Hello, Warriors! The relation between India and itโs 68-year-old neighbour, Pakistan has never been well going. Many times India witnesses infiltration and militant activities from Pakistanโs side whereas the Pakistani media always has a different story to tell.
Among all these โtensionsโ, India has moved a step ahead and is preparing to conduct a massive military exercise on its western front with intensive armoured, artillery and infantry manoeuvres to practise swift, high-intensity attacks into enemy territory.
Sources from TOI say the combat exercise, the largest such endeavour in recent times, will be held in Rajasthan in October-November. It will be centred around the 21 Corps, one of the three principle โstrike corpsโ of the Army, but will include almost the entire Southern Army Command. โThe exercise, which will peak towards end-November, will also include a major airdrop of paratroopers behind (simulated) enemy lines. Such a large exercise is usually held once in four years to validate, fine-tune war-fighting strategies,โ said a source.
With armoured and infantry formations from Jhansi to Hyderabad already mobilising for the exercise, Pakistan โis being informedโ of the impending manoeuvres as per the โadvance noticeโ military protocol between the two countries, said sources.
The exercise will include well over 30,000 troops as well as hundreds of T-90S and T-72 main-battle tanks, artillery guns and multiple-launch rocket systems, all backed by โreal-time battlefield transparencyโ provided by satellites and drones, ground and airborne radars. โThe aim is to ensure a realistic war-like situation without actually going to war,โ said the source.
The exercise comes shortly after Army chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag, during a function in the ongoing commemoration of the 1965 warโs golden anniversary, had stated that his forceโs operational strategy had factored in the need to be ready for โswift, short nature of future warsโ with โlimited warning timeโ. Pakistan Army chief General Raheel Sharif, in turn, had responded by describing Kashmir as the โunfinished agenda of the Partitionโ and threatened India with โunbearable costsโ whether it be a โshort or longโ war.
For long unnerved by the Indian โCold Startโ military doctrine, Pakistan has also often recklessly brandished its tactical โNasrโ nuclear missile as an effective battlefield counter to Indiaโs conventional military superiority. But India has remained steadfast about nuclear weapons not being war-fighting weapons. While firmly declaring that there will no first-use, Indiaโs nuclear doctrine does however warn that โnuclear retaliation to a first strike will be massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damageโ.
The coming exercise will, of course, be conducted under the โNBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) overhangโ, as is the norm with all such large war games. The Armyโs โPro-Active Conventional War Strategyโ, colloquially called the Cold Start doctrine, was formulated after the painfully slow mobilization of its โstrike formationsโ at the border launch pads under Operation Parakram, which took almost a month after the terrorist attack on Parliament in December 2001.
This gave enough time not only to Pakistan to shore up its defences, but also the US to pressure the then NDA government to back off. Since then, the Army has been practising the strategy to mobilize fast and hit hard at several points along the border with self-contained and highly-mobile โbattle groupsโ. The โlaunchโ time for the battlegroups is now down to just three to four days, even though logistical bottlenecks remain a constraint for building on initial gains, said sources.
With these โpreparationsโ ahead of Pakistanโs threat to India and especially in the western sector, could this be the โresponseโ that India is giving to Pakistan?
Source: TOI