I'm now looking from India's angle, it has a number of options - it's focusing primarily on psychological warfare techniques.
The relationship between India and Pakistan has always been a bit of a powder keg (up and down), but as of May 2026, the temperature has been turned up several notches.
A quick look at the history and why I think the current mobilisation is largely a psychological game.
A Brief History of Mobilisation
Since 1947, the two have fought four major wars (1947, 1965, 1971, 1996 and 2025).
The Old Pattern:
In the past, mobilisation meant massive tank divisions moving to the border, like Operation Parakram in 2001, which lasted nearly a year without a shot being fired.
The New Pattern:
Since the 2019 Balakot strikes and the more recent Operation Sindoor in 2025, India has moved away from Total Mobilisation (which takes weeks) to Proactive Readiness. They now keep high-tech strike units permanently ready to go at a moment's notice.
Current Mobilisation (May 2026)
Right now, you aren't seeing a classic invasion force, but rather a high-intensity presence:
Exercise Vayu Shakti 2026:
In February, the Indian Air Force massed 120 aircraft—including Rafales and Su-30MKIs—just miles from the border at Pokhran. It was a massive flex of muscle meant to show they can strike anywhere in Pakistan with precision.
Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs aka Cold Start doctrine):
India has been positioning these smaller, faster, and more lethal units along the border. They don’t look as big as old-school army divisions, but they are designed to hit hard and fast before the international community can even call for a ceasefire.
Is it Psychological Warfare?
Yes. I believe, India is currently playing a sophisticated mind game with Islamabad for a few reasons:
1. The Two-Front Trap:
By keeping the pressure high on the eastern border, India is forcing Pakistan to keep troops there. This is a challenge/nightmare for Pakistan because they are currently tied up in an actual war with the Afghan Taliban on their western border. India knows that if Pakistan moves troops west to fight the Taliban, the gap in the east becomes a tempting target.
2. Economic Bleeding:
Every time India moves a few regiments or flies a hundred jets near the border, Pakistan has to match it. With India’s budget being eight times larger, they can afford the fuel bill for these games much longer than Pakistan can.
3. The False Flag Narrative:
By constantly being ready, India keeps the Pakistani leadership in a state of high anxiety. Every small skirmish or border incident is viewed through the lens of: Is this the big one?
The Bottom Line
India's current mobilisation is less about starting a war tomorrow and more about strategic exhaustion. By using aggressive exercises and proactive rhetoric, New Delhi is trying to burn through Pakistan’s military resources and mental bandwidth without having to fire a single bullet.
Essentially, it's like a high-stakes poker game where India is betting its massive bankroll can eventually force Pakistan to fold.
For Pakistan, it needs to maintain it's own psychological pressure - the Indians know that the Pakistanis are also very wreckless - for instance the massive counter strike on India last year resulted in them quickly agreeing to a ceasefire (as things were rapidly escalating dangerously to a nuclear exchange).
They also know that the Pakistani have not been deterred and on the whole have showed more mettle and stronger fight in them.
India, despite it's massive defence budget have serious constraints in its air force numbers and other areas.
The testing of numerous Pakistani missiles, satellite, submarine etc...has actually making Pakistan more stronger than before - hence deterrence achieved so far. The only hurt India and other can do to Pakistan will not be external but more likely internal - this where Pakistan needs to be in top and take adequate measures to nullify this kind of threats.