India is ready to take on Pakistan for its alleged backing of terrorists, but can it take on the country militarily? Military options exist but exercising them isn't that simple, say experts.
India's military options against Pakistan include:
Strategists say any military action should aim at achieving a political impact. "Two or three Mirage 2000s (fighter jets) go and drop a bomb on the bridge on the Sutlej River—the bridge on Sutlej, a powerhouse in Gilgit—so that the people in Pakistan think that this (backing terrorism) is costing us. The elite in Pakistan then have to put pressure and say enough is enough," says strategic analyst Air Commodore (retired) Jasjit Singh.
But India will have to plan what to do after a military strike. Public opinion is exerting tremendous pressure on the government to be seen as imposing costs on Pakistan, but if India uses military power in anger it risks falling into a trap laid by those in Pakistan who use terrorism as statecraft.
“Some want India-Pakistan tension to increase and in this process the Pakistan army gets back into the saddle. Ashfaq Kayani (Pakistan military chief) then has every justification to say Musharraf II,” says strategic Analyst Air Vice Marshal Kapil Kak
Experts reckon that military force ought to be used only as the last resort and efforts mounted first to exert international pressure to make support for terror very costly for Pakistan.
source : IBN Live
India doesn't rule out military option against Pak
India's military options against Pakistan include:
- Surgical air strikes not just on infrastructure which supports terrorism, but also on politico-economic targets.
- The use of artillery firepower to address alleged Pakistan Army support to infiltration and terror camps close to the Line of Control.
- Commando operations to hit out at critical vulnerabilities of the Pakistan military and the Inter-Services Intelligence, which is suspected to have trained the terrorists who attacked Mumbai last week.
Strategists say any military action should aim at achieving a political impact. "Two or three Mirage 2000s (fighter jets) go and drop a bomb on the bridge on the Sutlej River—the bridge on Sutlej, a powerhouse in Gilgit—so that the people in Pakistan think that this (backing terrorism) is costing us. The elite in Pakistan then have to put pressure and say enough is enough," says strategic analyst Air Commodore (retired) Jasjit Singh.
But India will have to plan what to do after a military strike. Public opinion is exerting tremendous pressure on the government to be seen as imposing costs on Pakistan, but if India uses military power in anger it risks falling into a trap laid by those in Pakistan who use terrorism as statecraft.
“Some want India-Pakistan tension to increase and in this process the Pakistan army gets back into the saddle. Ashfaq Kayani (Pakistan military chief) then has every justification to say Musharraf II,” says strategic Analyst Air Vice Marshal Kapil Kak
Experts reckon that military force ought to be used only as the last resort and efforts mounted first to exert international pressure to make support for terror very costly for Pakistan.
source : IBN Live
India doesn't rule out military option against Pak
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