If you're not sure about the accuracy of BVR, you can't be sure about the accuracy of SRAAM and air-to-surface weapons aimed at moving targets either.
Yep, Globe is right. That's the good thing about active radar seeking, you can disengage the moment you've sent the BVRAAM on its way, like those IR weapons. Only then you're in most cases to close to safely disengage.
That's why the Sidewinder enjoyed such success, because for one, it was the first fire-and-forget missile especially ones it's accuracy and reliability improved with the later versions.
Iran-Iraq, check out
www.acig.org articles and forum, you'll find that the AIM-54 despite being fired within their minimum range envelop on many occassions performed quite well, except on few occassions where the enemy could easily break away from the missile, as it isn't very agile, and not very accurate at too close range. I brought the Phoenix up because in the mission set out by Raptor, the target is a slow, heavy, big target, with dangerous escorts. I'm afraid that that the AIM-54/R-33 will not miss because of their inaccuracy, but because of electronic countermeasures and jamming deployed by air force one...
AIM-120, check out Gulf War I, Yugoslavia '99, and you'll find some convincing data.
SRAAMs may be more accuracte at their range (depending on type and countermeasures resistence), and I am not neglecting their use, especially for self defense they're more useful. Like I said it depends on the situation, which tactic you'd use. Why else do we still find both on the aircraft. I just think that overall the BVR capability (esp. with active seeking) provides a far more important evolution in air warfare, than the WVR missile evolution.
Ethi-Eri Which version of the R-27? Because I think they only got the older passive radar and IR seeking ones. Imagine R-77s in this conflict.
I think the only effective method of avoiding getting shot down by current generation of BVRAAMs, is using countermeasures, electronic self defense, in combination with evasive maneuvers. But just the agility won't do much good against an active radar seeking missile coming in at Mach 4.
Viggen, I don't know, as far as I know the Japanese Kamikaze pilots weren't that effective, and they weren't highly trained either... it's just the psychological effect it has/had on the enemy... it takes quite some resources to train a pilot to the level that he can avoid 4 escorting fighters on his way to target. Give him some missiles, and he might get home safely, if the missiles fail he can still ram or collide with the target (like a Su-15 did once with a An-12, IIRC, frustrated by the fact that he was too close to the target, and GCI had not ordered him/given permission to use his missile up to that point, and now it was crossing the border, exiting USSR airspace, actually they did not approve the ramming either, he ignored the order to disengage I think).