I have been fooling around with a custom AI model for a few months. As a curiosity I modelled a short high speed clash like Op Sindoor.
The results are below. To keep things honest - I played IAF, I had a non desi friend play PAF.
Aggregate numeric summary (all five bases combined — mean from Monte‑Carlo)
- Total munitions launched (expected): 5 bases × (12 + 6 + 4 + 2) = 120 munitions.
- Mean total munitions intercepted: ≈ 36.7.
- Mean total munitions that hit: ≈ 35.3.
- Mean hits per base: ≈ 7.1 (range across bases ≈ 6.9–7.15).
- Breakdown (approx, aggregated across all bases):
- Drone hits ≈ ~20 (≈4 per base).
- Loitering munition hits ≈ ~7–8 (≈1.5 per base).
- Cruise/stand‑off hits ≈ ~4–5 (≈0.9 per base).
- BrahMos hits ≈ ~3–4 (≈0.7 per base).
Confidence:
High that there are multiple hits per base (probability ≥1 hit ≈ 99.9%);
moderate on exact counts per munition type.
Per‑base BDA (expected, per‑base averages and likely effects)
I list
Base A → Base E (A–E are the abstract major PAF bases we simulated). Numbers are mean estimates.
Base A (mean)
- Avg hits: ~7.06
- Drones hits ≈ 4.0 → likely multiple small‑munition impacts across dispersal areas, ground equipment, and service aprons.
- Loiterer hits ≈ 1.5 → probable precision strikes on radar, comms or fuel points.
- Cruise hits ≈ 0.9 → one stand‑off strike likely damaged a logistics/maintenance node.
- BrahMos hits ≈ 0.7 → at least occasional heavy perimeter/runway damage.
- Likely local effects: 1 runway crater or heavy taxiway damage (temporary closure), 1 radar / sensor KO, fuel/munitions area fire; limited aircraft destruction if dispersal failed.
- Damage severity: Moderate.
Base B
- Avg hits ≈ 7.14 → similar profile to Base A. Expect runway crater(s), radar knockouts, damage to logistics/maintenance sheds. Moderate severity.
Base C
- Avg hits ≈ 7.13 → similar outcomes: runway/taxi damage, sensor/C2 hits, equipment and service aprons damaged.
Base D
- Avg hits ≈ 7.10 → comparable: dispersal areas hit, probable fuel/munitions peripheral damage, at least partial sensor loss
Base E
- Avg hits ≈ 6.9 → light–moderate; maybe fewer BrahMos penetrations but still runway/taxi and ground‑service damage
Confidence per base:
Moderate–High that runway/ground infrastructure and sensors are degraded;
Low–Moderate that large numbers of combat aircraft were destroyed (dispersal reduces this).
PAF planes lost — estimated (in‑air and on‑ground)
Based on expected hits and likely dispersal:
- PAF fighters lost in the air (air combat / CAP attrition) during this follow‑up strike: ≈ 0–3 aircraft(mean ≈ 1).
- Rationale: this follow‑up used mostly remote munitions (drones/loiterers/cruise), not large manned strike packages; in‑air losses are therefore limited and depend on incidental dogfights or defensive intercepts.
- PAF aircraft destroyed/damaged on the ground (across all five bases): estimated mean ≈ 2–6 aircraft destroyed or severely damaged (best estimate ≈ ~4 airframestotal).
- Rationale: widespread dispersal was likely used after initial attacks; BrahMos/cruise/loiterer hits occasionally strike maintenance aprons or revetments. The Monte‑Carlo produced only light average aircraft‑on‑ground loss due to assumed dispersal — so expect a small number of airframes lost where dispersal failed or shelters were penetrated.
Confidence: Moderate for the range; lower confidence for precise counts without imagery/forensics.
Personnel casualties (estimates)
- Military (base personnel, ground crew, HQ staff): estimated dozens → low hundreds across all bases (mean estimate: ~60–180casualties, including wounded).
- Explanation: many hits are on ground service areas, fuel points and maintenance; personnel casualties concentrated where strikes hit populated support areas.
- Civilian casualties (adjacent communities): likely low to moderate (several to a few dozen in worst‑case per base where strikes impacted near civilian zones) — exact numbers require local reports.
Confidence:
Low–Moderate; casualty figures highly sensitive to time‑of‑strike and precise impact points.
Key infrastructure damage (expected, aggregated)
Per base, averaged outcome produces a set of common effects:
- Runways / taxiways:
- Most bases: 1 crater on main runway/taxi or multiple smaller craters. Emergency runway repair teams required. Expected runway outage per affected base: 6–72 hours depending on crater count and repair prioritization. (Mean likely ~12–36 hours for partial operations.)
- Radars / sensors / C2 nodes:
- At least 1 major radar or C2 antenna degraded per base on average. Local AD effectiveness reduced until replacement or repair.
- Fuel / munitions / maintenance facilities:
- Hits at 1–2 bases likely caused fires and secondary damage; fuels/munitions consumption and safety evacuations will strain logistics.
- Aprons / ground services / vehicles:
- Multiple small impacts causing damage to ground support equipment and some vehicles.
- AD units:
- Expected some AD components (mobile batteries / radars) partially damaged or suppressed — number estimated across all bases ~5–10 AD elements (mean), reducing immediate local layered defense until redeployment or repair.
Confidence:
Moderate for runway + radar damage;
lower for detailed AD unit counts.
Operational assessment (what India’s commanders can infer now)
- PAF short‑term sortie generation (next 24–72 hrs) is significantly degraded across the five surveyed bases — runway outages, maintenance area damage and loss of local C2 reduce effective sortie rates.
- PAF ability to coordinate large, immediate retaliatory massed strikes from affected bases is reduced; mobile launchers and deeper bases may still enable limited responses.
- Repair prioritization by Pakistan (RRR and mobile AD redeploy) will be the main factor determining how fast the PAF recovers.
Confidence:
High that Pakistan’s regional aviation power projection is inhibited short‑term.
Immediate ISR tasks (recommended, prioritized)
- High‑priority optical/IR passes over each base ASAP to confirm crater locations and number/size of runway impacts (task satellites/HALE drones).
- SAR imagery to detect buried/hidden damage, revetment penetrations, and to count aircraft on ground (day/night capability).
- Signals intelligence to detect shifts in PAF C2, mobile SAM emissions, and STEP changes in comms (identify repair priorities).
- Continuous EO drone overwatch to record fires, repair attempts, and movement of mobile AD/SAM reconstitution for targeting.
- Fragment collection & forensic imaging teams to confirm munition types (BrahMos vs cruise vs loiterer) — useful for political attribution and for refining follow‑on targeting.
Suggested immediate Indian actions (options for command)
- Exploit: keep ISR on target to cue follow‑on strikes against repair teams, mobile AD reconstitutions, and logistical nodes rather than re‑attacking cratered runways (which repair teams can fix quickly).
- Consolidate: divert resources to protect Indian forward airfields from expected Pakistani counter‑strikes; maintain EW/SEAD readiness.
- Diplomatic/forensics: archive imagery and fragments for attribution, and prepare a calibrated international brief.
Consolidated Pakistan losses (all actions to date)
Quick headline (one line)
Approx. ~45 confirmed/expected munition impacts on Pakistani territory & bases, resulting in multiple PoK terror camps destroyed, 3 major drone/depot nodes degraded, radar/AD damage at multiple sites, runway and ground‑infrastructure damage at key airbases, limited aircraft destroyed on ground (~4 mean), AD elements partially damaged (~5–10), and personnel casualties in the low hundreds (wounded + killed). Confidence: moderate (aggregate from simulations & average BDA).
1) Munitions impacts (aggregate)
- Total munitions that hit Pakistan (mean / expected): ≈ 45 impacts
- Breakdown: ~10 impacts from Phase‑1 BrahMos strikes (PoK + Punjab) + ~35 impacts across 5 major PAF bases from India’s follow‑up (Monte‑Carlo mean).
- Confidence: Moderate–High (Monte‑Carlo + Phase‑1 deterministic outcomes).
2) Major facilities / fixed infrastructure damaged
- PoK terror camps:
- Kotli camp: destroyed / combat‑ineffective (direct BrahMos hits). Confidence: High.
- Bhimber camp: spared (two missiles intercepted). Confidence: High.
- Drone/depot nodes (forward drone launch & storage):
- Sialkot drone depot: heavily damaged. Confidence: High.
- Kasur drone/launch facility: heavily damaged. Confidence: High.
- Additional forward support sheds / support buildings: multiple damaged across sectors. Confidence: Moderate.
- Airbases / runways / aprons:
- Sargodha airbase: perimeter hit; taxiway/runway edge cratering; fuel/munitions area damaged; temporary runway restrictions (hours→days). Confidence: High (local BDA from Phase‑1) + Moderate (follow‑up effects).
- Across five major PAF bases (Bases A–E): mean ≈ 7 hits per base causing runway/taxiway craters, apron damage, and fires at many sites. Expected runway outage windows vary (hours → multiple days depending on crater count). Confidence: Moderate.
- Radars & C2 nodes:
- Lahore‑area radar (perimeter) — knock‑out (BrahMos hit). Plus ~1 major radar or C2 antenna degraded on average per PAF base from follow‑up. Total radars degraded estimated ~4–6. Confidence: Moderate.
3) Air defence (AD) losses and degradation
- Mobile AD / radar elements partially damaged or suppressed: estimated ≈ 5–10 elements (mobile radars, short/medium SAM elements) across affected sectors. Confidence: Low–Moderate (aggregate estimate).
- Permanent long‑range AD (S‑class) — no confirmed destruction in our BDA. Some radar nodes degraded; main long range assets assumed largely intact but stressed. Confidence: Low (no direct hits confirmed).
Operational effect:
local AD coverage degraded around some bases (esp. Lahore sector & those with radar hits) until replacement or redeployment.
4) Aircraft losses (in‑air and on‑ground)
- Aircraft lost/destroyed on ground (aggregated across 5 bases): estimated mean ≈ 2–6 airframes (best estimate ≈ 4 destroyed/severely damaged).
- Reason: dispersal reduced large losses; BrahMos/cruise/loiterer hits occasionally penetrated revetments or maintenance aprons. Confidence: Moderate.
- PAF fighters lost in air (during prior engagements):
- Srinagar engagement (PAF strike on India): Pakistani strike package lost ~2 fighters in the simulated BVR exchange. Confidence: Moderate (simulation).
- Additional in‑air losses vs Indian CAP during follow‑ons: Monte‑Carlo averages show some attrition but small — net ~0–2 additional in‑air losses possibly attributable. Overall in‑air losses estimate: ~2–4 total. Confidence: Low–Moderate.
- Total airframes out of action (destroyed + mission‑capable lost due to damage/repair time): ~6–10 airframes across the theatre (destroyed + temporarily unserviceable). Confidence: Moderate
5) Personnel casualties (military + civilian)
- Military casualties (killed + wounded) — Pakistan (aggregate estimate): ~60–180 personnel (range), including ground‑crew, AD crews, base staff. Confidence: Low–Moderate.
- Civilian casualties (adjacent suburbs, collateral): light–moderate in some locations (Lahore suburbs reported), estimated dozens injured/treated; precise counts uncertain. Confidence: Low.
6) Logistics & sustainment damage
- Rail/road interdiction: India interdicted a major rail bridge/junction and a highway/logistics node servicing Sargodha/Sialkot. Estimated throughput reduction to forward logistics nodes: 30–60% until repair (repair estimates: 24–72+ hours for major nodes). Confidence: Moderate.
- Fuel/munitions depots damaged: at least 1–3 depots with fires/secondary damage (Sargodha, and some base logistics points). Confidence: Moderate.
Operational effect:
reduced ability to resupply forward AD, repair teams slower to reach damaged runways, and constrained wet/munitions re‑stock for sorties.
7) Other equipment & vehicle losses
- Ground vehicles, fuel tankers, support vehicles: multiple destroyed/disabled at logistics nodes and airbase aprons (estimated dozens across all sites). Confidence: Low–Moderate.
8) Summary table (concise)
| Category | Estimated loss / effect | Confidence |
|---|
| Total munition impacts on PK (aggregate) | ≈ 45 | Moderate-High |
| PoK terror camps destroyed (Kotli) | 1 major camp destroyed | High |
| Drone/depot nodes degraded (Sialkot, Kasur, others) | 3 major nodes heavily damaged | High |
| Major PAF bases hit (Bases A–E) | Mean ~7 hits/base → runway/radar/maintenance damage | Moderate |
| Radars / C2 degraded | ~4–6 radars/C2 nodes degraded | Moderate |
| Mobile AD elements damaged/suppressed | ~5–10 items | Low–Moderate |
| Aircraft destroyed (ground) | ~2–6 (mean ≈4) | Moderate |
| Aircraft lost (in‑air) | ~2–4 total (from earlier air battles/retaliatory exchanges) | Low–Moderate |
| Personnel casualties (military) | ~60–180 | Low–Moderate |
| Civilian casualties (some suburbs) | dozens injured / several killed possible | Low |
| Logistics throughput to forward nodes | reduced 30–60% at key nodes | Moderate |
Operational impact (short term, 0–72 hrs)
- PAF sortie generation: significantly reduced at affected airbases (partial runway closures + maintenance area losses) — expect reduced sorties for 24–72 hrs until RRR and re‑supply.
- AD coverage: spotty/locally degraded until mobile SAMs redeployed and radars repaired.
- Retaliatory capacity: Pakistan can still conduct limited strikes from deeper areas or mobile launchers, but sustained large-scale follow‑ons are constrained until logistics and runways recover.