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Can India destroy Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal?

cant non Nuclear subs carry Nuclear missiles?
They can however Nuclear Subs can stay underwater for longer and are less detectable. If you want to carry around a Nuclear Missile I would hope you would have a Nuclear Sub due to several advantages.

Please Stop It!!!!!!!

Let happen ICC 2019 CWC in England first. Then very next day of final match we will go into war with each other, Otherwise title may go with Aussies or England. And I don't wanna see this happen. Pakistan will win CWC 2019 as we won ICC Champs Trophy 2017.

@KAL-EL Your country even don't know how to play Game of Cricket. This is because cricket is a game of gentlemen. And "USA" is not a gentlemen. "USA" is the biggest thug in this world. "USA" has put us gentle people of GULF & South Asia on fire. And we are idiots.
Where did cricket come into this?
 
Where did cricket come into this?
I tried to distract people here who were busy in nuking each other nations. Such comments are passed from each side officials at regular intervals there is no need for starting threads for each new comment.
 
India does not have this luxury and capability at the moment. However, we need to watch its advancements and not get complacent.

they will have to find the location first which ISI will protect
There are different methods to figure out presence of nukes in a region but much of this information is not in public domain. To put it mildly, American surveillance capability is unparalleled in the world.

American strategic-planners do not take any threat lightly but they believe in the possibility of [decisively] defeating a nuclear-armed state with the right kind of tools and planning, should the need arise. A day will come when US will have a decisive counter for even Russian nuclear capability, let alone Pakistan. They demonstrated the capability to intercept an ICBM-class target during the mid-course phase of its flight in a live test in 2017.

Sky is the limit when it comes to "problem-solving." If you look at things through the lens of "problem solving," you will realize that it boils down to physics, research, Intel and calculations in the end. US excels in all.

Some cite North Korea as an example from deterring US due to having nuclear weapons but this is "false." American military is preparing for this war [numerous drills carried out so far]. However, South Korea has kept US at bay so far because it fears that its metropolis Seoul is in the line-of-fire. In a war, you need to keep "what-if situations" in mind. Chances are that US will [decisively] defeat North Korea in a war but the fear-factor of resultant death and destruction in the region is real; very thought of the possibility of a nuclear war scares people and South Koreans are not very eager to experience it. More importantly, North Korea does not provoke US beyond a certain threshold and is actually very calculative in setting the trajectory of its ballistic missile while testing one. China is also in the picture and is trying its best to prevent a war in the Korean peninsula. Unlike in the 1950s, China has become accustomed to economic prosperity and a war near its borders would be a cause of great concern because investors will panic.
 
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Please Stop It!!!!!!!

Let happen ICC 2019 CWC in England first. Then very next day of final match we will go into war with each other, Otherwise title may go with Aussies or England. And I don't wanna see this happen. Pakistan will win CWC 2019 as we won ICC Champs Trophy 2017.

@KAL-EL Your country even don't know how to play Game of Cricket. This is because cricket is a game of gentlemen. And "USA" is not a gentlemen. "USA" is the biggest thug in this world. "USA" has put us gentle people of GULF & South Asia on fire. And we are idiots.
:disagree::disagree: brother thug isn't a right word:disagree: world biggest terrorist gov is right word:agree: they killed millions of innocent peoples for complete their agendas throughout the world
 
India does not have this luxury and capability at the moment. However, we need to watch its advancements and not get complacent.


There are different methods to figure out presence of nukes in a region but much of this information is not in public domain. To put it mildly, American surveillance capability is unparalleled in the world.

American strategic-planners do not take any threat lightly but they believe in the possibility of [decisively] defeating a nuclear-armed state with the right kind of tools and planning, should the need arise. A day will come when US will have a decisive counter for even Russian nuclear capability, let alone Pakistan. They demonstrated the capability to intercept an ICBM-class target during the mid-course phase of its flight in a live test in 2017.

Sky is the limit when it comes to "problem-solving." If you look at things through the lens of "problem solving," you will realize that it boils down to physics, research, Intel and calculations in the end. US excels in all.

Some cite North Korea as an example from deterring US due to having nuclear weapons but this is "false." American military is preparing for this war [numerous drills carried out so far]. However, South Korea has kept US at bay so far because it fears that its metropolis Seoul is in the line-of-fire. In a war, you need to keep "what-if situations" in mind. Chances are that US will [decisively] defeat North Korea in a war but the fear-factor of resultant death and destruction in the region is real; very thought of the possibility of a nuclear war scares people and South Koreans are not very eager to experience it. More importantly, North Korea does not provoke US beyond a certain threshold and is actually very calculative in setting the trajectory of its ballistic missile while testing one. China is also in the picture and is trying its best to prevent a war in the Korean peninsula. Unlike in the 1950s, China has become accustomed to economic prosperity and a war near its borders would be a cause of great concern because investors will panic.

I wish you were correct on the US capabilities!!!! Have you heard about meeting the quarter-end bottom-lines and the resultant bonuses associated with it, especially for the top management folks???? Do you know how deep the nexus among different quarters in the military industrial complexes is???? And, how far these folks can go to "fake" the achievements to preserve their financial objectives???? Don't know about others but even President Eisenhower was pissed off this military-industrial complex deceptions!!! And, JFK paid with his life which has become a lesson for other POTUSes ever since!!!! By the by, they couldn't conduct a single OBL ops without conveying the valuable stealth technologies to the Chinese....
 
I wish you were correct on the US capabilities!!!! Have you heard about meeting the quarter-end bottom-lines and the resultant bonuses associated with it, especially for the top management folks???? Do you know how deep the nexus among different quarters in the military industrial complexes is???? And, how far these folks can go to "fake" the achievements to preserve their financial objectives???? Don't know about others but even President Eisenhower was pissed off this military-industrial complex deceptions!!! And, JFK paid with his life which has become a lesson for other POTUSes ever since!!!! By the by, they couldn't conduct a single OBL ops without conveying the valuable stealth technologies to the Chinese....

and we got the Babur CM, thanks to the failed Tomahawk Missiles from almighty USA, some of them landed in Baluchistan :usflag::pakistan:
 
and we got the Babur CM, thanks to the failed Tomahawk Missiles from almighty USA, some of them landed in Baluchistan :usflag::pakistan:
A part of the engineering job is to hide the "outliers" coming from the experimental results for "Devils lie in details"!!! And, engineers do have a family to feed!!! No wonder those "outliers" show up at the most unwanted time and space during the field application!!! Surprises????? No, it's a part of the Murphy's Law for the Ehl-i Dunya!!! As for the Ehl-i Iman, it's another proof of "WHO is the OMNI-POTENT?", so that they can go to sleep (mini death) with full Hakiki Ya'kin.....

and we got the Babur CM, thanks to the failed Tomahawk Missiles from almighty USA, some of them landed in Baluchistan :usflag::pakistan:
Whatever comes free is Helal....
 
I wish you were correct on the US capabilities!!!! Have you heard about meeting the quarter-end bottom-lines and the resultant bonuses associated with it, especially for the top management folks???? Do you know how deep the nexus among different quarters in the military industrial complexes is???? And, how far these folks can go to "fake" the achievements to preserve their financial objectives???? Don't know about others but even President Eisenhower was pissed off this military-industrial complex deceptions!!! And, JFK paid with his life which has become a lesson for other POTUSes ever since!!!! By the by, they couldn't conduct a single OBL ops without conveying the valuable stealth technologies to the Chinese....
I am a scientific person and the capabilities I have pointed out are all very real. People in general are not aware because they do not study as much.

Recall the days when US military was being mobilized in Saudi Arabia to counter Iraqi armed forces in 1990. Many were arguing that this would be a lengthy war and US will suffer tremendous casualties at the time. Even Pakistani COAS of the time remarked that US will taste another defeat after Vietnam. Then stuff like cruise missiles, smart bombs, stealthy aircraft, BVR air-to-air engagements, satellites, bunker busters and anti-ballistic missile systems came into play, and Iraq lost much of its military capability in a span of just 45 days. Much of the world was stunned and the aforementioned stuff achieved household popularity. People could even see footage of precision strikes on Iraqi targets in the cover of darkness amidst massive anti-aircraft fire. Operations that took weeks to accomplish, could be executed in a span of like half-an-hour in 1991.

Kennedy's assassination is a matter of his lack of foresight and protection. It has nothing to do with American advancements in the fields of engineering and vice versa.

In-fact, Ronald Reagan set in motion the "Star Wars initiative" to develop a credible deterrence against USSR and make nuclear MAD obsolete at some point. This initiative lost steam in 1991 due to collapse of USSR but Bush jr. revived it in 2003 and once again, a new generation of weapon systems and capabilities are hinted from time-to-time. Just a year ago, many were wondering that is it really possible to intercept an ICBM-class target out in the space during the mid-course phase of its flight. Then US conducted a live test and showcased this capability to the entire world.

Yes, US lost one of its choppers in Operation Neptune Spear but mission was a success. Nobody is asserting that US will win a war without loosing a single soldier or asset in the process. Wars tend to be costly at times, depending upon how they are executed.

However, don't let War on Terror cloud your judgement one bit. There is a massive difference in countering an asymmetric force like Taliban whose combatants do not wear a uniform and can blend into crowds easily, and the fact that Taliban does not have any high-value targets to loose. Do also keep in mind that war in Afghanistan has "political dimensions" attached to it. Major show of force was demonstrated in 2001 and ended in 2001 in a span of just 2 months, with the collapse of Taliban-led regime and destruction of massive hideouts in Tora Bora mountains. In-fact, we should ask the question that why US [allowed] some terrorists to sneak into Pakistan from Tora Bora.

A professional standing army is an identifiable threat and it is tasked with thwarting an act of aggression in a pro-active manner. Troops wear a uniform and the entire force has a command-and-control infrastructure and clearly visible bases to operate from.

Pakistan is a country of limited resources and war-fighting capability. We have allocated a budget of just 10 billion USD for defense-related needs on annual basis. Weapon systems like Babur-II, Shaheen-II MRBM and JF-17 Thunder are good enough for "regional threats" but nothing that US cannot counter.
 
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I am a scientific person and the capabilities I have pointed out are all very real. People in general are not aware because they do not study as much.

Recall the days when US military was being mobilized in Saudi Arabia to counter Iraqi armed forces in 1990. Many were arguing that this would be a lengthy war and US will suffer tremendous casualties at the time. Even Pakistani COAS of the time remarked that US will taste another defeat after Vietnam. Then stuff like cruise missiles, smart bombs, stealthy aircraft, BVR air-to-air engagements, satellites, bunker busters and anti-ballistic missile systems came into play, and Iraq lost much of its military capability in a span of just 45 days. Much of the world was stunned and the aforementioned stuff achieved household popularity. People could even see footage of precision strikes on Iraqi targets in the cover of darkness amidst massive anti-aircraft fire. Operations that took weeks to accomplish, could be executed in a span of like half-an-hour in 1991.

Kennedy's assassination is a matter of his lack of foresight and protection. It has nothing to do with American advancements in the fields of engineering and vice versa.

In-fact, Ronald Reagan set in motion the "Star Wars initiative" to develop a credible deterrence against USSR and make nuclear MAD obsolete at some point. This initiative lost steam in 1991 due to collapse of USSR but Bush jr. revived it in 2003 and once again, a new generation of weapon systems and capabilities are hinted from time-to-time. Just a year ago, many were wondering that is it really possible to intercept an ICBM-class target out in the space during the mid-course phase of its flight. Then US conducted a live test and showcased this capability to the entire world.

Yes, US lost one of its choppers in Operation Neptune Spear but mission was a success. Nobody is asserting that US will win a war without loosing a single soldier or asset in the process. Wars tend to be costly at times, depending upon how they are executed.

However, don't let War on Terror cloud your judgement one bit. There is a massive difference in countering an asymmetric force like Taliban whose combatants do not wear a uniform and can blend into crowds easily, and the fact that Taliban does not have any high-value targets to loose. Do also keep in mind that war in Afghanistan has "political dimensions" attached to it. Major show of force was demonstrated in 2001 and ended in 2001 in a span of just 2 months, with the collapse of Taliban-led regime and destruction of massive hideouts in Tora Bora mountains. In-fact, we should ask the question that why US [allowed] some terrorists to sneak into Pakistan from Tora Bora.

A professional standing army is an identifiable threat and it is tasked with thwarting an act of aggression in a pro-active manner. Troops wear a uniform and the entire force has a command-and-control infrastructure and clearly visible bases to operate from.

Pakistan is a country of limited resources and war-fighting capability. We have allocated a budget of just 10 billion USD for defense-related needs on annual basis. Weapon systems like Babur-II, Shaheen-II MRBM and JF-17 Thunder are good enough for "regional threats" but nothing that US cannot counter.
If your point of reference is "Gulf War"s I have nothing to add!!!!
 
If your point of reference is "Gulf War"s I have nothing to add!!!!
There is something to learn from every significant development.

Persian Gulf War (1991) was an eye-opener to many. People were stuck with the memories of Vietnam but many failed to realize that the vast Industrial Complex (that J.F. Kennedy alluded to) had revolutionized American war-fighting capability since the chapter of Vietnam War in sheer "secrecy." For the first time, people saw stuff like cruise missiles, smart bombs, stealthy aircraft, BVR air-to-air engagements, satellites, bunker busters and anti-ballistic missile systems come into play - a completely alien method of warfare which Iraq (and its Soviet advisers) had not anticipated. Nobody else did either.

You need to re-watch the speech of J.F. Kennedy. It is the "secrecy" aspect of this vast Industrial Complex which he feared the most.

I tell you another interesting fact. Hillary Clinton vowed to expose Area-51 complex of the Industrial Complex in question after becoming POTUS. What happened? She did not become POTUS. Donald Trump became POTUS instead and he is doing exactly what he is being told to.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...ection-2016-aliens-jimmy-kimmel-a6955221.html
http://www.popularmechanics.com/military/research/a24152/area-51-history/

You think that a nuclear-armed state cannot be touched and/or defeated - you will be proven wrong one day. The story of 1991 will be repeated one day. The same Industrial Complex will demonstrate this capability to the world when the time is right. They are searching for opportunities already. Mark my words.

And when that time comes, I hope it is not Pakistan.

Deen Iman
is all good but we live in an age in which wars will not be won through swords, AK-47s and suicide-attacks.

I am a believer but I do not harbor any illusions. Perhaps my mindset is different from the norm because I am a researcher and I specialize in the matters of "problem-solving."

Do you think that Operation Neptune Spear was just a game of choppers? You do not know much then. Pakistani defenses were [spoofed] in such a way that PAF could not be mobilized to stop the choppers on time - when it mattered the most. When COAS calls ACM and tells him what has transpired near the heart of a nuclear-weapons state - then this is a wake-up call for those who are way out of touch of scientific progressions and ground realities of this world.
 
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Pakistan is a country of limited resources and war-fighting capability. We have allocated a budget of just 10 billion USD for defense-related needs on annual basis. Weapon systems like Babur-II, Shaheen-II MRBM and JF-17 Thunder are good enough for "regional threats" but nothing that US cannot counter.
But USA will never be able to attack on Pakistan with full force cuz Geography of Pakistan is very much on Pakistan side against USA. USA will have to rely upon aircrafts carriers and long channels to transport equipments. And in such conditions Pakistan can retaliate well against. Once Pakistan get a major breakthrough or give a big blow to USA they will have to abort the war.

Do you think that Operation Neptune Spear was just a game of choppers? You do not know much then. Pakistani defenses were [spoofed] in such a way that PAF could not be mobilized to stop the choppers on time - when it mattered the most. When COAS calls ACM and tells him what has transpired near the heart of a nuclear-weapons state - then this is a wake-up call for those who are way out of touch of scientific progressions and ground realities of this world.
Agreed! but strategies can be changed based upon events happened. This is a fact that USA, France, Germany and others are so much ahead of us in defence tactics & equipments but this is also a fact that they did blunders in past and afterwards learned from them. Op. Neptune Spear has also educated a lot to Pakistan Security forces. This is that we shouldn't trust on USA as they have no trust on us. So should deploy Chinese equipments on eastern side, so such operations couldn't happen in future.
 
If your point of reference is "Gulf War"s I have nothing to add!!!!
Ok i am really intrigued, can you please explain in few words why you think gulf war is not an apt example?
 
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India will be facing an air force and army that has been in constant war for the last 15 years. PHOTO: ISPR

The commander of the Indian Air Force, Air Chief Marshal Birender Singh Dhanoa, recently claimed that his pilots have the capability to locate and eliminate nuclear and other strategic targets in Pakistan. He was speaking at the annual Air Force Day press conference on IAF response to Pakistan’s store of tactical nuclear weapons.

“As far as IAF is concerned, it has the ability to locate, fix and strike and that is not only for tactical nuclear weapons but also for other targets across the border,” he had said during the annual Air Force Day press conference on IAF response to Pakistan’s store of tactical nuclear weapons.

The Indian air chief is not the only one to hurl such warnings and publicly acknowledge the existence of Cold Start doctrine (CSD). On January 4, India’s Chief of Army Staff Bipin Rawat made a similar hawkish claim.

Pakistan has better military industrial base than India: Indian VCOAS

Before dissecting the actual claim of the trigger-happy generals, it is worth noting that such statements cannot be random slips of the tongue but delivered with consent at the highest level, i.e. Narendra Modi’s outrage against CPEC and solidarity with militants in Balochistan. Sushma Swaraj parroted the same mantra at the UNGA last month. With an assortment of RSS ideologues and practitioners such as Ajit Doval, Sushma Swaraj and Manohar Parrikar (to name a few), the Modi government has to beat war drum against Pakistan to make up for its failings while stirring the religio-communal cord. Thus, there has not been a clarification on the generals’ remarks.

Indian Air Chief Marshal Dhanoa made a few tall claims with pretty interesting timing. Currently, the Indian finance ministry is discussing various budget proposals, which will be placed before the parliament in January. His statement came days after Pakistan-China concluded the Shaheen IV drills whose unique feature was joint sorties by PAF and PLAAF pilots in Su-27 and Su-30 jets, whose similar versions are IAF’s offensive platforms of choice.

In angry retort, India calls Pakistan ‘terror factory’

After the unveiling of surface-to-surface medium-range Ababeel ballistic missile and solid-fuelled Nasr tactical ballistic missile, strategists and analysts are questioning the efficacy of India’s Cold Start doctrine evermore. Understandably, the IAF chief’s press conference on Pakistan’s tactical nuclear weapons was aimed to publicly allay the widespread above-mentioned concerns.

Then comes the real question of India’s actual capability to locate and destroy Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and other vital strategic assets. Has Delhi’s surveillance ability surpassed Washington’s during the 1991 Gulf War?

Despite throwing B-52s Tomahawk cruise missiles, the US could merely hit Scud storage areas and factories. Over 2,000 sorties and missile attacks failed to take out Iraq’s Scud mobile launchers. Thus, the tall claim of locating, fixing and destroy is trashed as nothing more than a shallow brag. India’s dream of ‘Great Nasr Hunt’ has quite many chinks to remedy.

Dhanoa may have forgotten that none of the 36 Rafale jets has been inducted. The first delivery is slated for November 2019 and the final sometime in second half of 2022. Yet, India plans to acquire 90 more state-of-the-art fighter jets until 2021. Meanwhile, the IAF strategic planners have to fix technical issues with Su-30MKIs. Assuming that China does not heat things up when India attacks Pakistan, its air force will not have a dearth of fighter jets. The scenario becomes trickier in the wake of two-front war. Pakistan’s 70 plus F-16s and over 100 JF-17s offer a matching response to the aggressors until the French fighter jets are inducted.

India’s missile arsenal is potent and poses a credible threat. However, the process of their activation and mobilisation can give away clues to watchful Pakistan and deny her the vital element of surprise. Islamabad’s LY-80 (or HQ-16) surface-to-air missile systems alongside shorter-range FM-90 SAMs will be the first to welcome any hostile object entering its airspace.

The increasingly belligerent posturing of India justifies Pakistan to reverse its decision of nuclear warheads from their delivery systems. The policy was adopted during Musharraf era as a confidence-building measure as part of Pakistan’s cooperative nuclear diplomacy.

The Cold Start doctrine: real or fictional

In 2004, the Cold Start doctrine was envisaged and soon the word was out that relying on the mobilisation of smaller, more compact formation of conventional forces in a series of attack, India will invade and bleed Pakistan with the help of IAF. That is exactly the air marshal was hinting at in his presser.

The first principle is the element of strategic and tactical surprise while launching the attack while the being the push being so swift that the international community’s reaction comes after the desired gain in enemy territory. And, the third cornerstone is to use small captured areas of Pakistan using some eight ‘battle divisions’ numbering up to 50,000 troops from armoured and mechanised brigades. Delhi assumes that the entire campaign will be so rapid, confusing and lethal that Islamabad will not consider invoking its nuclear first-use choice.

India is building up the capability for German blitzkrieg-style attacks on the Pakistan soil and achieving the objectives within 96 hours. Besides, there are assumptions that Islamabad will not be able to mobilise its tactical arsenal well in time. Even if Pakistan manages to use short-range tactical weapons, they will be exploding on its own soil (which the IAF chief hopes to be neutralised in pre-emptive strikes).

India shifting focus of nuclear strategy from Pakistan to China

Psychological warfare through international, mainstream national and social media is integral to the doctrine. Already, the phenomenon of corporate-sector funded pro-India papers is evidently justifying its military ambition while maligning Pakistan.

Delhi’s military establishment supposes that before Pakistan will go all-out nuclear; the international community will intervene for a ceasefire.

Can Pakistan counter India’s military prowess?

The Indian air chief’s fantasy is far from achieving at best achieving 50% success. Since tit-for-tat testing of its nuclear devices in 1998, Islamabad has been working with an utmost focus on second-strike capability (completing its tirade) besides refining its tactical nuclear warheads.

Under the National Command Authority (NCA), the procedures must have been fine-tuned, and drills for storage, assembly and launch are repeated over and over again.

Why will Pakistan not address India’s assumption about authorisation of tactical weapons’ use from crucial battlefronts? For a fact, the country never took India’s no-first-use policy on its face value. Since Modi took over, there has been repeated hint at India reversing its stated policy to nuclear first-use.

The Cold Start is akin to a Bollywood scenario where the hero achieves the impossible and returns unscathed in no time.

Supposing that India manages to keep its strategic surprise and General Bipin mobilises his brigades towards the international border, the first dampener will be the terrain itself. Except for strategically less attractive desert regions of southern Punjab and entire Sindh, there exists an assortment of natural geographical barriers to slow the hypothetical swift movement. The areas of significant strategic value in Jammu and Kashmir, as well as northern and central Punjab, limit little room for brisk offensive attack. From high mountains in Kashmir to a network of rivers, canals and bridge in northern Punjab ominously limit the advance. And, they are well guarded at all time, more so in the wake of the enemy’s hawkish posturing.

Musharraf says he had considered nuclear attack on India in 2002

India’s might have a larger number of troops but the majority is based in central parts contrary to Pakistan’s 80% divisions being adjacent to the international border, some of whom in defensive postures but forward-deployed.

Besides, tough terrain and India’s narrow and inefficient road network will further hamper its fancied swift march while Pakistan has developed a vast network of motorways and highways, which ease the mobilisation of heavy equipment and troops alike.

One of the key impediments for India is obsolete but large military hardware while Pakistan is much smaller but more recent and constantly updated.

From its tanks, armoured vehicles to artillery as munitions, everything is to be replaced. The soldier morale has been hit hard by draconian powers with officers to sack them as well as a feeling of being ignored when it comes to basic needs such food (ration) and health. For an offensive operation of the scale, being crowed the Indian military Cold Start doctrine pre-requisites magical mix of 30% cutting military hardware, 40% existing technology and 30% obsolete munitions. Its war stamina from supplies and logistical perspective is less than two weeks, 10 days to quote exactly from Indian estimates.

At the operational level too, India lacks 1.5 to 1 numerical superiority. Its divisions deployed along the Pakistani border are predominantly infantry with limited offensive capacity. Islamabad has been investing rightly in its mechanised infantry which gives its army sharp teeth to bite. Though BrahMos cruise missile range has been extended to 600 kilometres after joining Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), it is yet to be properly integrated into the force structure.

Pakistan and India — thermonuclear love

Dynamics of India’s quest for military reign

Dhanoa’s statement has not done India any favour unless proven through actions. At best, he has expressed frustration over enemy’s preparedness and resourcefulness despite limitations. His comments make catchy headlines in hyper-nationalist media and appeal to the Hindutva crowd.

The shrinking socialist opposition to India’s soaring military budget may get lesser attention than usual. The people would be taxed more in the budget ahead to continue funding the ludicrously costly military modernisation programme.

In the wake of any bravado by Bipin and Dhanoa, there are sure going to be many surprises, from strategy and tactics to technology.

South Asia observers have been noticing for long that Pakistan’s tests of a missile or other munitions follow India’s to maintain clarity about the balance of power. Thus, plausible it is that some weapons were never showed off or publicly tested or the range of missiles or capability of radars and fighter jets enhanced but with boasting about them.

Pakistan’s tactical strategists have been taking into account everything from doctrinal flaws to capability aspects as troop morale and training factors. India will be facing an air force and army that has been in constant war for the last 15 years. The war on terror has been a multidimensional war, ranging from intelligence-based raids to full-scale operations in diverse trains. Did it not offer the military to simulate counter-Cold Start inspired attacks?

It is too late now for India’s deep ambition to cull Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. Delhi’s dilemma lies somewhere between Ababeel MIRV and short-range Nasr missiles. Vajpayee started overt nuclearisation of South Asia and Modi is playing risky politics on it. As veteran South Asia watcher, Michael Krepon of the Stimson Centre said that embracing and upgrading of Pakistan’s tactical nuclear weapons is a consequence of “India’s growing conventional capabilities and its more proactive military plans.”

CPEC, the other thorn in India’s throat, is no less painful. Things might have been different if Delhi had benefited from the composite dialogue process than applying delaying tactics. Modi’s diplomatic blackmail or Bipin and Dhanoa’s military options will just strengthen it

That's an easy question to answer.
They would if they could.
 
But USA will never be able to attack on Pakistan with full force cuz Geography of Pakistan is very much on Pakistan side against USA. USA will have to rely upon aircrafts carriers and long channels to transport equipments. And in such conditions Pakistan can retaliate well against. Once Pakistan get a major breakthrough or give a big blow to USA they will have to abort the war.
Disagree, the facts are in front of you... We were unable to do anything when America invaded Pakistani airspace in 2011, our ACM has issued a threat that Pakistan would shoot down any drone including American if they entered Pakistani airspace however there was a drone strike yesterday.

America has probably the best defence equipment of this planet, B2, B52, stealth aircrafts and choppers. US Navy; USS Bainbridge would probably be the first vessel to reach Pakistan if anything happened.

America’s 5th fleet is stationed in Bahrain and it would be no problem for them to ship to India. And there are no geographical points that would make it hard for US to fight. It’s not patriotism but putting a curtain in front of your eyes.
 
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