Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cold Start is a military doctrine that was developed by the Indian Armed Forces for use in a possible war with Pakistan. [1] It involves the various branches of India's military conducting offensive operations as part of unified battlegroups.
Prior to Independence and India becoming a republic, Jawaharlal Nehru contemplated the path the country would take in world affairs. [14] In 1946, Nehru, as a part of the cabinet of the Interim Government of India, said during a radio broadcast; "we propose, as far as possible, to keep away from the power politics of groups, aligned against one another, which have led in the past to world wars ...
India has recently adopted a new war doctrine known as "Cold Start" and its military has conducted exercises several times since then based on this doctrine. "Cold Start" involves joint operations between India's three services and integrated battle groups for offensive operations.
Cold start can refer to: Cold start (automotive), the starting of a vehicle engine at a low temperature relative to its operating temperature. Cold start (computing), a startup problem in computer information systems. Cold Start (military doctrine), a military doctrine developed by the Indian Armed Forces.
India, with the adoption of the Cold Start Doctrine, has come up with independent brigade groups a little larger in composition than a task force.It is composition mix of all elements for specific war purpose against Pakistan.
This was the first field implementation of such a formation. The new restructuring will further reduce the 72-hours response time determined in the Cold Start Doctrine to under 24 hours. [14] As of May 2022, the IBGs were test-bedded by IX Corps and further validated by the XVII Corps.
Jonas Savimbi, a key Reagan Doctrine ally in Angola during the Cold War, meeting European Parliament deputies in 1989. War between western supported movements and the communist MPLA government in Angola, and Cuban and South African military intervention there, led to a decades-long civil war that cost up to one million lives. [168]
Mutual assured destruction (MAD) is a doctrine of military strategy and national security policy which posits that a full-scale use of nuclear weapons by an attacker on a nuclear-armed defender with second-strike capabilities would result in the complete annihilation of both the attacker and the defender. [1]