I have on multiple occasions wanted to comment exactly the same for a long time now but refrained thinking it's better staying mum as the planners of this force would definitely have thought on the same lines as well. This ought to be a small force of highly trained men & women of strategic importance. These operatives should purely be responsible for war time espionage in enemy territory operating as sleeper cells during peace time & counter espionage of similar nature at home not be relegated to counter terrorism operations. The threat from areal assets around our borders is getting bigger & bigger day by day & it's best countered on ground as the air space is well defended with sophisticated Radars ( both ground & areal ) and SAMs. If we are to dissuade our neighbour from carrying any surgical attacks that could well lead to a major war then our best chance is to do a soft kill ( not physically destroying or damaging air & critical supportive ground assets in a way that there is no debris left on ground, ie playing with the software of Ground Radars or other such assets ) when the planes are still on ground and not already in air.
I agree with you.
In Pakistan, the general psyche of defence forces is very different. Army gets priority, then PAF and in the end Navy (if someone remembers, wait we have a navy too).
The problem is that in case of war, even after formation of Joint Staff HQ and JSSC (Joint Services staff college), all three forces give priority to own missions rather than be available to extend support to other arms.The Army keeps screaming for air cover from PAF, whereas PAF conserves aircraft, fuel, ammo, pilots, spare parts for their own missions. PAF has to obey PA demands for C-130 and has to diverge these aircrafts for PA missions hampering its own cargo missions. PN has acquired aircraft from PAF and finally got own pilots to do the job lest PAF takes these aircrafts away in wartime through its own pilots.
In such cases, it was in PAF's best interest to make own spec ops force. In 1965, PA SSG was used to parachute into India to destroy airfields, thus helping PAF. In 1971, SSG was stretched thin in kashmir, West Pakistan and East Pakistan in PA missions. In 1980's, SSG was used in Soviet-Afghan war and then became an anti terror unit. Now its used in all ops around the country as well as against external threats.
PAF knows that in next war, it needed its own SSW to conduct operations necessary from Air Force point of view. Operations which required skilled commandos operating behind enemy lines to hamper enemy air operations.
There are numerous threats from enemy AF in case of war.
The enemy AF forms FOB (forward operating bases) and flies aircrafts form those locations. It disperses its aircrafts in numerous locations where runways, supply, weapons and spare parts are present to operate such aircraft in war time situations, similar to how PAF will disperse its aircraft to different points on M-2 Motorway and FOB's. Intel on location of enemy movement and aircraft dispersal at different FOB is crucial.
The Radar and SAM network is another target for SSW to clear the way for an imminent PAF operation in the vicinity of that area. Specially trained and infiltrated S-400 hunting teams are a must which have the ability to sabotage S-400 presenting threat to PAF ops within 24-48 hours of the war. Although enemy AWACS can do much of constant Radar work for enemy AF to operate, destruction of SAM's is a crucial blow to divert constant CAP's to affected areas.
The most common action is destruction or disabling the runways so the enemy AF cannot make to the skies but the appearance of many FOB and temporary airstrips renders the efficiency of such ops close to useless.
Destruction of fuel dumps as well as weapons storage facility delivers a devastating blow to enemy operations. SU30 can stay in air longer and also carries more weapons than any PAF fighter.
Assassination of top ranking enemy AF officials as well as experienced pilots is priority too as this delays many planning procedures/ops and a lethal plane without a killer-instinct pilot is just a fly in the sky.
The Heavy Lift Cargo aircrafts which deliver supplies to crucial areas in kashmir regions are a juicy target. They not only transfer troops but also weapons, supplies, medical equipment, spare parts etc in lesser time than ground transport.
Similarly disabling enemy Aircraft on the ground is important but the dispersal of aircrafts to different FOB's makes this task cumbersome and SSW can be employed to interrupt the flying of enemy Aircrafts in other ways.
From providing intel to destruction of enemy assets, SSW role is spread over a large domain to bring out favourable results for PAF in case of war.