India’s Emerging Security Challenge: One-Front Reinforced War

GS2 – International Relations

Context

Lt. Gen. Rahul R. Singh has confirmed active Chinese backing of Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, indicating a shift from a two-front war to a “one-front reinforced war” paradigm.

Nature of the Threat:
  • Not a conventional two-front war, but a Pakistan-led conflict with Chinese technological and diplomatic reinforcement—below the threshold of conventional escalation.
Key Features of Collusion:
  • Military Assets:
    • Pakistan used Chinese J-10C fighters, PL-15 missiles, HQ-9 air defence.
  • ISR Support:
    • Real-time coordination via Chinese ISR systems and BeiDou satellite navigation.
  • Cyber and Drone Warfare:
    • Tactics influenced by Chinese cyber and UAV strategies.
  • Information Warfare:
    • Chinese media amplified Pakistani narratives to sway global opinion.
  • Diplomatic Shielding:
    • China avoided condemning terror attacks and backed Pakistan at UNSC.
Strategic Implications for India:
  • Deterrence Challenge:
    • Blurs the line between grey-zone tactics and full-scale war.
  • Doctrine Shift:
    • Rising importance of network-centric warfare, ISR, drones, and EW.
  • Active Two-Front Reality:
    • Despite Eastern Ladakh disengagement, India now faces threats on both LoC and LAC.
  • China’s Defence PR:
    • Showcasing weapons in conflict zones aids global arms sales.
Way Forward:
  • Policy Realignment: Move from reactive posture to anticipatory deterrence.
  • Integrated Strategy: Coordinate between MEA, MoD, DRDO, and SFC.
  • Defence Manufacturing Push: Accelerate Make in India in UAVs, EW systems, satellite tech, anti-drone defence.
  • Budgetary Support:
    • Increase defence spending (currently 13% of central budget, down from 17.1% in 2014–15).
    • Prioritize ISR, missile defence, cyber warfare.

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