India’s warmongering is at the peak and the India Army has recalibrated its tactics along the LoC over the past few days and has achieved a “dynamic” operational posture, allowing it to exercise various “military options at a short notice”, Indian newspaper The Hindu quoting defence sources reported the other day.
They said the Indian Army is in high “operational readiness”, a development following the Uri attack in which 18 soldiers were killed.
“We have achieved an operational posture which will allow us to exercise various military options at a short notice,” The Hindu quoting the sources said.
IAF’s premier operational command along the western front has gone on a high alert with a major exercise across all its 18 airbases and other installations from Srinagar to Bikaner, which comes amid heightened tensions with Pakistan in the aftermath of the attack on the Army camp in Uri.
The primary objective of “Exercise Talon” involving the crucial Western Air Command (WAC) is to “improve operational preparedness and air defence” in the entire stretch from J&K to Rajasthan, Indian media reported quoting defence sources.
Though the four-day war-games are largely defensive in nature, with combat air patrols and PAD-GD (passive air defence and ground defence) operations, it’s significant that WAC had conducted a similar Talon exercise just about a week before the terror attack on the Uri Army camp on September 18.
Repeating the intensive manoeuvres within the same month is highly unusual, said sources, adding that it showed that IAF was leaving nothing to chance at a time when Pakistan’s F-16s and other fighters have been taking to the skies on a regular basis across the border, apart from practising landing on highways.
The Indian Army, of course, has been refining different contingency plans in conjunction with the IAF after the Uri attack to further synergise the integrated air-land fighting machinery, even as the force has also steadily upgraded its “readiness” all along the 778 km line of control with additional troops, “forward movement” of ammunition and fuel dumps and the like, according to Times of India.
There have also been a flurry of top-level military meetings over the last one week among the different top commanders as well as detailed presentations to PM Narendra Modi, defence minister Manohar Parrikar and national security advisor Ajit Doval in the military operations directorate in South Block, the newspaper said.
While WAC chief Air Marshal S B Deo has been visiting the different airbases under his command, chiefs of the Army’s South-Western Command (Jaipur), Western Command (Chandimandir) and Northern Command (Udhampur) too have been reviewing their areas of responsibility.