How India’s S-400 Shot Down Pakistan’s Saab 2000 AEW&C – A Minute-by-Minute Timeline
1. On May 8, 2025, during India’s Operation Sindoor, the Indian Air Force achieved a historic feat by using its S-400 Triumf surface-to-air missile system to shoot down a Pakistan Air Force Saab 2000 Erieye AEW&C aircraft at a record-breaking range of 314 kilometers.
This marked the longest confirmed SAM kill in combat history, showcasing the S-400’s advanced capabilities and India’s layered air defence strategy. Below is a minute-by-minute timeline of how this high-stakes engagement likely unfolded, based on the S-400’s operational mechanics and the context of Operation Sindoor.
T-10:00 (22:50 IST, May 8, 2025) – Detection and Tracking
Location: An S-400 battery commanded by Group Captain Animesh Patni is positioned near the India-Pakistan border in Punjab or Rajasthan. It is on high alert as part of Operation Sindoor, following the terrorist attack in Pahalgam.
Action: The S-400’s 91N6E Big Bird radar, capable of detecting targets up to 600 km away, identifies a high-value airborne target – a PAF Saab 2000 Erieye AEW&C – operating approximately 314 km away, deep within Pakistani airspace near Dinga, Punjab. The radar’s high-resolution tracking confirms the aircraft’s altitude (around 8-10 km) and slow cruising speed (typical for AEW&C platforms).
Context: The Saab 2000, equipped with the Erieye radar, is a critical asset for the PAF, providing real-time situational awareness and directing fighter operations. Its presence suggests Pakistan is coordinating a response to Indian strikes. The IAF, aware of its strategic importance, prioritises it as a target.
2. T-08:00 (22:52 IST) – Threat Assessment and Command Decision
Action: The S-400’s command and control centre, integrated with India’s broader Integrated Air Defence System (IADS), processes radar data and classifies the Saab 2000 as a high-priority threat due to its role as a force multiplier. The IAF’s Air Defence Command, overseen by senior officers, authorises engagement to disrupt Pakistan’s command-and-control capabilities.
Details: The S-400’s 55K6E command post correlates data from multiple radars (including the 92N6E Grave Stone for fire control) to ensure precise targeting. The system’s automation reduces human error, but the decision to fire is cleared at a high level given the target’s significance and the risk of escalation.
(Picture: Inside the Saab 2000 AEW&C aircraft. These people never knew what hit them.)
3. T-06:00 (22:54 IST) – Missile Selection and Preparation
Action: The S-400 battery prepares to launch a 40N6 long-range missile, designed to engage targets up to 400 km away with a 143 kg high-explosive fragmentation warhead. The missile is loaded onto one of the battery’s 5P85TE2 launchers, and the system calculates the optimal intercept trajectory, factoring in the Saab 2000’s speed (approximately 600 kph) and altitude.
Risk Factor: The S-400 unit is positioned close to the border, within range of Pakistani artillery, making rapid deployment and firing critical to avoid counter-detection.
4. T-04:00 (22:56 IST) – Final Confirmation and Lock-On
Action: The S-400’s Grave Stone radar achieves a firm lock-on, continuously updating the target’s position. The system’s ability to track up to 80 targets simultaneously ensures no interference from other PAF assets, such as fighters or drones, which may be operating nearby.
Context: The Saab 2000, unaware of the lock-on, continues its orbit, likely coordinating PAF fighter jets or monitoring Indian airspace. Its radar emissions make it a juicy target for the S-400’s passive detection systems. (Passive radars can track targets without emitting signals that could reveal their own presence and location).
5. T-02:00 (22:58 IST) – Missile Launch
Action: The S-400 fires a 40N6 missile from its mobile launcher. The missile, travelling at Mach 12 (approx 14,700 kph), climbs rapidly to an optimal altitude for its semi-active radar homing phase. The launch is discreet, with the road-mobile S-400 battery prepared to relocate immediately to avoid counterstrikes.
Environment: Nighttime conditions and the Saab 2000’s distance reduce the likelihood of visual detection by Pakistani forces. The missile’s onboard radar begins tracking the target as it approaches.
6. T-00:30 (22:59:30 IST) – Mid-Course Guidance
Action: The 40N6 missile, now in its mid-course phase, receives continuous updates from the S-400’s ground-based radars via data link. The missile adjusts its trajectory to account for any evasive manoeuvres by the Saab 2000, though the aircraft’s slow speed and large radar cross-section make it an easier target compared to fighters.
PAF Response: Theoretically the Saab 2000’s crew may detect the incoming missile via onboard warning systems, but the missile’s speed and the aircraft’s limited maneuverability leave little time for effective countermeasures. The crew probably do not get time to even say their prayers.
7. T-00:00 (23:00 IST) – Intercept and Destruction
Action: The 40N6 missile detonates its 143 kg warhead in proximity to the Saab 2000, shredding the aircraft with a high-explosive fragmentation blast. The impact occurs at approximately 314 km from the launch site, over Dinga. A massive fireball, later captured by local citizens, confirms the destruction.
Outcome: The Saab 2000 is obliterated, severely degrading the PAF’s airborne surveillance and command capabilities. The loss of this critical asset disrupts Pakistan’s ability to coordinate air operations.
T+02:00 (23:02 IST) – Post-Engagement Actions
Action: The S-400 battery relocates to avoid Pakistani retaliation, leveraging its road-mobile design. The IAF’s command centre assesses the strike’s success using satellite imagery and intercepted PAF communications, confirming the kill.
Strategic Impact: The engagement, part of a broader campaign that included a Brahmos missile strike on another AEW&C at Bholari airbase, cripples Pakistan’s AEW&C fleet, with two of nine platforms lost.
Aftermath and Significance
The S-400’s 314-km kill demonstrates its ability to create an anti-access/area-denial (A2AD) zone, forcing enemy aircraft to operate far from Indian borders.
This engagement, validated by Indian media and international analysts, underscores the system’s precision and India’s strategic foresight in acquiring it despite US pressure.
The loss of the Saab 2000, combined with other strikes during Operation Sindoor, signals India’s growing air defence dominance over Pakistan.
As India considers acquiring the even more potent S-500 Prometheus from Russia, its air defence shield - an indigenous Iron Dome - is poised to become even more formidable.
Ends
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Donald Trump isn't the first US President to sanction India. Richard Nixon was the first. His conversations with his national security advisor Henry Kissinger during the 1971 India-Pakistan War reveal how some American leaders view India.
1. Washington DC, December 3, 1971, 10:45am.
Nixon is on the phone with Kissinger, hours after Pakistan launched simultaneous attacks on six Indian airfields, a reckless act that prompted India to declare war.
Nixon: So West Pakistan is giving trouble there.
Kissinger: If they lose half of their country without fighting they will be destroyed. They may also be destroyed this way, but they will go down fighting.
Nixon: The Pakistan thing makes your heart sick. For them to be done so by the Indians and after we have warned the bitch (reference to Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi). Tell them that when India talks about West Pakistan attacking them it's like Russia claiming to be attacked by Finland.
2. Washington, December 10, 1971, 10:51am.
Nixon: Our desire is to save West Pakistan. That's all.
Kissinger: That's right. That is exactly right.
Nixon: All right. Keep those carriers moving now.
Kissinger: The carriers—everything is moving. Four Jordanian planes have already moved to Pakistan, 22 more are coming. We're talking to the Saudis, the Turks we've now found are willing to give five. So we're going to keep that moving until there's a settlement.
Nixon: Could you tell the Chinese it would be very helpful if they could move some forces or threaten to move some forces?
Kissinger: Absolutely.
Nixon: They've got to threaten or they've got to move, one of the two. You know what I mean?
Kissinger: Yeah.
Nixon: How about getting the French to sell some planes to the Paks?
Kissinger: Yeah. They're already doing it.
Nixon: This should have been done long ago. The Chinese have not warned the Indians.
Kissinger: Oh, yeah.
Nixon: All they've got to do is move something. Move a division. You know, move some trucks. Fly some planes. You know, some symbolic act. We're not doing a goddamn thing, Henry, you know that.
Kissinger: Yeah.
Nixon: But these Indians are cowards. Right?
Kissinger: Right. But with Russian backing. You see, the Russians have sent notes to Iran, Turkey, to a lot of countries threatening them. The Russians have played a miserable game.
3. May 1971
Nixon: The Indians need—what they need really is a—
Kissinger: They’re such bastards.
Nixon: A mass famine. But they aren't going to get that…But if they're not going to have a famine the last thing they need is another war. Let the goddamn Indians fight a war.
Kissinger: They are the most aggressive goddamn people around there.
1. Zohran Mamdani is the son of Mahmood Mamdani, a fake Marxist, and Mira Nair - a fake Malayali. Mira is a Punjabi Nayyar who fooled millions of Malayalis into believing that she was a Malayali via her misspelled name. Such duplicity is at the core of Zohran Mamdani. But he's a lot more dangerous - he harbours a deep hatred for both Hindus and Jews and tacitly supports violence against them.
2. In 2020 he led a hate mob against the Hindu community at Times Square, New York.
“Who are the Hindus? Harami (Bastards),” the mob was heard yelling. Mamdani remained unflinched despite the dehumanisation of the Hindu community by his supporters. He instead began spewing vitriol against Ram Mandir.
“I am here today to protest against the BJP government in India and the demolition of the Babri Masjid that attempted to build a temple on the ruins of it,” said Mamdani.
3. He has openly criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi, labelling him a "war criminal." Perhaps because Modi has given a free hand to India's armed forces to strike Pakistani military whenever the Pakistanis resort to terror attacks in India.
Thread on Kerala Christians and Muslims Against S-400
1. In 2019, a Kerala newspaper published a news item on India acquiring the S-400 missile defence system from Russia. Many Kerala Christians and Kerala Muslims wrote comments criticising the decision. Defying the odds, almost 100% members of these two communities mocked India. Take a look at the screenshots. Kudos to Kerala Hindus for digging this out 6 years later and holding the haters to task.
1. On the eve of Pakistan’s defeat in Dhaka (around December 15, 1971), army chief and dictator Yahya Khan was hosting a party at his newly constructed house in Peshawar, where he was in the company of a woman referred to as Mrs Shamim, nicknamed "Black Pearl," a Bengali actress. The story suggests that, as the party grew increasingly debauched, Yahya, heavily intoxicated, insisted on driving her home while both were naked, only to be stopped by his military secretary, Major General Ishaque, who convinced him to dress. This account is primarily cited in Hassan Abbas’s book "Pakistan’s Drift into Extremism: Allah, the Army, and America’s War on Terror".
2. A day after the 1971 War began; Brigadier Gul Mawaz went to see Yahya, his close friend. He found him and Hameed, his chief of staff, inebriated… While they were talking, Yahya received a call from Japan from Noor Jehan, the famous Pakistan singer. After telling the brigadier who the call was from, Yahya asked her to sing him a song.” (Hassan Abbas, Pakistan’s Drift into Extremism)
3. The following did not happen during the 1971 war, nevertheless, it shows the character of Pakistan Army generals.
“Yahya’s cavorting on one occasion caused a major protocol issue with the Shah of Iran who was on a state visit to Pakistan. The Shah was getting late for his departure but Yahya would not come out of his bedroom. Finally, his close friend Akleem Akhtar aka ‘General Rani’ was persuaded to enter the bedroom and get him out. When she did, she found him in a bed with a famous female singer. She helped the President dress and brought him out.” (Owen Bennet Jones, Pakistam: Eye of the Storm)
1. This is Prithviraj Sukumaran, Malayalam movie actor. He is the director of Empuraan, one of the most Hinduphobic movies in recent years. In the past he had endorsed India's first halal certified residential apartments in Kerala.
🇵🇰 Located in Kochi, the Shariah compliant apartment building has homes facing Mecca.
🇵🇰 Residents share the same faith, food habits and attire. This is housing apartheid because non Muslims are not allowed to live here.
🇵🇰 Prayer and washrooms as prescribed by Sharia law.
🇵🇰 Layout that enables azan from nearby mosques to be heard clearly.
2. Prior to this, Prithviraj was planning to produce and act in a movie titled ‘Vaariyamkunnan’, based on the life of a Jihadi named Variyam Kunnathu Kunjahammed Haji, who was responsible for carrying out genocide against Hindus in Kerala.
The storyline was based on the life of a Muslim leader of the Moplah community, who massacred thousands of Hindus during the Malabar or Moplah communal riots in 1921.
The movie had to be shelved after the filmmakers received massive backlash against their attempts to whitewash crimes committed by Jihadi Moplahs against innocent Hindus in Kerala.
3. In a massive drug bust in April 2022, the Kerala Excise Department raided an apartment owned by Prithviraj in Thevara, Kochi and recovered a huge cache of drugs, cocaine, LSD and ganja. The police arrested Nujum Salim Kutty, a 33 year old native of Punalur who was living at the actor’s apartment.