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Many details here that should be analyzed.
'We were ready to punish Pakistan'
Colonel Anil Athale (retd) | March 01, 2005 | 14:07 IST
The December 13 attack on the Indian Parliament by Pakistan-backed Lashkar-e-Tayiba terrorists brought the subcontinent to the brink of war.
Despite the campaign of disinformation promoted by the Indian doves, everyone knows the Lashkar is not a secret organisation.
Headquartered at a sprawling campus at Muridke, near Lahore, its annual rallies are attended by a million people. The outfit gets donations from across Pakistan on Muslim festive occasions, and is known to have close relations with the Pakistan army.
{Immediate cause for the deployment}
Thanks to the bravery of the guards at Parliament and a slice of luck (the car bomb failed to detonate), the attack that aimed at killing/taking hostage a large number of MPs failed, though the vice-president had a narrow escape.
This failure saved the subcontinent from war. It is doubtful if war could have been averted if they had succeeded in their mission.
In the next 48 hours, India ordered the mobilisation of its armed forces and began to move them to battle stations on the Indo-Pak border. The operation was codenamed Parakram.
Under normal circumstances, the armed forces expect at least 7 days notice before being ordered to deploy for war.
{Indicates response time for major decisions- OODA loop. Hence the Cold Start doctrine to reduce the overall OODA loop.}
That is the job of India's external intelligence agency RAW (Research and Analysis Wing). But this time, both RAW and the Intelligence Bureau (responsible for internal security) were caught napping, and the armed forces had to move without any warning.
{Once again. The KRC reforms were only of an organizational nature. I think its IB and local police job to monitor terrorists. The RAW should have expected some thing after the J&K Legislative Assy attack in October 2001 to relieve pressure from jihadi elements. This inability to plan for six sigma events is a constant problem with heirarchial organizations.}
India's major strike formations, including the armoured units, are located at least 800 km away from the border. Soldiers stationed in the east are even further away.
{One outcome is the stationing of such formations closer to the borders.}
The Navy too needs that kind of time to move to battle stations.
The Air Force can be ready relatively quickly, but even they have to reposition maintenance units as per battle plans.
In the best of circumstances, this move to the border and preparations last anything between two to three weeks. Thus it would be fair to assume that the armed forces were ready and raring to go only by the first week of January 2002.
Parakram cost put at Rs 6,500 crore
Neutralising Pakistan's nukes
To be fair, the attack on the Indian Parliament apparently came as a surprise to Pakistan as well. The immediate Indian deployment and threat of conventional attack caught Pakistan on the wrong foot.
{Why didnt the TSP expect Indian mobilization? Because they thought the presence of US troops offered them immunity. The terrorist strike was a signal to the jihadis that they still would take care of India even though they were emasculated by the US presence. The non-mobilization was to provide plausible deniablity. What would the sequence of events be if the Indian leadership suffered massive casualties? Chai in Delhi dreams?}
Despite its advantage of shorter lines of communication to the border, Pakistan was slow to react to the Indian move. Since India initiated the move towards conflict, it is to be assumed that Indian nuclear weapons were also kept in state of readiness.
Crucial info/insight.}
While India's stated policy is of no first use, it does not mean we have to wait for the first Pakistani nuke to fall on an Indian city. With satellite and MiG-25 based surveillance in place, India must have been closely monitoring the movement of Pakistani nukes.
Given that Pakistan has a smaller arsenal and also a small geographical area for its deployment, the only chance for Pakistan to use its nuclear weapons is to launch them in a surprise attack without warning and then hope to stall the Indian retaliatory strike with a combination of world pressure for restraint and its own defensive preparations.
In the case of Operation Parakram, as India moved first, a surprise attack was not possible. World pressure now mounted on Pakistan to observe nuclear restraint.
With a huge presence on Pakistani soil and in the Arabian Sea nearby, the Americans were in good position to prevent Pakistan from using its nuclear weapons.
India thus achieved a major success by virtually neutralising Pakistani nukes and gained space to fight a conventional war on its own terms, where it has a degree of superiority.
{Rather India calculated that the US presence was a disincentive for TSP to use nukes.}
According to Major General Ashok Mehta (retired) the Indians were ready by January 7, 2002, while Pakistan was still off balance.
{Wasnt this the time Lt. Gen K. Vij made his moves with 2 Corps and made the TSP send SOS to US?}
Op Parakram: The balance shifts
It is likely that to stall the Indian offensive, around that time, Pakistan may have made some moves to ready its nuclear weapons for use. In response to this then Indian Army chief, General S Padmanabhan, went public with an explicit threat on January 11, 2002.
'As long as I am alive, if nuclear weapons are used against India, or Indian forces, or the forces in the seas, or our economic interests, the perpetrator of the particular outrage will be punished, punished so severely that his continuation in any fray will be in doubt,' the general said.
{Any one recall his exact words about having the enemy by the tail?}
Indian generals rarely speak, and when they do, the Pakistanis take them seriously.
It appears that the general-speak had the desired effect, and Pakistan lost the nuclear initiative.
General Musharraf's speech on January 12, 2002, accepting some of the Indian demands may well have resulted from this nuclear standoff.
It is obvious that India was not satisfied with Musharraf's concessions. There also may have been a school of thought that this time around India must act.
India was on brink of war twice
India's options
January/February is the ideal time for India to act against Pakistan. Due to the snow bound passes of the Himalayas, the chances of Chinese intervention are minimised. This also enables India to thin out the troops from that border.
But despite the rhetoric of 'Aar Paar Ki ladai' (decisive battle) it seems clear that India may well have wanted to only 'punish' Pakistan, and not destroy it.
{Change in war aims?}
There are several options on the J&K border to carry out a limited offensive.
Attacks in the direction of Muzzafarabad or Skardu are well within Indian capability. But doing this could invite a retaliation elsewhere. The Indian deployment all along the border was essentially to forestall this possibility.
Army planned offensive in PoK in January?
The most likely scenario worked out in 1987 (during the Brass Tacks exercise) was a Pakistani counterthrust in the Sialkot area. To respond to this India could use its superior tank force to advance in Sindh and cut Pakistan into two.
These moves and countermoves as well as behind the scene diplomacy went on throughout January and February.
With the neutralisation of Pak nukes and the readiness to deal with conventional threat in Punjab by February 2002, the Indian army was well set to 'punish' Pakistan on the Kashmir front.
But then Godhra happened.
{ Kaluchak happened later in May 2002}
Image: Uday Kuckian
Next: Did Godhra Save Pakistan