Hopefully Pessimistic
Registered Member
Seems like the boj isn't even doing anything in Balochistan at all now, they aren't even trying just letting them go on a rampage no change in strategy.
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Seems like the boj isn't even doing anything in Balochistan at all now, they aren't even trying just letting them go on a rampage no change in strategy.
Both David Galula and Kitson both wrote extensively for insurgencies in home.All of these were focused on a very specific counter insurgency context which were US & European powers on expeditionary foreign lands.
Do you know the condition of Sindh?Both David Galula and Kitson both wrote extensively for insurgencies in home.
You are dead wrong about some of pakistan's amy initiatives to control insurgencies. There is a reason why there is a calm in Sindh which was once at the verge of collapse.
It's not my problem if you don't understand the full context, won't read the whole conversation, and just click on reply.
Seems like the boj isn't even doing anything in Balochistan at all now, they aren't even trying just letting them go on a rampage no change in strategy.
ChatGPT generated postDo you understand the basic physics and logistics of fighting a foreign-funded asymmetric war, or are you just looking for a reason to criticize ?
Blowing up an isolated bridge or hitting soft targets in remote areas isn't a sign of military victory. It is the textbook definition of guerrilla desperation. Sabotage does not equal territorial control.
Look at the actual data. Balochistan is a massive, unforgiving landscape covering roughly 347,000 square kilometers. It makes up nearly 44% of Pakistan’s landmass but holds only about 6% of its population.
Guarding every single inch of asphalt, every remote bridge, and every pipeline across thousands of kilometers of empty desert is logistically impossible for any army on earth. Especially when dealing with militants backed by regional hostile powers who melt back across international borders.
The Pakistan Army holding the line against a multi-front proxy war across a massive, underpopulated territory isn’t "giving up." It is a massive, ongoing logistical feat.
But hey, why let geographic reality and military history get in the way of a good tweet? Let's just blindly criticize them anyway because our favorite political leader told us to, and thinking for ourselves is hard.
Busy elsewhere l reckonWhy has no one spoken about the Taliban deal with Russia?
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