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Army undertakes major exercise along western front to hone combat skills

somnath

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NEW DELHI: India may be raising a new mountain strike corps to counter China's build-up of military infrastructure and capabilities all along the Line of Actual Control but it continues to hone its combat skills on the western front with Pakistan as well.

A major exercise, codenamed 'Sarvada Vijay' (Always Victorious), is currently underway in the deserts of Rajasthan with the overall aim being to practice conventional cross-border thrusts into enemy territory.

With a large number of tanks, infantry combat vehicles and howitzers deployed, the exercise involves the Mathura-based I Strike Corps with some support elements. "Army chief General Bikram Singh will be visiting the Suratgarh area to review the exercise later this week," said a source.

After Operation Parakram in 2002, which exposed operational gaps and the slow troop mobilisation along the border, India reorganised the Army formations along the western front to ensure the capability to deliver a more effective lethal punch if required.

This involved the creation of the South-Western Command (SWAC) in Jaipur in 2005 as the 1.18-million strong Army's sixth operational command. While I Strike Corps falls under SWAC, the other two such "attack" formations are II Corps (Ambala) under the Western Army Command at Chandimandir and XXI Corps (Bhopal) under the Southern Army Command in Pune.

But with the focus for long being on a land battle with Pakistan, it is only over the last few years that India has belatedly turned its attention to China. So, while the three existing strike corps are largely geared towards Pakistan, the Army in 2009-2010 raised two new infantry divisions (1,260 officers and 35,000 soldiers) at Likabali and Missamari (Assam) for the "defence" of Arunachal Pradesh.

Now, India has begun raising the new mountain strike corps - the XVII Corps with its headquarters at Panagarh in West Bengal -- to add some much-needed "deterrence" to the "dissuasive posture" against China. It will give the Army, virtually for the first time, some "rapid reaction force" capability to launch a counter-offensive into Tibet Autonomous Region in the event of a Chinese attack.

The XVII Corps is to be fully raised over the next seven years with around 90,000 soldiers at a cost of around Rs 64,700 crore. Apart from "integral units", the new corps will have two high-altitude infantry divisions (initially being raised at Panagarh and Pathankot), two independent infantry brigades, two armoured brigades and two Para-Special Forces battalions, spread across Ladakh, Uttarakhand and Sikkim.

This is deemed critical to counter China's "aggressive" strengthening of its military capabilities along the LAC, including at least five fully-operational airbases, an extensive rail network and over 58,000-km of roads in Tibet. This allows China to move over 30 divisions (each with over 15,000 soldiers) to the LAC, outnumbering Indian forces by at least 3:1 there as of now, as earlier reported by TOI.


Army undertakes major exercise along western front to hone combat skills - The Times of India
 
What the **** kind of a reporting is this??The title is about a major exercise on western India but they gave almost no info about this in the report itself!!The reporter just blabbered about the same old China front,MSC,Chinese kinfra bs.Like we haven't read those things a thousand times before!!

What kind of fucking retards are getting employed by ToI as reporters these days??!!
 
BTR variants.But Indian Army mostly uses ICVs due to their firepower(BMP 2K) insteads of APCs.
in deserts tracked vehicles r success so what u have in that category other then BMP 2Ks?
 
So what is the main stay APCs of Indian Army in Desert?
There are no APCs in the India Army. They were made obsolete years ago. We have ICVs now based on the BMP-2.

The difference is that APCs were used as a 'battle taxi', ie to take troops near an objective from where they used conventional methods of assault with APCs in the fire support role. ICVs in contrast are used in the assault role itself with the attacking troops going over the objective, and beyond for exploitation.

The FICV is replacing the BMP-2 Sarath. Here's the TATA Tracked FICV Prototype Model......

dsc02647pb.jpg


And the wheeled FICV...

dsc02644ix.jpg
 
There are no APCs in the India Army. They were made obsolete years ago. We have ICVs now based on the BMP-2.

The difference is that APCs were used as a 'battle taxi', ie to take troops near an objective from where they used conventional methods of assault with APCs in the fire support role. ICVs in contrast are used in the assault role itself with the attacking troops going over the objective, and beyond for exploitation.

The FICV is replacing the BMP-2 Sarath. Here's the TATA Tracked FICV Prototype Model......

dsc02647pb.jpg


And the wheeled FICV...

dsc02644ix.jpg
i think this has to do with yr doctrine. APCs r still part and parcel of our Offensive-Defensive Doctrine called " Baig Doctrine''.

It was made by our former Chief of Army Staff General Mirza Aslam Baig in 89.
 
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@OrionHunter, @Umair Nawaz

There are still a considerable number of BTR 60s and BTR 80s (1200+ total) in active service with Indian Army.

But yes,they have largely been made redundant with BMP 1s (~800) and BMP 2K (~2400) ICVs due to their heavier firepower.
 

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