
India's recent activity in the border areas has given the outside world a sense of wanting to regain advantage of the border areas at any cost. India did not hesitate to buy the US military's helicopter gunship at 3 times the market price, with a unit price of 100 million US dollars, which is more expensive than the F-35A stealth fighter. The Indian army deployed most of its fighters to the first line of the plateau border, and also built a large number of ammunition warehouses and material and equipment warehouses on the front line. The Indian military also urgently purchased a large number of artillery and drone equipment from the United States, Britain, Russia, Israel and other countries, and also deployed to the front-line border.
The Indian army also dispatched nearly 10,000 trucks and 8,000 camels to transport various materials, avoiding a recurrence of last year's large number of casualties in the shortage of personnel. It can be said that India is very high-profile in terms of equipment purchase, deployment and preparation of various materials. The Indian army has received strong support from the US military this time, and the United States promised to sell more weapons to the Indian army, and is willing to stop the work of materials and maintenance services to the Indian army. According to reports, the Indian sappers are building 61 border strategic roads with a total length of 3323.57 kilometers to ensure that the transportation lines can be smoothed as soon as possible.
Judging from the deployment of the Indian army, Indian fighters are mainly deployed at first-line airfields close to the plateau, and the Indian army's troops, artillery, armored vehicles, radars, and material warehouses have all been deployed in valleys close to water sources. As can be seen from satellite maps, in many valleys known as Death Valley, there are densely packed with indian equipment and supplies. Along the rivers of some plateaus, the Indian army showed a long snake array deployment, the formation was very narrow and long, the defense was very difficult, and it was particularly vulnerable to artillery fodder.
The US business think tank recently publicly published a reminder that the Indian army's front-line airfields and a large number of equipment deployments are for deterrence purposes and lack the necessary practical considerations. The US think tank pointed out that more than 60 percent of the Indian warplanes are deployed in front-line airfields, and these airports are within the range of the other side's artillery, and once they fire, the other side can completely use the artillery salvo to directly destroy the Indian warplanes at the airport. The think tank pointed out that although the Gust of Indian Troops is deployed in airfields farther away from the front line, those airports are also within the range of long-range fire, which does not ensure safety.
The US think tank pointed out that the troops and equipment deployed by the Indian army in a large number of Death Valleys are completely within the scope of cannon fodder, and as long as the artillery is intensively bombed, more than 80% of the Indian army's valley equipment may be destroyed. The US think tank reminded that although the current front-line deployment of the Indian army is a bit aggressive, it is not very safe, and once a large number of fighters and equipment are fired, they may become cannon fodder in situ and will not play any role at all. The United States has always supported India's exhaustive military force, because India has purchased a large amount of weapons and equipment from the US military at a high price, and the US arms dealers have made a lot of money.
At this time, the US think tank issued a document reminding India, but also telling the Indian military not to adopt a similar deployment method. Although the US military's reminder is very accurate and reasonable, the Indian military's support capabilities in the front line are limited, and if the equipment is deployed in a decentralized manner, then India will not be able to support so many fighters, equipment and troops. In order to achieve the effect of a large number of people and ensure that the pressure on support is reduced, India can only choose this centralized deployment method.