Abstract
The establishment of integrated military theatre commands in India is a significant restructuring of the country’s defence forces, with tangible consequences for Pakistan’s security. The reform will bring the integration of the Army, Navy and Air Force into Joint Command Forces that can operate fast and on multiple domains, on the basis of previous ideas like the Cold Start doctrine and the Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs). The developments are potentially destabilising because they compress the traditional response time, reduce the time limit for crisis decision-making and enhance the risk of limited military response under the nuclear overhang scenario for India. By enabling faster and more coordinated offensive options, India’s Theaterisation deepens Pakistan’s security dilemma and raises concerns about rapid, limited strikes that could exploit reduced warning time. The paper discusses the implications of Indian theatre commands for deterrence stability in South Asia. It argues that Pakistan will likely respond with enhanced inter-service integration, better intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) and continued evolution of its Full Spectrum Deterrence posture, to deny India the space for limited war. The methodological approach used in the study is qualitative analysis, which is based on official statements, institutional reforms, public statements, and open-source strategic assessments. The analysis finds that while India is moving toward greater operational efficacy and jointness, Theaterisation may also raise crisis instability, quicken escalation risk, and further complicate the strategic stability in South Asia.
This resarcher paper was published by the Institue for Strategic Studies Research & Analysis (ISSRA) in Margalla Papers 2026 Vol.30 No.1 and can be read at https://margallapapers.ndu.edu.pk/index.php/site/article/view/376
Syed Ali Abbas is Research Officer & Comm Officer at the Center for International Strategic Studies (CISS) Islamabad. He is also an MPhil scholar in the Department of Strategic Studies at the National Defense University (NDU) Islamabad.






