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Inside Operation Sindoor: How India's Pre-Planned War Drills Enabled Swift Military Precision
Inside Operation Sindoor: How India's Pre-Planned War Drills Enabled Swift Military Precision

India.com

time18-05-2025

  • Politics
  • India.com

Inside Operation Sindoor: How India's Pre-Planned War Drills Enabled Swift Military Precision

New Delhi: When the dust settled after Operation Sindoor, one question echoed across defence circles: how did India mobilise its military might so quickly and in such coordinated fashion? The answer lies not in chance, but in a series of war games and strategic foresight. Between April 18 and 21, just days before tensions erupted following the Pahalgam terror attack, India's armed forces were engaged in Exercise Haldi Ghati – a tri-services communication drill designed to test and perfect interoperability between the Army, Navy and Air Force. There was a singular goal of the exercise – ensure that all three forces could communicate with each other seamlessly, no matter the situation. At the same time, out in the Arabian Sea, the Indian Navy was executing Exercise Tropex – its theatre-level operational readiness drill involving nearly all major warships. This massive show of force was not just for training, it turned out to be a crucial asset in the weeks that followed. The April 22 Pahalgam attack, which claimed 26 civilian lives, triggered immediate action from India's top defence brass. Led by Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan, the Department of Military Affairs wasted no time. What had been simulated days earlier was now being applied to real-world deployment. The trial runs during Haldi Ghati had paid off. The forces had already rehearsed how to 'speak the same language' in battlefield conditions. In the critical two-week window between the terror attack and India's precision strikes on May 7, inter-service communication channels were tested, refined and fully activated. Simultaneously, Joint Air Defence Centres were established along the India-Pakistan border, pooling together weapon systems and command nodes from all three services. This allowed the military to build a unified air defence shield, which played a pivotal role in neutralising Pakistan's drone incursions on May 7, 8 and 9. Real-time clarity became another force multiplier. Thanks to integrated communications, commanders at defence headquarters in Delhi had a live and unbroken view of battlefield developments, capability that shaped strategic responses during the operation. Meanwhile, the Indian Navy's presence in the Arabian Sea, bolstered by Tropex, had an immediate impact on Pakistan's posture. India's forward-deployed warships covered key zones, forcing the Pakistan Navy to withdraw and station its assets closer to the Makran coast, effectively neutralising any threat from the sea. By the time Operation Sindoor was executed, India's war machine was not only activated, it was already running at full tempo. Exercises Haldi Ghati and Tropex were not just drills; they were blueprints for real-time dominance, implemented just in time.

How 'Haldi Ghati', 'Tropex' helped India deploy military rapidly for Operation Sindoor
How 'Haldi Ghati', 'Tropex' helped India deploy military rapidly for Operation Sindoor

India Gazette

time18-05-2025

  • Politics
  • India Gazette

How 'Haldi Ghati', 'Tropex' helped India deploy military rapidly for Operation Sindoor

New Delhi [India], May 18 (ANI): India was carrying out a tri services war game Exercise 'Haldi Ghati' between April 18-21 to ensure seamless communications between the three services and enable them to talk to each other without any obstacles. Around the same time, the Indian Navy was carrying out a major theatre level readiness Exercise Tropex in the Arabian Sea where almost all the major warships of the force were taking part. Right after the Pahalgam attack that took place on April 22, the Department of Military Affairs led by Chief of Defence Staff Gen Anil Chauhan went ahead with the implementation of the lessons learnt during the communications exercise, defence sources told ANI. The officials concerned carried out the trials successfully to enable a seamless communication between all three forces, the sources added. The time period in the run up to the real attack on May 7 was used fully to ensure jointness in communication. Meanwhile, the Joint Air Defence Centres of the three forces were also formed in forward areas of the India-Pakistan border where the air defence weapon systems and command and control systems of the defence forces were brought together, they said. The success in having a common seamless communication systems and air defence network was helpful in dealing with the attacks by drones by Pakistan Army on May 7,8 and 9. The jointness in communications also helped the force commanders in the headquarters in Delhi to get a clear picture of the real time situation in the battle ground. The Tropex in the Arabian Sea also helped the Indian Navy to immediately carry out deployment in every corner of the Arabian Sea forcing the Pakistan Navy to keep its assets close to the Makran coast, the sources said. The Indian Navy had all its frontline warships in the forward locations and was ready to get into action. (ANI)

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