AgNoStiC MuSliM
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I don't understand this Strategic Depth concept of retreating into neighbouring country on the other side to regroup and fight another day ...... whether or not what Pakistan/Indian authors/experts (mis)construe it as such or not.
For the sake of my understanding, were the PA on the run, and as S-2 put it, channelizing backward into Afghanistan, would the IA let them? Or would they keep pushing, and take up the lacunae left bt the retreating PA?
Even if you are not talking about a complete rout, and a portion of the PA still holds on to areas to fight back, what benefit would be gained if the other part was retreating to fight another day?
I mean, in that case "another day" would never come, coz the IA would find it easier to defeat a divided/thinned out force and then keep pushing, across the border, to mop up the remainder?
Yes Taimi, I am a total war novice (before you inform me of such) ..... but I would like to learn and understand.
Cheers, Doc
I believe S-2 and Taimi are saying the same thing, that Pakistan's 'strategic depth' concept did not envision military assets rumbling through the mountains into Afghanistan. You could also corroborate that with the little open source material on Pakistan's nuclear threshold - one of those 'thresholds' is the possible bifurcation of Pakistan by Indian forces.
For the Pakistani military to retreat into Afghanistan implies a large chunk of Pakistani territory would be lost - that would imply the nuclear threshold has been crossed, based on open source information at least.
I think where S-2 and TK disagree was on the hypothetical scenario of a Pakistani Army retreating through the Hindukush into Afghanistan being devastated by the IAF. I would imagine the PAF would be rendered useless by then for such a scenario to be feasible.
The SD concept makes even less sense (in the military retreat sense) when you also factor in the fact that a large chunk of Pakistan's military is set up to fight in the plains and deserts of Punjab and Sindh. I fail to see what post-retreat (to Afghanistan) military operations planners would hope to carry out successfully, through mountainous terrain, when the Army could not even hold out in the plains and deserts it was trained to fight in.
Hence the argument that SD is a concept focused on denial of space to India in Afghanistan, so that Pakistan does not have to fight a two front war, and utilizing Afghanistan for the transit of natural resources from land locked Central Asia to the rest of the world through Pakistan - the latter something that would be immensely beneficial to all countries concerned.