collapse

Shooting down advanced platforms in such a short time displayed PAF’s operational acumen and concurrently had a cascading psychological impact on the IAF. Even in peacetime, when an aircraft crashes due to technical failure or human error, the morale of the squadron to which the aircraft belonged plummets. Imagine the morale of IAF’s No 7, 47 and 222 Squadrons, which bore the brunt of losses on 7 May. The psychological impact of these losses was so profound that it created an operational paralysis, forcing the IAF to recede for the rest of the conflict. The conclusion is clear: numerical strength does not translate to dominance if cohesion, clarity and an offensive mindset are absent.

Effects-Based Targeting and Strategic Signalling

All PAF operations during the conflict exhibited strategic maturity amid escalating engagements. Though over 30 Indian targets were successfully engaged during PAF’s offensive, the careful target selection did not cause any civilian casualties or collateral damage. The IAF’s command and control, Air Defence Systems and other operational capabilities were neutralised with the aim to maintain control, signal restraint, and uphold international credibility. This deliberate targeting sent a dual message: PAF possessed both the precision and the restraint necessary to control the direction of conflict. Through such actions, Pakistan reinforced its defensive posture while projecting a credible deterrent, effectively and limiting diplomatic fallout.

Escalation Management and Precision Engagement

PAF maintained superior escalation control throughout the conflict, a capability often misjudged in the fog of war and air engagements in particular. By intelligent target weapon-matching, PAF not only avoided collateral damage but adhered to a calibrated response spectrum as well. This allowed Pakistan to retain the moral high ground and limit diplomatic repercussions.

During PAF operations, the application of air power was closely monitored by the top leadership, which prevented horizontal or vertical expansion of the conflict, effectively managing escalation while sustaining operational initiative. This approach sharply contrasted with India’s reactive and politically constrained posturing.

Cognitive Overload and Command Dislocation

The conflict exposed the IAF’s internal disorientation; despite fielding superior platforms in quantity and technology, the IAF struggled with what analysts described as “cognitive dissonance”, a state where information received contradicted expectations and doctrine. Press conferences by the Indian Military officials often gave contradictory accounts, especially regarding aerial losses and operational gains.

There was a visible disconnect between the political and military leadership in their appreciation of the situation. Such situations resulted in cognitive overload, which affected IAF’s strategic decision making and in turn the pilot performance. In essence, PAF won the battle of minds while IAF struggled to synchronise its muscle.

Information Operations and Narrative Dominance

PAF’s careful but effective application of all elements of aerospace power enabled Pakistan to shape the international diplomatic and media environment. A press briefing to foreign dignitaries by DG ISPR alongside a senior PAF official, releasing verified imageries of engagements, enabled Pakistan to offset Indian disinformation campaigns. Pakistan’s media strategy during the conflict remained mature and effective, portraying reckless Indian military adventure, with credible evidence and without jingoism, contrary to the Indian media strategy. The neutral observers credited PAF’s professionalism, which has operationalised information warfare and deliberate narrative control.

Air Campaigns for Strategic and Psychological Effect

The IAF-PAF conflict advocates that air campaigns must move beyond attrition-based doctrines. Air strategies must be able to achieve psychological effects, decision paralysis, and master the escalation control throughout the conflict. Indeed, air superiority is not merely won in the skies but also in the minds of adversaries, their masses and observers worldwide. By mastering the psychological, strategic and operational dimensions of air warfare, PAF secured more than a military win; it forged a strategic narrative of deterrence, discipline and dominance. In the age of hybrid war and information saturation, such victories are the ones that endure.

Air Vice Marshal Nasir Wyne (Retd) is Director at Centre for Aerospace & Security Studies (CASS), Email: [email protected]. The article was first published in The Defence Journal.


Share this article

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Recent Publications

Browse through the list of recent publications.

The West: The History of an Idea

The world is witnessing the collapse of the Western order, if not the emergence of an alternative one. The idea of ‘West’ as against the rest is still at the root of contemporary understanding of world politics. Georgios Varouxakis, a remarkable voice on Modernity and Nationalism, has provided the historical origins and modern connotations attached with the idea of ‘West’. In his book ‘The West: The History of an Idea’, Varouxakis has argued that the West is not an eternal entity, rather it is a modern socio-political construct that emerged in the political philosophy of the early 19th century and evolved with the passage of time. The book provides an in-depth historical analysis of the idea to determine the roots of its modern interpretation.

Read More »

Space-Enabled Warfare in the 21st Century: Pathways for Developing States

Space has emerged as a distinct domain of warfare alongside land, sea, air, and cyber. Developed countries like the United States, Russia, and China possess offensive and support capabilities in space. In the shadowed expanse of Low Earth Orbit (LEO), where satellites operate like silent custodians, the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine transformed the nature of modern conflict. As Russian troops marched forward, the commercial satellites like Maxar and Planet, which are operated by Western firms, captured high-resolution imagery of Russian troops, providing real-time intelligence to Ukrainian commanders, unlike ever before.

Read More »

The US-Israel War on Iran: Objectives, Strategy, and Escalation Management

Zahra Niazi
‘States tend to overestimate themselves or the benefits and swiftness of war, and to underestimate their opponents’ capabilities, intentions, or the costs and duration of war.’ If anything, the 2026 war initiated by the United States and Israel against Iran shall be remembered in the annals of warfare among the most visible manifestations of this dynamic.
The war, immediately preceded by the January mass protests in Iran, did not represent a sudden rupture but rather the continuation of a 47-year-long confrontation and a more intense phase of the June 2025 war.
The US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, defined the war’s objectives as being laser-focused: to destroy Iran’s missile capabilities and its security infrastructure, while ensuring that it could never develop nuclear weapons. Beyond these stated objectives, among the priorities on the continuum also lay the objective of regime change, with both President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu explicitly calling on the Iranian population to take over the government at the outset of the war.

Read More »