kubotabx23
Registered Member
Now, on the flipside the Indians managed to sow fear into the civilian population of many of your areas because their drones hit random places. Women were scared, children were scared especially in the urban areas which are considered safe like Lahore.
However, in places like ISB or Karachi where Suicide attacks or bombs are common there were people who came out and were actually enjoying cups of tea because they have enough trauma and experience of death that they simply found the Indian efforts an evening show.
Not saying that was the right response but that is essentially what is "Battle hardening". In other words a Pakistani trooper having gone through hell against TTP, comrades shot and killed - isolated in an ambush, hungry and thirsty but having to hold it down to avoid being spotted by a sniper - that person will quietly sit in their foxhole in the east and do their job until their fate while a non-hardened Indian counterpart will panic, run , abandon posts and complain of being hungry.
Which is why ironically, the constant flare ups along the LoC are actually good for India along with tough deployments compared to the rather calm environment they face today.
No kidding - terrorist attacks were so common in Peshawar, both witnessing and on the receiving end, that it became normalized to my cousins. It was to the extent where any bomb blast wouldn't really scare them anymore. Even during the recent May conflict, while talking to my Pupo to ask if all was well - I could hear the anti-air at the time (against the drones) - she was literally having tea and was like yeah, just another day.
It's a tragedy, but also very nation-building.
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