For the first time, unmanned aerial car (UAV)-hooked up explosives have been used to goal an Indian air force (ISAF) base. UAVs dropped explosives near a mi-17 hanger late final night time. Such became the depth of one blast that it punched a hole into the concrete roof of a building close to the hanger. Both the Jammu & Kashmir police and the national research enterprise (Nia) are probing the fear strike. It is still unclear whether the UAV got here from throughout the India-Pakistan border or became guided from a constructing or an extended point close to the leaf base in Jammu. However, the terror strike marks a paradigm shift in the grey-area struggle.


Excessive perimeter partitions, barbed cord and sentry posts can no longer stall the enemy assault. From a safe distance, the enemy can launch an assault from a stand-off distance. A few drones can fly up to twenty kilometres, sporting more than one kilograms of payload -- from pizzas to bombs -- and there are unmanned combat aerial automobiles that may fly lots of kilometres with an endurance of days and might deliver rockets and missiles. The terrorists seem to have used a type 1 or type 2 UAV.