Prem what is AVATAR? Not Kalki I am guessing.Prem wrote:Since Indians believe in AVATAR, will the advent of AVATAR change any strategic equation wrt PRC ?

Prem what is AVATAR? Not Kalki I am guessing.Prem wrote:Since Indians believe in AVATAR, will the advent of AVATAR change any strategic equation wrt PRC ?
I agree completely.RamaY wrote: IMVHO, India can claim complete deterrence against it's enemies with 500-750 megaton capacity bums.
Moreover 3 gorges may be defended by several S300 units.NRao wrote:
Most do not understand that, specially in the nuclear context.
However, the 3 Gorges dam may be able to take a conventional hit. So, it may need a nuclear one - just for the yield.
shiv wrote:Prem wrote:Since Indians believe in AVATAR, will the advent of AVATAR change any strategic equation wrt PRC ?
Prem what is AVATAR? Not Kalki I am guessing.
Prem wrote: The idea is to introduce paradign shift in this whole wordly affair by sudden appearance in Akash . .
And then India is not 20th century Germany. None of us want India to be.RamaY wrote:Rajeshks garu,
india's true enemies lie beyond that 2000km line.
I have yet another POV, those are not THE TWO choices.shiv wrote: One view is the need to show a huge bomb.
The other view is my view. The ability to decimate anyone is unnecessary. What is needed is the ability to inflict massive suffering. .
The truth or otherwise of 1, 2 and 3 does not automatically mean that 4 and 5 will hold true.1) So when we have border patrol we deter sheep stealing by PLA
2) When we have brigades deployed we deter China from skirmishes to back up those border patrol
3) When we have a full mil machine at readiness we deter from conventional war
Nukes are nukes, "tactical" or "strategic" is semantics. "Having tactical nukes" per se means little.4) When we have tactical nukes we deter China from using those.
5) When we have KT nukes we stop limited strategic exchange.
The escalation ladder that I am talking of is to put a conceptual structure into the rough thoughts and actions.shiv wrote:For example if China nukes a couple of Air bases what are the choices that India has?
Sanku wrote:
So if things stop at tactical exchange, well and good, but nothing that I have said on how to model for deterrence assumes that..
This was WW1.samuel wrote:When I was a kid, I used to think that to win a war, the army will have to stand in a very long line and march one inch at a time, dishoom dishoom all the way till it covers the entire country. In this ju-jitsu, it is a slightly clever tactic to say that ahh, we need too many bombs to wipe out completely. Look at how many square inches there are.
Can you please enlighten me how India automatically becomes 20th-century-Germany by having ICBMs and Megaton nukes?rajeshks wrote:And then India is not 20th century Germany. None of us want India to be.RamaY wrote:Rajeshks garu,
india's true enemies lie beyond that 2000km line.
I was wondering whether we are talking about starting an arms race or having a CMD.
rajeshks wrote:And then India is not 20th century Germany. None of us want India to be.RamaY wrote:Rajeshks garu,
india's true enemies lie beyond that 2000km line.
I was wondering whether we are talking about starting an arms race or having a CMD.
We cannot discount such events.The Chinese respect those with the will to power, and they mount relentless pressure on those who wilt.
My point was, at this point of time we need to take care of China, Pak and middle-east only. Thats what I meant by 2000 km radius. Our current threat perception demands only that kind of capabilities. We dont need to build capabilities to reach north Atlantic or Pacific, at least at this point of time. My comparison with Germany was based on this. Atleast we are not going to fight NATO. We could have half a dozen boomers to take care of the worst conditions arising out of western powers. Then its my personal opinion.ramana wrote:
This shows a mindset. No wonder Talbott said they should have let INC do the tests.
The public opinion very clearly showed that it wasnt a Hindu bomb. And the KRC report and a Niagara of op-eds have also showed that the bomb was created by a national consensus.
If India equips itself to the threat perception why does that make her a throwback to Germany of the 20th cnetury? Which indoctrination school are you a product of?
So what is your real complaint?
Hi RamaY, please dont feel offended by my post. Please read my above post also. My point was simple, we need to build capabilities that our threat perception demands. Dont expand as if we are going to fight the entire world. Germany made that mistake and paid the price.RamaY wrote: Can you please enlighten me how India automatically becomes 20th-century-Germany by having ICBMs and Megaton nukes?
Could you please give me one good reason why a megaton bum on an ICBM is detrimental to India's security and image; and how it differs India's 25KT (or 45KT TN) weapon on a 2000.00000001KM IRBM.
Hint: India will not use none of these bums on its own population and they will be used against India's mortal enemies.
Also think about the scenario where we have the capabilities to attack north atlantic and there is a puppet govt in delhi supported by commies. Our future PM has not yet shown the signs of a matured politician. Obviously the govt will be pressurized to make anti-west statements. West will not only clip our wings but may be our legs too and our future economic super power bubble will burst. So we need to be careful about what we showcase.ramana wrote:The founding fathers of the doctrine also thought the same and unfortunately the others knew and foreclosed most of the options and on the last one the pressure is mounting.
You are being overconfident about what can be achieved in 10 years. Even the most optimistic projections don't show the Indian economy reaching Japan like levels for another 20+ years. And then, the HDI stats will probably continue to lag because of the continuing reliance on the Indian state to produce a miracle in that area. When it comes to the TN question, it surely is a case of kal kar so aaj kar aaj kare so ab once the threat is perceived.rajeshks wrote:Economically India is growing very fast, we need to hold our temptations to test ICBM atleast for another 10 years. If someone decides to clip our wings now through economic sanctions that can jeopardize all our plans.
Even the most optimistic projections don't show the Indian economy reaching Japan like levels for another 20+ years.
Ramana, was this comment about me?ramana wrote:Atleast you do want India to develop capabilties unlike others who want to something else.
Rajeshks garuRajeshks wrote:Regarding our capabilities, we all know that PSLV + RV technology can make a ICBM. So the capabilities are very much there. The question is when we should showcase that kind of capabilities. I think this is the wrong time to do that. Economically India is growing very fast, we need to hold our temptations to test ICBM atleast for another 10 years. If someone decides to clip our wings now through economic sanctions that can jeopardize all our plans.
I will put it in a different way. The entire world will pay the price if any of Indian interests are threatened by WMD. That should be our policy.My point was simple, we need to build capabilities that our threat perception demands. Dont expand as if we are going to fight the entire world. Germany made that mistake and paid the price.
Probably something like this was there in the minds of our leaders when we signed the nuclear deal with US. We signed deal with US but will buy uranium from France & russia for our civilian reactors. Plutonium from our military reactors plus whatever uranium we had as reserve for civilian reactors can now be used to develop some 200+ warheads. May be my wild day dream:) But then we need a minimum guarantee that our 200-300 kt device will work.samuel wrote:How about something simpler. We have no intention of using nuclear weapons, and if hit, we will respond in a way that suits us. We have approx. 250-300 250-300KT weapons, with an unknown un-assembled war-heads, which can be delivered by cruise missiles, missiles, air and sea. We are resolved to keep our arsenal ready and updated
Rest of world responded to chinese intentions by projecting threats from all directions. Russia, Japan, Taiwan, India etc etc. China would love to swallow Taiwan and Arunachal Pradesh and have enough muscle power to do that but still they can't due to threats from other directions. Moreover how much money are they wasting by preparing themselves against an attack by US/NATO. So the price they pay is too much. Compare that with India or Israel.RamaY wrote:Let’s compare India’s case with a comparable nation, China. China pursued its national interests a.k.a ICBMs, TNs, Tibet, Tiwan in parallel to its economic development, and one can see how the interconnection between these seemingly disparate strategic objectives of a nation state work.
That is why the CTBT should not be signed. Also above post is at variance with the stated expert opinion that fission weapons are adequate. Maybe they gamed for a simpler world and are frozen in minds?But then we need a minimum guarantee that our 200-300 kt device will work.
OK. Do a small exercise for me.rajeshks wrote:Rest of world responded to chinese intentions by projecting threats from all directions. Russia, Japan, Taiwan, India etc etc. China would love to swallow Taiwan and Arunachal Pradesh and have enough muscle power to do that but still they can't due to threats from other directions. Moreover how much money are they wasting by preparing themselves against an attack by US/NATO. So the price they pay is too much. Compare that with India or Israel.RamaY wrote:Let’s compare India’s case with a comparable nation, China. China pursued its national interests a.k.a ICBMs, TNs, Tibet, Tiwan in parallel to its economic development, and one can see how the interconnection between these seemingly disparate strategic objectives of a nation state work.
This is actually a double whammy, the tactic itself is not deterrence as I have argued before but merely a show of rage which then is pointless one way or other since deterrence has failed.shiv wrote: Faced with escalation by an adversary and given that we do not have a very large arsenal of very high yields - there is in my view no alternative to a resolute and ruthless devastation of anyone who escalates from conventional to nuclear.
Actually to give a well known poster credit, he started with this, a mismatch between our idea of India and the reality thereof.samuel wrote: I feel the discussion of deterrence is hampered or conditioned by these larger questions and cannot be viewed in isolation. What is the right vision for India?
Sankuji, please say more. what's reality then?Sanku wrote:Actually to give a well known poster credit, he started with this, a mismatch between our idea of India and the reality thereof.samuel wrote: I feel the discussion of deterrence is hampered or conditioned by these larger questions and cannot be viewed in isolation. What is the right vision for India?
In my understanding there is a substantial school which has made clear statements that our (the uber jingo who is the laughing stock of the better sort of old school members) vision was anyway totally divorced from reality.
So I guess in my words -- India sucks and thus we have no right for high table, these are all wet dreams from the opium pipe.
Samuel ji, let those who revel in Indian realities lay them out for you.samuel wrote:Sankuji, please say more. what's reality then?Sanku wrote:
Actually to give a well known poster credit, he started with this, a mismatch between our idea of India and the reality thereof.
In my understanding there is a substantial school which has made clear statements that our (the uber jingo who is the laughing stock of the better sort of old school members) vision was anyway totally divorced from reality.
So I guess in my words -- India sucks and thus we have no right for high table, these are all wet dreams from the opium pipe.