Intentar ORO - Gratis
N-EQUALISER ASIDE, HOW CLOSE IS PAK MILITARY TO INDIA'S?
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
|September 05, 2025
Comparing defence expenditures doesn't give a clear picture. If pension spend is taken out for India and off-budget support added for Pakistan, the difference narrows in the short term
The true balance of power between two adversaries is decided long before hostilities commence on the battlefield—in the quiet interplay of capability, intent, and the means to sustain both. The question, therefore, is can Pakistan sustain a claim to conventional parity with India despite a headline defence-spending ratio that heavily favours New Delhi? This demands an evidence-based answer that treats money as necessary, but not sufficient, for military power.
After the tit-for-tat nuclear tests between India and Pakistan in May 1998, the strategic balance of power in South Asia was frozen in perpetuity. Pakistan's ability to claim conventional deterrence parity with India, despite a defence budget several times smaller, rests on a composite of force-design choices, external assistance and technology transfers, selective modernisation, and a calibrated deterrence architecture.
The claim is not that Pakistan equals India in absolute numbers, or in the full spectrum of capability; rather, it is that Islamabad seeks 'effective parity', not 'numerical parity'—the ability to negate India's advantages at decisive points that matter to the political outcome of war.
The resource reality at the core argues against any such parity. Pakistan's 2025-26 defence allocation is about $9 billion, while India's is around $78-81 billion. The headline ratio, however, conceals two essential accounting adjustments. Firstly, India's figure is typically inclusive of pensions and other miscellaneous expenses that account for around a third. Excluding them, the Indian discretionary envelope falls to $54-55 billion—around six times Pakistan's, not nine times.
Esta historia es de la edición September 05, 2025 de The New Indian Express Kozhikode.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE The New Indian Express Kozhikode
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
A Phoenix for a Burning Nation
The narrative brings to life a quiet hero who rises from his own pyre to rekindle India's moral flames
3 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
Gujarat's ₹10K crore agri relief package ignites political storm
Relief formula 'flawed': BKS state general secretary RK Patel slammed the relief model, questioned how the same relief could apply to both 25% and 100% crop losses
1 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
Reinterpreting the Tree of Life
With the help of master artisans, two women are reviving palampores through embroidery in an effort to portray it not as ornamentation, but art
2 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
'Cong fighting same battle that Mahatma had fought'
Priyanka claims BJP, allies resorting to 'vote theft' to stay in power
1 min
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
A Story of Her Own
The first woman in Bhutan to be published in English, Kunzang Choden, in her memoir Telling Me My Stories, gives an account of belonging, loss, and displacement, against the backdrop of the rapid modernisation in the country in the middle decades of the twentieth century.
2 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
India for faster emission cuts by developed nations
INDIA has reiterated its firm stand on climate justice and equitable global action at the COP30 Leaders' Summit in Belem, Brazil.
1 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
The Great Wall of India
A new collection of wallpapers takes inspiration from the cityscape of Varanasi
1 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
A Fantasy Called Chanakya
There is absolutely no historical evidence that a man called Chanakya ever lived during Mauryan times (300 BC) or that he guided Chandragupta Maurya to kingship.
3 mins
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
PM to launch hydro project during 2-day Bhutan visit...
PRIME Minister Narendra Modi is set to visit Bhutan on a state visit on November 11-12, during which he will inaugurate the 1,020 MW Punatsangchhu-II Hydroelectric Project along with Bhutan king Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck.
1 min
November 09, 2025
The New Indian Express Kozhikode
SHOOTING STAR WHO LIT UP SCREENS & LIVES
NE of the best times I have had at the movies was watching a newly-restored print of Ritwik Ghatak's 1958 film Ajantrik (known variously in English as The Mechanical Man or The Pathetic Fallacy) at the 2019 Pingyao International Film Festival in China.
2 mins
November 09, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
