Cumpara de la elefant.ro

Analysis of India\'s Ability to Fight a 2-Front War 2018, Paperback/Ravi Rikhye - Independently Published


Analysis of India\'s Ability to Fight a 2-Front War 2018, Paperback/Ravi Rikhye
120.99 Lei

Disponibil

(29-06-2024)
Cumpara de la elefant.ro

Produs vandut de elefant.ro

(0)

Review(s)

Verifica toate preturile pentru acest produs : click aici


Distribuie pe :


Descriere :

Cumpara analysis of india\'s independently published de calitate.
Pe yeo poti sa gasesti cel mai bun pret pentru analysis of india\'s independently published

Description The Analysis asks one question and has one answer: Can India Fight a two-front war against China and Pakistan? The answer is it cannot.
It means the authorization and funding must be made now, and the job completed in 3-years..
Immediately does not mean spread over 10-years in the future.
The remaining twelve brigades will come from existing formations.
This book argues that for a proper 2-Front defensive capability, India immediately needs eight more divisions, two corps HQs, and 12 new brigades.
Without an offensive capability, we can stabilize our fronts with 29 divisions against Pakistan and 14 against China, which will leave both free to attack again.
Should that not suffice for a 2-Front defense, 46 divisions versus China-Pakistan\'s 38? Yes - but defense, not for offensive war.
The Northeast is reasonably defended thanks to the four new divisions we raised.
For now, accept that India needs one more division for each of XV, XVI, IX, XI, and XII Corps, and three more for Ladakh-Himachal-Uttarakhand.
This is discussed in detail.
Next, because of the Government of India\'s etched-in-stone policy that ever meter of ground must be held, we need more brigades to divisions to defend than Pakistan does.
These, while unable to assume a first-line role, can provide defense in depth, follow-up forces, and cover secondary sectors.
Still further, China retains many reserve brigades.
We don\'t know yet if they will remain as divisions; nonetheless, it is best to include the, giving China 108 brigades.
Further, China still retains at least six divisions.
Its entire ground force, including airborne troops under the air force and marine brigades under the navy, amount to 90 brigade groups that are being trained to Fight in any theatre.
First, China has ended its policy of assigning formations permanently to a theatre for regional defense.
The matter is, however, more complex than a simple division count.
China can comfortably deploy 10 divisions, Pakistan has 25, including one it calls Force Command Northern Areas, and two it calls "Corps Reserve." That is 35 versus India\'s 38.
This should not be the situation on the face of it.
There are, however, severe problems on the ground.
The Air Force continues deteriorating, it can Fight a 1-front war but not two.
It can defend its "Near Seas": The Bay of Bengal, the East Arabian Sea, the Gulf of Munnar (waters between India and Sri Lanka), and the Andaman Sea.
Theoretically, India can Fight a 2-Front war on land.
Our spending is 1.6% of GDP, lower even than the 1.9% of 1962.
To negotiate from strength, we need 4%+ and to recover our lost territories we need 6%.
For a strong defensive posture, we need to spend the 3 - 3.5% of GDP we spent 1963-1990, both to modernize and to raise eight more divisions that is the minimum needed.
If we tried to defend both fronts, we would have lost both.
If we chose to defend Punjab, we would have lost the North East Frontier Agency, now called Arunachal.
It takes little imagination to foresee what would have happened if 1962 had become 2-front: Pakistan would have walked over Punjab, perhaps all the way to Delhi, and we would have lost Kashmir too.
And we know how that ended.
Today spending is down to 1.56% of GDP, lower even than in 1962.
The next problem is equally straightforward: The Government of India is determined not to spend money on defense.
The solution, fortunately, is straightforward: build a 2-Front war capability.
Because of the China-Pakistan alliance, we cannot Fight even a one-front war: engaging in a war with either adversary runs the risk of weakening the other front, leaving it open to exploitation.
Description The Analysis asks one question and has one answer: Can India Fight a two-front war against China and Pakistan? The answer is it cannot


Uneori, aceste descrieri pot contine inadvertente. De asemenea, imaginea este informativa si poate contine accesorii neincluse in pachetele standard.
logo

  • Produsele tale vor fi disponibile pentru toti clientii nostri, in fiecare zi, pe yeo.ro
  • Vor fi promovate pe retele de socializare si bloguri
  • De asemenea, vom crea continut video pentru 20 de produse