Your post is even funnier, IK. Where on earth did I say that Pakistan should "fold down", janaab?
What I said was clear as daylight, "Try some-place else"...... if you re-read my post.
Therefore you consider H-6 Bombers flying via tactical routing KHI-Cape Guardafui-Diego Garcia ; then you do not need to 'run the gauntlet' any more !! And pour "fire and brimstone" where you wish to.
On the less than bravado instilled scenarios along with "know it all" tirades, I would humbly point that a simple look at the weapons development and purchasing history of both nations should clear up where is what being looked at and what was done in response.
There was a reason there was a sudden focus on SHORADs by the IAF in the last decade along with a tit for tat buy of stand off weapons. The 90's was all about India securing the low level airspace via a combination of aerostat and low level radar systems since the PAF's mirage fleet excels at going at 100 feet rather smoothly and is an inculcated skill from the days of Risalpur.
However, to counter that low level coverage.. the PAF focused on stand off systems for its Mirages that would allow it to penetrate the airspace just enough and still get the deeper targets. Regardless of coverage,the denel cruise system based weapons are still much small targets than Mirages and hence Radar sees them generally too late. Add this to the capablity of being launched from a 100 km away and you end having to extend interceptors out where they lose the additional safety of ground based defence when confronting attacking aircraft. In short, the IAF was left vulnerable in a very crucial way. That gap needed to be closed rapidly and hence Spyder.
To offset that losing gap, the PAF might move elsewhere and the grapevine suggests something evolutionary. But to sum it up, the Indian ADGE has little or no gaps in coverage(other than some barnstorming grade daring approaches) and has very few gaps in weapons it can employ in them.
So, us subcontinent folk are pretty ingenious in planning for war( execution is another matter).
However, where the PAF is plagued with a paucity of funds and corruption, the IAF has its own plagues with a serious mismatch in manpower along with a bumbling bureaucracy; the result is that the IAF is not what is should be on paper.