PanzerKiel
MILITARY PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2006
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I will use Karunjhar as a jumpspot and troops will travel not only through the marshes but over them using hovercrafts, airborne assault and marine assault from the sea.
Close Air Support aircraft such as outlined by me here will be used by all the forces indicated including those in karunjhar mountains. Parachute drops.
Relatively minor forces from multiple directions and via multiple means will assault Bhuj thus escaping early detection. Once the assault is underway I will reinforce those positions with larger forces from Karachi, Badin, Karunjhar and V Corps as deployed above.
Meanwhile the Pak coast is guarded two brigades of conscripts and an additional division just north of Badin.
Not practical i must say.
-A salient, already surrounded on three sides by the enemy, cannot be a jump off point. Moreover, this particular salient is too small for assembly of forces. Enemy field artillery would have a field picking off targets here.
- Assuming for a moment that this big a force crosses the marshes, how their supply convoys going to reach them? (Sustainability)
- Do we have the required number of hovercrafts to transport a big force? Are you ready to conduct parachute drops over marshy area, into marshes?
-How would the large mechanized forces of 5 Corps cross the marshes?
- By coast, i meant the coast from Karachi to Gwadar, whose guarding this area against an amphibious landing?
Does India dictates our response?
If your planning is good, everything worked out to the minutest detail...no matter how big your adversary is, you can always dictate. History is full of examples.