The Maritime Signalling After Operation Sindoor — India–Pakistan Naval Posturing and Strategic Shifts

Context

Following the India–Pakistan standoff in May 2025, codenamed Operation Sindoor, the strategic focus has gradually shifted from airspace tensions to the maritime theatre. A series of naval deployments, deterrent statements, and capability demonstrations by both countries reflect an evolving maritime competition and recalibration of deterrence postures in the Arabian Sea.

Key Developments

  1. India’s Maritime Posture
  • Defence Minister’s Warning:
    On October 2, 2025, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh warned Pakistan of a “resounding response that could alter its history and geography” if misadventures occurred in the Sir Creek area — a disputed maritime boundary zone.
    Pakistan has reportedly been expanding its military infrastructure in the region since 2023.
  • Naval Doctrine Shift:
    • Admiral Dinesh Tripathi, Chief of Naval Staff, stated in August that the Indian Navy would be the first to act in any future conflict, indicating a forward deterrent doctrine.
    • Operation Sindoor was designed to test and demonstrate this naval readiness posture, hinting at a more assertive maritime role.
  • Capability Inductions & Partnerships:
    • Commissioning of INS Nistar, India’s first indigenously designed diving support vessel.
    • First joint patrols with the Philippines in the South China Sea, strengthening Indo-Pacific maritime cooperation.
    • These moves are aligned with India’s broader Indo-Pacific strategy, countering China’s naval presence in Karachi and Gwadar.
  1. Pakistan’s Naval Signalling
  • Dispersal of Assets:
    Post-Sindoor, Pakistan relocated vessels from Karachi to Gwadar to reduce vulnerability to Indian strikes.
  • New Platforms & Missiles:
    • Commissioned the Hangor-class submarine PNS Mangro (Chinese-built).
    • Tested the P282 ship-launched ballistic missile.
    • Conducted live-fire drills and overlapping NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) zones near India — sometimes within 60 nautical miles of Indian waters.
  • Strategic Intent:
    Pakistan’s aim is to project naval survivability, complicate Indian operational planning, and reinforce its A2/AD (Anti-Access/Area-Denial) capabilities in the Arabian Sea.

Strategic Analysis

  1. Escalation Control at Sea
  • Maritime domains are harder to de-escalate compared to air skirmishes.
  • Even limited naval exchanges risk crossing the war threshold, as memories of 1971’s Operation Trident and Python still define Pakistan’s strategic anxiety.
  • Both navies are testing deterrence without triggering open conflict — a delicate balance between visibility and restraint.
  1. Shifting Deterrence Equations
  • India retains numerical and geographical advantages, but faces modernisation lag in parts of its fleet.
  • Pakistan’s Chinese and Turkish-built vessels — with advanced radars, EW systems, and missile versatility — are narrowing the gap.
  • India’s earlier dominance, symbolised by 1971’s decisive naval campaign, can no longer be taken for granted.
  1. External Dimension
  • China’s presence in Karachi and Gwadar under the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) framework adds a PLAN (People’s Liberation Army Navy) dimension.
  • Türkiye’s collaboration on Babur-class corvettes adds a third-party variable to Pakistan’s naval growth.
  • These partnerships internationalize the Arabian Sea dynamics, complicating India’s traditional assumption of maritime superiority.
  1. Strategic Drift & Cognitive Gap
  • Both militaries risk operating under outdated assumptions from earlier crises (Kargil 1999, Balakot 2019).
  • With the introduction of hypersonic missiles, drones, and AI-based surveillance, escalation ladders are shifting faster than doctrinal adaptation.
  • The maritime theatre is now the key testing ground for this evolving strategic psychology.

 

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