Joe Shearer
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2009
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- 27,493
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No stories here.
It's harder for IAF to break-in into our airspace today than it was in 1999. The quality and scale of our airpower has significantly increased post-2006..
Offcourse it wouldn't make IAF stand down if india principally decides to launch a war against us...
And from our pov, "next time" already happened. In 2001-02, and in 2008---both times, indian military "stood down" as we moved our military elements towards war-time locations and started Combat Air Patrols over our cities and around our aerial borders. With our nuclear warheads increasing in number, quality, and our missile's range now covering even Eastern most Islands of India , rest assured, indian military will continue to "stand-down" and a certain threshold will be maintained in subcontinent.
PAF's culture was never authoritarian. PAF's strategic insight and planning have always been of top quality amongst all services of subcontinent---leading PAF to preempt 1965 indian invasion and launching multiple successful attacks on enemy--and even achieving a better kill ratio over larger enemy in 1971.
However, Army has been the dominant service in our military and their strategic insight has been questionable at times. However, this culture has changed. PAF-Army have become increasingly synchronized over last decade and disagreements at Corps commander meetings isn't unusual anymore. Example of it can be seen in Pakistan Army's decisions regarding Waziristan operations.
Anyways...
First, about the PAF. It is extremely unfair to twist my citation into a seeming criticism of the PAF. Nothing could be further from the truth. The PAF is Pakistan's truly world-class service, and I have never said anything different. BUT this thread was an abortion; only WindUp could come out with shit like this, the feather-brained motor-mouthed propagandist that he is, and there is no way to show the PAF in a favourable light, because there was no role that the PAF could have played. I agree that the pre-emptive strikes in 1965 got the IAF into a lot of trouble, but you are ignoring the statistics, and I will not use up valuable time to draw those lessons once again. The same thing applies to 1971. You are neglecting or deliberately ignoring a very clear change in the sortie-rate of both sides, one decreasing sharply, one increasing steadily.
However, to return to the Army. It has been your weakest link to date, not because it is in itself, but it is enmeshed with that peculiar and contorted entity hidden deep inside Pakistan, the Pakistan deep state. They have become fatally addicted to living and working in a democratic-hating environment. It is this that you have to take into account . .
No stories here.
It's harder for IAF to break-in into our airspace today than it was in 1999. The quality and scale of our airpower has significantly increased post-2006..
Offcourse it wouldn't make IAF stand down if india principally decides to launch a war against us...
And from our pov, "next time" already happened. In 2001-02, and in 2008---both times, indian military "stood down" as we moved our military elements towards war-time locations and started Combat Air Patrols over our cities and around our aerial borders. With our nuclear warheads increasing in number, quality, and our missile's range now covering even Eastern most Islands of India , rest assured, indian military will continue to "stand-down" and a certain threshold will be maintained in subcontinent.
PAF's culture was never authoritarian. PAF's strategic insight and planning have always been of top quality amongst all services of subcontinent---leading PAF to preempt 1965 indian invasion and launching multiple successful attacks on enemy--and even achieving a better kill ratio over larger enemy in 1971.
However, Army has been the dominant service in our military and their strategic insight has been questionable at times. However, this culture has changed. PAF-Army have become increasingly synchronized over last decade and disagreements at Corps commander meetings isn't unusual anymore. Example of it can be seen in Pakistan Army's decisions regarding Waziristan operations.
Anyways...
First, about the PAF. It is extremely unfair to twist my citation into a seeming criticism of the PAF. Nothing could be further from the truth. The PAF is Pakistan's truly world-class service, and I have never said anything different. BUT this thread was an abortion; only WindUp could come out with shit like this, the feather-brained motor-mouthed propagandist that he is, and there is no way to show the PAF in a favourable light, because there was no role that the PAF could have played. I agree that the pre-emptive strikes in 1965 got the IAF into a lot of trouble, but you are ignoring the statistics, and I will not use up valuable time to draw those lessons once again. The same thing applies to 1971. You are neglecting or deliberately ignoring a very clear change in the sortie-rate of both sides, one decreasing sharply, one increasing steadily.
However, to return to the Army. It has been your weakest link to date, not because it is in itself, but it is enmeshed with that peculiar and contorted entity hidden deep inside Pakistan, the Pakistan deep state. They have become fatally addicted to living and working in a democratic-hating environment. It is this that you have to take into account . .