India’s Cold Start Doctrine gives Pakistan sleepless nights
Posted on Mar 18 2015 – 2:42pm by IBC World
In
the event of a war with Pakistan, a Cold Start attack will involve
various branches of India’s military conducting large-scale offensive
operations as part of a united battle group. According to Cold Start Doctrine strategy,
India will invade and defeat Pakistan in just under 72 hours by
utilizing quickly Mobilized Armored Units (MAUs) and unmatched air and
sea power to formulate the Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs), which India
believes would be enough to tear Pakistan into two, without starting a
nuclear war.
What does India’s Cold Start Doctrine mean for the lay man ?
South
Asia and in particular the Indian sub-continent is perhaps the last
hold-out spot for the conventional battlefield scenario, the kind
recorded in literary documentation down the ages. India has two or
rather three blocks with their armored divisions in columns, one
formation along the Indus valley and the other on either sides of the
Himalayas.
India’s
military might stretches to meet threats from two simultaneous fronts.
On the western side from Pakistan and on the eastern front from China.
For a big and huge working democracy like India, securing its
territorial borders since its inception in 1947 has been the number one
priority.
The
thermo-nuclear tests of 1998 at Pokhran was a turning point in India’s
military capability and may have altered the level for all the right
reasons. The Pokhran tests marked a sea change in thinking and mind sets
for the national political leadership as well as for the military
commanders in the fleet. Once and for all it became clear that India
henceforth need not worry about any breach in its territorial
boundaries. No advancing army could afford to make a mistake, in traditional military sense, an enemy marching into the Indian territory.
India
was now ready to set it eyes beyond it immediate shores to safeguard
its interest and asset across the world. India felt bolder and safer
after acquiring thermo-nuclear capability.
India’s bitter lesson of terrorist attacks from Pakistan
But
as it turned out, that was not the case in the coming years especially
in the months following the Parliament attack in New Delhi in December
2001 and again in November 2008 when Pakistani terrorist attacked
Mumbai. In both cases, Pak backed terrorists had stepped up their
assault against India, on Indian soil and in the absence of a working
model of a tri-forces military doctrine under an elected leadership,
India’s image took a beating.
Under
this concept, neutralizing Pakistan inside the first 72 hours of the
offensive was the primary objective. The ‘Cold Start Doctrine’ is based
on SPEED, FAST MOBILIZATION of armored strike divisions & retaining
the element of SURPRISE. All this appears to be a story from a fairy
tale but this is now a stark reality for Pakistan.
India
now has an acknowledged military doctrine. The ‘Cold Start Doctrine’
was not an overnight concept. It came about with a bitter lesson the
authorities had learnt in the aftermath of the Parliament attack in
2001. The Armed forces since 2004, with many military drills being
conducted have now perfected the mobilization of half a million troops
in less than 48 to 72 hours.
With the onslaught of the co-ordination between the Army and the Air Force under the ‘Cold Start Doctrine’, the Indian Navy is highly capable of enforcing a total naval blockade of Pakistan within 48 hours of the first attack. This will leave the country without the most important commodity that is needed to fight a war, and i.e. OIL.
Foreign
and Indian Military analyst point out that it is an apt time for India
to assert its Naval power to claim the entire Indian Ocean area as it
inches closer towards a ‘Blue Water Navy’.
Setbacks during the Parliament Attack and Troop Mobilization
Orders were given to mobilize half a million troops during operation ‘Parakram’ in 2001.
Indian forces were dispatched, some up to the linear positions along
the western border with Pakistan. Not many of us know that soon after
the parliament attack, all three Chiefs of Staff had called upon the
then Prime Minister Mr. Vajpayee and sought his permission to attack
Pakistan. The plan was to slice Pakistan into two separate units from its middle and Mr. Vajpayee had turned down the plan.
Operation
‘Parakram’ brought to light some bitter truths. As against a given
timeline of 48 to 72 hours for mobilization of troops, India took full
three weeks (21 days) to move Army columns from various locations across
the country. By the time India’s strike force took position along the
Indo-Pak border, the element of ‘SURPRISE’ had evaporated. Pakistan had
got all the time to bring its forces closer to the Indian border.
Operation ‘Parakram’ had failed.
Failure
of Operation ‘Parakram’ made Pakistan bolder and inspired it to carry
on more attack on Indian soil and that’s what it exactly did in 2008
when Pakistani terrorist attacked India’s financial capital Mumbai.
Making the ‘Cold Start Doctrine’ a deadly reality for Pakistan
There
is an URGENT need for a unified command integrating the Army, Navy and
the Air Force. For a successful and a decisive military doctrine, a
unified command of all the three forces is a must.
Apart
from the visible disconnect between politicians and military leaders,
there has also been an inter-services rivalry which has crippled a
series of modernization projects in the past. The story in the country’s
Military Doctrine is no different. The Indian Air Force believes that
it is a much superior force and plays a decisive role in the outcome of a
war. The Navy which does not operate within India’s territorial
boundaries but is deployed away from the countries shores always has a
different line on the terms of engagement.
India does not have a Tri-Services Military Doctrine.
A Military Doctrine for China
A
new strike force comprising of about 90,000 troops is being raised only
to counter the Chinese forces. This strike force will be deployed
predominantly in Arunachal Pradesh which China claims in its entirety.
India
has learnt many of it military lessons the hard way, particularly those
that came in the aftermath of the 1962 war with China, a military
engagement that went horribly wrong in all possible ways.
Defence
experts say that apart from the traditional theatres of war which are
Land, Sea and Air, two more dimensions have been added, SPACE and CYBER
war. Wars of the future it is said will take place in another less
visible but more lethal realm. Expect the first salvo to be fired by an
advancing army in the Cyber World followed closely by the Space
dimension.
India’s Military Transformation
In
order for India to acquire an Asian Super Power Military status, it
needs the most important task to be completed at an early date for a
viable military doctrine. At the centre of all this is the need to
establish a Tri-Services Military Command Structure to effectively use
Military Force against an adversary like Pakistan or China.
The
deadly ‘Cold Start Doctrine’ which is in existence with the Indian
Military has the capability to cut Pakistan into half within the first
72 hours and make it surrender unconditionally. Now can you imagine what
would a TRI-SERVICES Cold Start Doctrine’ do to a country like
Pakistan.
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