Just to steer you in the right direction, the base of Strike Corps,once it has been launched, is almost 25 km, may be more. With a RCC bunker or a weapon bunker every 100 m, you can do the math. This 25 km stretch has to be cleared because, may be your mechanized forces MAY force their way through the gauntlet of fire, your soft skinned vehicles of infantry and following logistic convoys would be badly shot up.
I would also suggest you to zoom to the lowest level of Google Earth and try to study the terrain in detail. NUMEROUS DCBs, Double DCBs, towns, cities, rivers / canals / water channels, they all contribute towards the terrain friction. Remember, Terrain and the enemy are the two factors which you have to master before you make your plan. If you havent included them, in detail, as part of your initial planning, everything goes for a six.
Your infantry will be sitting on the other side of the water obstacle, may be 200 m away from those bunkers. Would you like or try or risk CAS this much close. THen CAS aircraft will use which weapons. PGMs, though accurate are far too costly and less in number to be expended on individual bunkers. Dumb bombs, being inaccurate, will place your own troops in risk. There are other, time tested, battle tested ways which are adopted for bunker busting by both armies.
These bunkers have ATGMs as well, would they let your tanks come this much close? And then if you suffer tank losses during bunker busting, you can imagine your remaining combat potential for the main fight which has yet to start.
Thanks
@PanzerKiel that's some good homework, always glad to learn from you. How about if you punch a 2 km wide gap and then attack the bunkers from behind? If the initial punch through is fast enough, you will catch a lot of them by surprise. Rommel did similarly in WWI. Clearing a 25 km long stretch before going forward would completely defeat surprise and initiative.
Remember also that we are looking to engage in Jaisalmer for a relatively brief period of time and then turn northwards. We are not actually pushing forward towards Jodhpur.
This means that as we turn north and attack Bikaner from the South, linking up with own forces, we don't really need to maintain a solid supply route from the rear via Jaisalmer. Instead, we are attacking Bikaner and linking up with own forces.
Therefore the issue of clearing a longer-term supply line via Jaisalmer is moot.
Low cost PGMs are now available things, I think at least enough can be built locally to punch through. The cheapest is laser based glide bomb kits that attach to a regular iron bomb. Regarding friendly fire, some risks have to be taken and managed as best as possible.
Nothing wrong with your theory, but then please do try to calculate when our economy will be able to afford these wonder weapons in large numbers.
We aren't importing, we are making something similar. Look also at the BMP3 which has a similar auto loading system (and looks like a light tank)
It also has a 100mm gun and carries 7 troops in addition to the driver, commander and gunner.
Now, a gun mortar being half way between a traditional gun and a mortar has far lower velocities than a traditional gun. This means they can be built with less metallurgy (and cost) behind them. The autoloader for the AK is built in Pakistan, surely a similar autoloader is possible for this?
The benefit of a mobile gun mortar in this kind of environment is that, if you are stuck on a road and can't maneuver much, you can still fight and fire at the enemy as your weapon is non line of sight.
What I am saying here isn't a revolutionary idea, its roughly what a BMP3 already is.
I have been there alot. With a long mechanized column moving on these dirt tracks, imagine what enemy CAS will do. In 1971, it was a Hunter Detachment which confronted our 22 Cavalry and stopped it.
Interesting and awesome. I'm sure you cannot tell us too much more. Air cover during the assault is a must and I doubt any of the game plan I've outlined is possible without at the very least PAF being able to keep the IAF off the PA. In 71 I think PAF was holding all its assets and waiting for D Day but it never came. This allowed IAF a free hand against PA.
Why on earth must your schwerpunkt be on the almost undoable?
Ignore what I'm saying. Ask somebody with service experience what happens if there is a narrow road, running through sands that are difficult to traverse, that runs a division (count the soft vehicles and the troops carriers) along those narrow roads, and there is a breakdown?
Ask him what happens to fuel: how does it get to the head of the column?
We could go on and on.
Load fuel before entering Indian territory and worry about it after overcoming water obstacle in Jaisalmer? It's less than 100 km away from Pak territory. You can give fuel cans to every vehicle headed. Once you get past Jaisalmer, the terrain and the roads open up (the latter quite a bit).