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notorious_eagle,
I have never concealed my own great respect for you and your views, which are always temperate and carefully thought through, and based on real professional knowledge.
Sir the respect is mutual, you are by far one of my favourite members here.
However, I am not sure about your first two assertions, about the balance of numbers not having changed due to India spending billions of dollars, and about Pakistan still being able to match India's corps level deployment strength.
Sir
If you look at the balance of forces, its still roughly the same. In fact, in the last 10 years the balance has been reduced in favour of equilibrium. If Pakistan did not counter India's recent acquisitions, the balance would have continued in India's favour. India still is not in a position to deliver the knock out punch against Pakistan. PA still maintains overwhelming firepower, it will do far more damage above its weight before it dies.
First, in the same vein for which I criticised some armchair pundits a few posts earlier, India's military suffers from feast and famine. You forget that unlike Pakistan, India has always been regarded as an awkward customer by the leader of the free world, the US, and its minions. You forget that there was a crushing embargo enforced on us, even on civilian institutions, due to the punishment that was deemed appropriate. You forget that even high-end Mac computers were on the banned list when Pakistan was awash with them. You forget that some of us have been through this ourselves, personally; I have been made to stand cap in hand for an entry-level Silicon Graphics machine, and my foreign partner, BAE, no less, could do nothing about it. That is one machine, not a set, not a lab, not a facility. Remember what nuclear engineers were doing in exactly that time slot? You forget that our entire Sea King fleet was grounded, that our Sea Hawks were grounded because that same partner, one phase earlier, under Dept. of Commerce admonition, had cut off spares. You forget that no simulators were allowed except those that had earlier come in with the original fleets sold, and that CA, Reflectone and Thomson kept us right out where we belonged. That was while Pakistani air force pilots had free access to the latest planes available in the Gulf and in Saudi Arabia. And you forget that these billions were spent to replenish the years of neglect that the Indian military went through till Bush and Manmohan Singh built a rapport.
We are quite well aware of the hiccups and handicaps that India faced early on. But Sir, i can assure you Pakistan did not have it as easy as you are making it out to be. After the 1965 war, Pakistan was largely cut off from Western Military Equipment. While the Soviets poured India with military hardware, Pakistan was largely cut off from Western Arms.
That was than, lets look at the present. India is slushed with Military Equipment from multiple sources. If China's military machine had not modernized in the last 2 decades, the disparity between India and Pakistan would have exponentially grown in the last 2 decades. This was perfectly demonstrated in the confrontation in 2002, when India was awash with all kinds of weapons systems while on the other hand Pakistan's defences were barely adequate to hold on to its fortifications.
And please let us not argue about the countervailing influence of Soviet technology. My organisation was responsible for rewriting the IAF's manuals and I know personally what state the Russian manuals were in, and what problems a 100 flying hour design posed when flown for several times that mark. I could go on like this for every other technology that we got; we got it from them and fought wars with them, against the latest, shiny new stuff that we were faced with, because nobody else would sell it to us at the time.
You do have a point that Pakistan benefitted immensely during the 50's and early 60's from American generosity. American training went a long way in instilling discipline into PAF.
You mentioned the parity in corps level deployment strength. I just don't understand what you mean: corps to corps, mano a mano? Somehow I thought the days of the phalanx were long over, and even a weak, undernourished Bengali like me can pull a trigger. But what did you mean? I shall wait for an answer.
At the end of the day, IA is still training to fight a war on Corps Level Strength. As the old saying goes 'You fight as you train and train as you fight'.
Cold Start or whatever is still on paper, it still has not been implemented on field. IA Generals are still thinking on fighting at Corps Level, the recent literature and battle manoeuvres performed by Indian Armoured and Mechanized are a testament to that. Although you have warned me to not use Kargil or Operation Parakram
as an example, but the IA mobilized its Corps to fight Pakistan. Kargil War was pretty much over in India's favour when India mobilized a Corps to evict the invaders.
By the way, why select a corps to be the basis of comparison? Has there been a successful corps-level action fought in the unhappy history of India-Pakistan rivalry, except in 71?
As i stated before, Indian training does suggest that India is still thinking of mobilizing a Corps to fight Pakistan. Now you off course are operating on more information than i do due to your background, thus your more than welcome to share any bits and pieces about India's New Order of Battle.
Instead, let us look at where your order of battle is located, where the opposing order of battle is located, and ask yourself if any holes exist.
You have been warned.
There are some pockets of holes that do exist but most of them have been heavily fortified. Punjab is static due to topography and canals, Sindh is where the order of battle will be due to the fluid nature of the Thar Desert.
I deeply appreciate this post, even though I believe so strongly that we are a peaceful nation that has been let down again and again by our neighbours.
Sir
There lies the problem. You feel that India has been let down by its neighbours while we feel that Pakistan has been let down by India. While we Pakistanis have acknowledged Indian grievances, India is yet to do the same with Pakistan. Indian support of weapons and money for Anti Pakistani Elements have left a very sour taste on our mouths. And i can assure you, if these intransigences don't stop, there are many in Pakistan's Establishment whom are pushing an agenda to extract revenge against India.[/quote]