generally speaking the ratio has to be 5 to 1 attacker Vs defender to be an even match in a trench/ bunker , dug out position.
4 : 1 in Plains against an entrenched enemy(bunkers/etc)
9 : 1 in Mountain assault.
Ofcourse these are only recommended figures and not a rule, militaries have won with less and lost with more.
this is a harsh comment.
you guys would take revenge for the 1962 fiasco if that was the case.
No. 1962 was a loss on account of multiple Indian failures on multiple levels instead of PLA accomplishments.
The PLA loss ratio was nothing to write about.
The Indian military was unprepared at all levels - no mountain warfare training,
no winter clothes and fighting in freezing weather, literally no acclimatization - troops were relocated from plains to mountains in a few days and were still fighting in summer gear! a Prime Minister who was trying to convert the ordinance factories to manufacture washing machines and other white goods and who till the last moment refused to acknowledge that we may be attacked, a Defence Minister who had promoted his incompetent cronies to the top of the Command Hierarchy, an incompetent command who was following the wrong orders from the political bosses.
And lastly, - PLA simply over-runing the positions with sheer numbers.
This is what happened the next time - the Sumdorong Chu. Do read it.
1987 Sino-Indian skirmish - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
My musings and off topic:
I have personally understood the 1962 war in very positive terms despite it being a military loss. It yielded handsome political dividends.
1. It made the GoI understand in harsh terms that they are to - never again - play favorites with the Military. Since that time, GoI interference has been very very minimal in appointing Chief's and promotions for the Services. They strictly use seniority now having burnt fingers catastrophically.
2. It made Nehru and other leaders of the time understand in very unambiguous terms that a strong military is essential. Nehru was hostile to Indian Army, thinking of it as a colonial entity and wanted to depower and dissolve it - an example that of changing ordinance factories to white good producing factories.
3. It made all the other leaders in GoI start rebuilding the military. The process started in 1963. Without it, Indian military would have been anemic for all the wars that were to follow shortly.