Exactly. However, I would advise keeping one eye out towards the Myanmar airspace beyond the Chaukan pass hills in the extreme east. Basically, speaking, the low altitude airbases spread beyond that region are too tempting to ignore on the basis of not overflying Myanmar for political reasons. It brings more PLAAF firepower to bear on us and spreads the IAF even thinner in that region that what they already are. Add to that issue the question whether we would overfly Bangladesh or not if the situation in the eastern skies gets desperate.Rahul M wrote:they would keep their ground forces under the protection of their own simple but massive AA assets. I'm not talking about LR/MR-SAMs. MANPADS, AA guns, even small arms are notoriously effective against low flying a/c in a mountainous terrain. they would use their real high performance aircraft(flankers/flanker copies/J-10) to give some kind of air cover against our high flying a/c. we could see some counter value attacks against high value targets but that would be the extent of it. no CAS ability to speak of if the conflict is in India.
I have to ask: Just how much damage do you think a single BM targeted for example on the weak road network that tethers Tawang to the south will be able to cause and how much time would be required for the road to be reopened should that happen?But the BMs/CMs would get used against high value targets in India, like FABs, field HQs, ammo and fuel dumps, rail yards etc.
most certainly true. they can ill afford to use these against all and sundry. the need to rationalize targeting would be a major planning headache for them, IMO.
How many parallel roads exist so that if one road get's blocked for some time, the other branches can compensate?
Given the precarious roads leading to Tawang, just how much time would be required to bring in repair vehicles and equipment to bring the road to operational status again? A day? more?
And if the above is known, what is the frequency of missiles (BM/CM) might be required per day to ensure the logistical train never reopens for days on end? What if this tactic is used just after a surprise attack or the spillover of border skirmishes to ensure the Indian reinforcements to the region never reach the forward areas in time? And if that is the case, can the IAF compensate by providing emergency airlift to make up for the delays?
Once you start looking at the numbers to the above questions, you will begin to see why the BM/CM saturation attack option is such a tempting thought process.
Of course, then you can ask in return: can't we do the same to the Chinese? And to answer that look at the above questions again from a Chinese POV and you will see why or why not.