Oscar
I would love to have a chat with you that would hopefully educate me on the nuances or consequences of PAF using this strategy. If you want we can have this on PM as well lest the topic gets distracted.
My question is that all through the history, India has enjoyed numerically superior forces compared to Pakistan. However it has never been able to utilize those superior numbers in her favour.
The reasons are:
1. IAF employed a ridiculously large number of types of and subtypes of aircraft. All these aircrafts of previous years required a very heavy maintenance approach and consequently, each airbase of India was geared to only a couple or maybe 3 types effectively.
That meant that different aircrafts had different staging points and could not use other bases half as effectively and efficiently that they could. So you had some coming from Agra who could only be used and repaired and turned around from Agra, some from Rajasthan, etc, etc.
2. India had very bad logistics network. Spares for one type of aircraft available only at one base and hard and very timeconsuming to move to another.
3. India's and Pakistan's geography provide each a different set of advantages and disadvantages. Pakistan can owing to very small width, mobilize and bring to battle its forces very very quickly whereas IAF OTOH had to bring it from central India.
4. Pakistan's communication infrastructure was much better than anything IAF could field.
5. The gap between the number of qualitative fighters which have an advantage of PAF's force was always low or negative.
Now, in today's and in the next 10 years scenario:
India has made some changes. These are:
1. It is a declared policy now that all bases are being made to cater to all types of fighters in IAF inventory. This is still work in progress. That means all spares, dedicated weapons, etc will be stocked at each base.
2. IAF's communication infra is far better than it used to be. Pakistan's is stil further ahead. But i'll come to this point again.
3. IAF is reducing the number of aircrafts it had. Relatively less types, though still more than ideal.
4. Fighters today in IAF are less maintenance intensive than before and the newer ones coming in like Rafale and FGFA are based on american philosophy. Their technological superiority allows for much more than was possible for older gen planes.
5. The number of planes that IAF has which are technologically equivalent at the very least and mostly superior to PAF is today very high.
Now, i understand that in terms of mobilization and all, PAF would still be better. But my point is that it doesnt matter if PAF stays ahead as it has always stayed ahead in that. Today it would hurt PAF if the IAF were to lessen that gap of yesteryears even if the PAF stays ahead. This is kind of like the awacs example. Even though iaf might field a better one it doesn't make a difference as paf will also have one to fill their needs. Reverse this in fighter scenario. Paf maybe better in mobilizing but as long as iaf is also able to do it enough to field an advantage in numbers that could not be used before.
Secondly, the quantitative and qualitative advantage enjoyed by IAF fighters is unparalelled in Indo-Pak history. For example if i were to just compare the 4th generation fighters of IAF and PAF, the ratio is very lopsided.
And unlike previous years, the bulk of IAF's fleet are technologically superior to PAF's best fighters. This scenario is unprecedented.
Now, does building low cost fighters make sense assuming that even if they justify their cost and shoot down IAF planes disproportionately, the loss of even one of PAF's top fighter - F-16 would mean a significant reduction in PAF's capability.
Thus while having more number of technologically equivalent aircraft (not superior) like F-16 will give more offensive options. From the numbers and technology stacked, it appears PAF will hardly be able to go offensive.
My thoughts are a little hazy and hard to put down. Would appreciate if you could kind of go beyond the words!