Zapper
SENIOR MEMBER
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You can never wipe em out going with that approach. For instance, naxals in India or North East groups have previously been dealt by local police with no affect. State govts with naxal infestation like Andhra, Jharkhand, Orissa formed specialized teams with men selected from their state police depts and deployment of CRPF was a game changer and pretty much wiped out naxals in the region with several of em surrendering. It's kinda the same in NE except that CRPF in coordination with IA were able to clean up resulting in surrender of several groups recently. During this process, we did loose quite a few personnel primarily due to IED attacksOn the Pakistani side, you might never see large scale adoption of Western style COIN equipment & tactics because COIN is not something the Army plans to do on a permanent basis at the scale it has been doing it and it can easily absorb isolated attacks here and there.
So why invest billions out of a limited military budget in developing COIN/COT capacity for a conflict that civilian law enforcement and paramilitary organizations (Frontier Corps) are expected to step up and lead going forward?
The clean up process would've been done much faster had we resorted to using heavy weapons or drone/helo support similar to your Zarb-e-Azb. That approach was never taken to prevent collateral damage and not to affect local communities. The only weapon ever used against em were 5.56 INSAS or 7.62 AKs'. While both IA or PA can absorb manpower loss, it would be a long drawn operation. Again, we don't necessarily need to employ western strategies and tactics for COIN ops but acquiring MRAPs should suffice. IA started acquiring Tata, Mahindra and DRDO based MRAPs and MPVs recently which were seen in Kashmir. PA could go for license produced Turkish MRAPs