What an amazing thread! This one should be made sticky. How I wish all threads on PDF were of the same high quality displaying maturity of thought and professionalism.
That said, I would like to throw in my two bits.
For decades, India's posture against China in the North-East has been defensive. This is the first time it will have offensive capabilities in the mountains if they are needed.
The new mountain strike corps will consist of two mountain divisions that are specially trained and equipped for an attack into Tibet. If the PLA captures any Indian territory, the strike corps will quickly concentrate an attacking force over Tibet’s impressive road network, and would not be forced into bloody, Kargil-style counterattacks to recapture that territory. Instead, the new strike corps would launch its own riposte, advancing into Tibet and capturing a vulnerable chunk of Chinese territory. Several objectives would be identified in advance and detailed preparations made for the offensives.
The new strike corps will have its own mountain artillery, missile batteries, combat engineers, anti-aircraft guns and armoured vehicles. It would also be supported by Indian Air Force fighters, operating from newly renovated bases in northeastern India.
Jorhat, Guwahati, Mohanbari, Bagdogra and Hashimara are being developed as air bases. The IAF is also modernising eight ALGs (Advanced Landing Grounds), essential for quickly building up and re-supplying the strike corps. These bases would also be crucial for airborne operations, especially heli-lifting forces to key objectives behind the enemy frontlines.
One member on this thread had mentioned the PLA’s legacy of excellent logistics in the many wars they have fought. However, unknown to many is the fact that the Chinese offensive into Arunachal in 1962 petered out due to a major tactical blunder. And that is, failure of a foolproof logistics plan that seemed to go awry after day 20 of the conflict.
According to Lt Gen Henderson Brooks who authored the as yet secret Henderson Brooks Report, a few extracts of which were obtained by Neville Maxwell and included in his book, India's China War, one of the main reasons why the Chinese withdrew was due to the breakdown of logistics. The battles on many fronts stalled as the PLA soldiers were down to 'eating grass and weeds', as also "hundreds falling sick drinking water from unclean, grimy streams and rivulets as well as dirty snow"..
As if this wasn't enough, the supply of replacement weapons/spares and ammo were fast drying up as the lines of communications were getting disrupted due to inhospitable terrain where PLA troops had overstretched themselves. Looking over your shoulder for administrative backup is the worst that can happen in combat and leads to disaster.
It is unfortunate that the logistics aspect in battle is usually given short shrift during the planning stages. If adequate importance is not given to this principle of war, a strike corps operating in mountainous terrain could flounder with disastrous consequences. As such, forward logistic nodes in the mountains will also need to be set up, where the requirement of space would be enormous. Considering the restricted lines of communications which would be vulnerable to enemy action as well as weather, establishing such mobile and static logistic nodes for a strike corps would be a nightmare of hellish proportions.
So, all said and done, having a strike corps looks dandy on paper, but in practical terms, operationalising it is going to be an uphill task! (pun unintended!)