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The hot reality of India’s Cold Start Doctrine

Umair Nawaz

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The hot reality of India’s Cold Start Doctrine

April 20, 2016 admin J DEFENCE, DEFENCE NEWS, GENERAL NEWS 0

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Article by By Muhammad Umer

In 2002, the Indian armed forces massed 500,000 troops at Pakistan’s border in response to the deadly December 2001 terrorist attack on the Indian parliament, for which the Indians held Pakistan responsible.

The operation against Pakistan was code named Parakram. It was designed for quick retaliation against Pakistan, possibly even with the goal of capturing a part of the country to be used as a bargaining chip. But by the time the Indians mobilised their forces on the border, the Pakistani armed forces had already taken up defensive positions, neutralising Operation Parakram. This incident forced the Indians to rethink their military planning.

During Parakram, the Indian forces had to be deployed from central India and it took them longer than expected to reach the western border. Their deployment from the centre provided Pakistan enough time to shore up its defences. The massive deployment cost of an estimated $3.2 billion dollars was absolutely astronomical.

Knowing that the Indian armed forces could not afford another failure like Parakram, the Indian military leadership sat down to develop a new military doctrine that would ensure a surprise, rapid mobilisation against Pakistan to capture a part of the country without threatening its existence, keeping the conflict limited to preclude the use of nuclear weapons. This would give India the upper hand in any future conflict and would force Pakistan to negotiate on India’s terms.

The Indians began moving away from their traditional defensive posture towards a more offensive posture against Pakistan in 2004. By May 2011, the Indian dream of quick mobilisation against Pakistan for a limited war involving rapid armoured thrusts had become a reality. The Indian armed forces proved the credibility of Cold Start when they conducted exercise Vijayee Bhava, in which the Indian military was able to mobilise 50,000 troops within 48 hours at Pakistan’s border.

The Indian civil and military leaderships were quick to dismiss the allegations that Cold Start was real after the exercise. At the time India’s Chief of Army Staff, General V K Singh stated that there is no such thing as Cold Start, but acknowledged that India does have a ‘proactive strategy’, “which takes steps in a proactive manner.” No matter what the Indians called it – a pro-active strategy or a Cold Start Doctrine – they proved that they could engage Pakistan in a limited war, which would fare well for them.


This put Pakistan in a difficult position: the financial and resource constraints meant that Pakistan had to come up with an unconventional solution to ensure a continued balance of military power.


Facing limited options and the very real threat of Cold Start, Pakistan developed a short-range, low-yield nuclear weapon. Pakistan introduced HATF-IX, or Nasr, a short-range ballistic missile to deter any threat from India’s pro-active military strategy and restore the balance of power. The international community condemned Pakistan for lowering the nuclear threshold by introducing what they considered to be tactical nuclear weapons, ignoring the fact that the development of Nasr was in fact a response to India’s pro-active military strategy.

Pakistan has tried to highlight the threat of Cold Start, citing a series of major military exercises, which have proven India’s ability to swiftly mobilise troops to Pakistan’s territory, with the capability of conducting offensive strikes. General Dalbir Singh Suhag, the current Indian army chief, said last year: “We are acutely aware that the swift, short nature of future wars is likely to offer limited warning time. This calls for maintaining very high levels of operational preparedness at all times. This is something that has now become inherent in our operational strategy.” Despite all of this, Pakistan’s claims have been regularly dismissed. But for the first time earlier this month, President Barack Obama indirectly addressed India’s Cold Start Doctrine in his speech at the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit’s closing ceremony.

President Obama said, “the other area where I think we’d need to see progress is Pakistan and India, making sure that as they develop military doctrines, that they are not continually moving in the wrong direction.” Many experts in the strategic community believe that by referring to military doctrines in reference to India and Pakistan, President Obama was subtly addressing India’s Cold Start Doctrine, incidentally justifying the need for Nasr.

According to a senior Pakistani military expert, India has been constructing massive new airfields and bases, a wide rail and road communication network has been laid down to facilitate swift mobilisation, new logistic installations have been set up close to Pakistan’s borders to support the offensives and the peacetime locations of some of the formations are what they used to be in times of crisis. The average relocation distance of Indian forces are 250 km for defensive and 500 km for offensive formations.

India has spent $55 billion dollars on Cold Start and plans to invest another $100 billion dollars on it, which is over and above the country’s current $51 billion defence budget. The K4 submarine-launched ballistic missile test and the development of INS Arihant prove that the Indian navy has the ability to participate in an effective blockade of Pakistan’s Sea Lines of Communications, as envisioned in the Cold Start Doctrine.

Because of the dangerous new developments in India, President Obama stressed the need for both countries to take responsibility for ensuring peace in the region; previously, the onus was only on Pakistan. Hopefully, this recognition that both countries share the responsibility for ensuring peace in the region will force them to reconsider their current military doctrines, and the burden of this task will no longer be Pakistan’s alone.

Last week, while speaking to a crowd of experts in Washington DC, a senior Pakistani military expert reiterated Pakistan’s desire for peace in the region, and called on India to stop behaving irresponsibly and work on confidence building measures, which will help both countries move in the right direction.
http://www.indiandaily.in/hot-reality-indias-cold-start-doctrine/
 
"No battle plan ever survives contact with the enemy." - German Field Marshall Moltke the Elder

Pakistan's mobilization time is less than 18 hours, that is for our full scale mobilization. Pakistan can muster a counter offensive to obliterate the 50,000 strong Indian Integrated Battle Groups as well as opening up multiple fronts on the border to capture and hold Indian territory, give a go ahead to our proxies in India to start operations inside the Indian heartland. Upping the ante is either going to force India to declare a full scale war with Pakistan which is all but likely to bring PLA into the battlefield and might end in a full scale nuclear exchange resulting in over one billion people dead or it would have to accept the oxymoronic nature of a 'limited war' and withdraw from the battlefield having gained nothing but successfully driving out foreign investors from India fearing instability which most definitely will cost India billions of dollars of investment it needs.

And how?
Can you please care to explain?

As I see WAR is ON and its been limited from very long time.
 
No body respects you at a weaker position..Pakistan has to build a large war economy to arm itself..during the process it will also create massive wealth, economic growth and employment..Nazi Germany armed itself out of economic ression and then bombed every place which was hiding laundered German capital...

"No battle plan ever survives contact with the enemy." - German Field Marshall Moltke the Elder

Pakistan's mobilization time is less than 18 hours, that is for our full scale mobilization. Pakistan can muster a counter offensive to obliterate the 50,000 strong Indian Integrated Battle Groups as well as opening up multiple fronts on the border to capture and hold Indian territory, give a go ahead to our proxies in India to start operations inside the Indian heartland. Upping the ante is either going to force India to declare a full scale war with Pakistan which is all but likely to bring PLA into the battlefield and might end in a full scale nuclear exchange resulting in over one billion people dead or it would have to accept the oxymoronic nature of a 'limited war' and withdraw from the battlefield having gained nothing but successfully driving out foreign investors from India fearing instability which most definitely will cost India billions of dollars of investment it needs.

there is no such thing as limited war or offensive war..something the Pakistani war planners need to come out of!
And create a full scale re-arnament program..you need impregnable sea denial and air superiority..along with massive waves of heavy bombers at high speed..

speed, surprise and shock are necessary to win a war...nothing breaks down an enemy more than shock!
 
We first have to go back and study how Moughals defeated Indians. Though the weapons have changed, the war strategies and philosophies remain identical.

No body respects you at a weaker position..Pakistan has to build a large war economy to arm itself..during the process it will also create massive wealth, economic growth and employment..Nazi Germany armed itself out of economic ression and then bombed every place which was hiding laundered German capital. there is no such thing as limited war or offensive war..something the Pakistani war planners need to come out of.

And create a full scale re-arnament program..you need impregnable sea denial and air superiority..along with massive waves of heavy bombers at high speed. speed, surprise and shock are necessary to win a war...nothing breaks down an enemy more than shock!
 
According to Col R S N Singh ex RAW, conventional war is not the answer of Proxy war.So cold start is not a response to a terror attack.

However there is a scope of limited conflict at multiple fronts especially in Kashmir. Just like 1971 when India preemptively opened many fronts in Punjab (Shakargarh Bulge,Jarpal etc) and Turtok (kargil) in Kashmir and ultimately annexed Pakistani territories permanently.

While remain on Defensive in Rajasthan/Sindh sector except few raids by SF.
 
I say just let them come to the border one more time ...I bet they will have to come up with one more 'awesome hot & cold doctrine'. At present Pakistani troops are battle-hardened and are way ahead than the Indian army in this regard...a varied experience of more than a decade of unconventional limited war ....India would be a fool if they tried to test us on this at this stage ...I see their upper hand in Sea only ...Pak Navy needs submarines and its own navy pilots with some good planes ....except pilots ...Pak can shop these things from China...submarines have been ordered already ...I wish we could go for some J-11 as well :man_in_love:
 
Pakistan's mobilization time is less than 18 hours, that is for our full scale mobilization. Pakistan can muster a counter offensive to obliterate the 50,000 strong Indian Integrated Battle Groups as well as opening up multiple fronts on the border to capture and hold Indian territory, give a go ahead to our proxies in India to start operations inside the Indian heartland. Upping the ante is either going to force India to declare a full scale war with Pakistan which is all but likely to bring PLA into the battlefield and might end in a full scale nuclear exchange resulting in over one billion people dead or it would have to accept the oxymoronic nature of a 'limited war' and withdraw from the battlefield having gained nothing but successfully driving out foreign investors from India fearing instability which most definitely will cost India billions of dollars of investment it needs.
Contrary to My Analysis It will be End The Pakistan Nuclear Bluff Once For All Ultimately It will Break the Morale Of Public In Pakistan Because in This Modern Edge ISPR Propaganda Will Not Work Like in 1971 When Pakistan Population Caught By Surprise

It will a Blow to Pakistani Nuclear Cover that they are to Chicken to Face India In Direct Conflict.Hell Why Blame them Any Rational And Smart Army will Do the Same Facing Superior Enemy

As For Chinese they are Pure Businessman(That's What I Like In them Most) Stay out From the Situation Like in the Past They Not Emotional Like People of Indian Subcontinent They are Smart People

TC
Cerberus
 
India's limited war will very swiftly turn into an all out war leaving irreversible consequences for the entire region.

Those going to war are / should be aware of its consequences.

Further, when the reasons and / or advantages for going to war outweigh its consequences then its right to go to war irrespective of the consequences. More so when those who decide to go to war have the wherewithal to handle or control its consquences
 
Contrary to My Analysis It will be End The Pakistan Nuclear Bluff Once For All Ultimately It will Break the Morale Of Public In Pakistan Because in This Modern Edge ISPR Propaganda Will Not Work Like in 1971 When Pakistan Population Caught By Surprise

It will a Blow to Pakistani Nuclear Cover that they are to Chicken to Face India In Direct Conflict.Hell Why Blame them Any Rational And Smart Army will Do the Same Facing Superior Enemy

As For Chinese they are Pure Businessman(That's What I Like In them Most) Stay out From the Situation Like in the Past They Not Emotional Like People of Indian Subcontinent They are Smart People

TC
Cerberus

Its not a bluff, every single military advisor to the US president has said Pakistan will use nuclear weapons if India decides to enter any pakistani territory and world opinion will be in their favour as they are the ones being attacked.
 
Its not a bluff, every single military advisor to the US president has said Pakistan will use nuclear weapons if India decides to enter any pakistani territory and world opinion will be in their favour as they are the ones being attacked.

If this were correct its not surprising the US Pres often takes ill advised decisions.

War would be in retaliation / reaction to a terrorist action like Mumbai .

When the US troops entered Iraq who was the attacker & was world opinion against the coalition forces ?
 
If this were correct its not surprising the US Pres often takes ill advised decisions.

War would be in retaliation / reaction to a terrorist action like Mumbai .

When the US troops entered Iraq who was the attacker & was world opinion against the coalition forces ?

You are no USA, you are a 3rd world country

no one in the west cares about India to be frankly honest. Maybe in a few years they will once India becomes economically strong

mumbai happened and other then Indians no one gave a dam hoot about it. Infact over the years every time India has bought up Pakistan involvement the US government has turned around and told you guys Pakistan has suffered more at the hands of terrorist then India.
 
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