True, the kargil war exposed our lack of precision bombing capability. Only the mirages could perform that role. Today the MKIs, mirages and mig 29 UPG can all do that role (and we have hundreds of these), and every aircraft inducted into the IAF in future will be able to do that.
True, there was very little co-ordination between the Indian army and the IAF during the kargil war. But we were still better off than the enemy, because the PAF didn't even know there was a war going on until they watched Indian news channels. Heck, their prime minister himself didn't know that his country was at war, until his Indian counterpart told him. It was a purely army misadventure.
On our part, in the next decade, we learnt from our mistakes and have done remarkably well in addressing them. From upgrading the bulk of our aircrafts into mutlirole platforms with precision strike capability, to evolving joint operations doctrines that are fine tuned every year through joint exercises.
Both the air force and the army were handicapped due to the constraints imposed by the government. The army was not permitted to launch cross border strikes to lay a siege on the intruders, and the air force was not allowed to conduct interdiction of their supply lines to disrupt their logistics. Yet, despite these constraints, they did manage to evict every single intruder. And if pakistan tries anything like this in future, their intruders (armymen or mujahideen or NLI or jihadis or non-state actors or terrorists or whatever they choose to call them next time) will be obliterated purely by the IAF, with no need for the army's involvement. They know that, which is why they won't ever try it again.
So apart from thwarting pakistan's attempt to take kashmir, our forces also ensured that they won't dare to attempt t again. That's what I call a decisive strategic voctory.
It amuses me when some pakistanis here still think they were victorious, or that they achieved something with that misadventure. They came with the aim of taking kashmir, and ended up wthdrawing completely and putting a few men on point 5353 or whatever. Intruding into enemy territory and withdrawing at record speeds when counter-attacked, and being too ashamed to even admit participation is a victory in some people's minds.
True, there was very little co-ordination between the Indian army and the IAF during the kargil war. But we were still better off than the enemy, because the PAF didn't even know there was a war going on until they watched Indian news channels. Heck, their prime minister himself didn't know that his country was at war, until his Indian counterpart told him. It was a purely army misadventure.
On our part, in the next decade, we learnt from our mistakes and have done remarkably well in addressing them. From upgrading the bulk of our aircrafts into mutlirole platforms with precision strike capability, to evolving joint operations doctrines that are fine tuned every year through joint exercises.
Both the air force and the army were handicapped due to the constraints imposed by the government. The army was not permitted to launch cross border strikes to lay a siege on the intruders, and the air force was not allowed to conduct interdiction of their supply lines to disrupt their logistics. Yet, despite these constraints, they did manage to evict every single intruder. And if pakistan tries anything like this in future, their intruders (armymen or mujahideen or NLI or jihadis or non-state actors or terrorists or whatever they choose to call them next time) will be obliterated purely by the IAF, with no need for the army's involvement. They know that, which is why they won't ever try it again.
So apart from thwarting pakistan's attempt to take kashmir, our forces also ensured that they won't dare to attempt t again. That's what I call a decisive strategic voctory.
It amuses me when some pakistanis here still think they were victorious, or that they achieved something with that misadventure. They came with the aim of taking kashmir, and ended up wthdrawing completely and putting a few men on point 5353 or whatever. Intruding into enemy territory and withdrawing at record speeds when counter-attacked, and being too ashamed to even admit participation is a victory in some people's minds.