Kargil, Pahalgam and a revamp of the security strategy, Pg 6.
As India commemorates the 26th anniversary of the Kargil War (1999), parallels are drawn with the recent Operation Sindoor (2025), highlighting India’s evolved security posture against cross-border terrorism.
The Kargil War (May–July 1999) marked a turning point in India-Pakistan relations and defence preparedness.
A recent terror attack in Pahalgam (April 2025) by Pakistan-based groups killed 26 civilians.
In response, India launched Operation Sindoor (May 7–10, 2025), striking 20+ military and terror bases in Pakistan.
Reports suggest a BrahMos missile hit on the Nur Khan Base damaged a nuclear storage facility.
Pakistan requested a ceasefire within 96 hours, echoing the Kargil conflict outcome.
Post-Kargil reforms include the creation of DIA, NTRO, NSCS, and appointment of CDS.
India’s modern defence capabilities reflect a shift from strategic restraint to deterrent retaliation.
Detailed Insights:
Kargil War Legacy: Exposed intelligence failures, poor high-altitude warfare logistics, and lack of joint command structure, prompting institutional reforms.
Modernization Drive: India now prioritizes indigenous defence production, evident in acquisitions like Rafale jets, S-400 systems, Apache helicopters, and BrahMos missiles under ‘Make in India’.
Cold Start Doctrine: Developed post-Kargil for swift retaliatory strikes without crossing the nuclear threshold.
Limited War under Nuclear Overhang: Kargil demonstrated that calibrated military operations are possible between nuclear states.
Terror Response Evolution: Initial restraint post-terror attacks (2001 Parliament, 2008 Mumbai) shifted after Uri (2016) and Balakot (2019), with precise cross-border strikes.
Operation Sindoor Precedent: Marks a new deterrent threshold—rapid, overwhelming retaliation against non-state provocations backed by state support.
Strategic Clarity: India is now sending a clear signal that cross-border terrorism will be met with kinetic retaliation, not diplomatic restraint.
Concepts Involved:
Cold Start Doctrine: A military strategy enabling India to launch limited, rapid offensives without triggering full-scale war.
Precision Strike Capability: Use of accurate long-range weapons like BrahMos missiles to neutralize high-value targets.
High-Altitude Warfare: Combat operations conducted in mountainous terrain (e.g., Kargil), requiring specialized logistics and equipment.