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After Operation Sindoor, Pakistan navy struggles with ageing fleet, crippled readiness and low morale

A dwindling submarine force, vessels rusting at dockyards, and cancelled naval drills reveal deep cracks in Pakistan’s maritime muscle as India’s naval dominance grows post-Sindoor.

July 07, 2025 / 18:42 IST
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Pakistan’s multi-origin naval procurement strategy, from the US, UK, China, and Turkey, has turned into a logistical nightmare.

In the weeks following India’s Operation Sindoor, the Pakistan Navy is quietly slipping into one of its worst operational crises in decades. With just two submarines reportedly functional, several warships stuck in port, and a clear lack of morale among sailors and officers, Pakistan’s naval fleet appears ill-prepared for any meaningful deployment in the Arabian Sea, CNN-News18 has reported, citing sources and maritime data.

This comes at a time when the Indian Navy has visibly expanded its presence, increasing patrols and exercises near Pakistani waters, which remain largely uncontested.

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Ships that don’t sail: The pier-side reality in Karachi

According to CNN-News18, open-source maritime tracking data shows that most of Pakistan’s surface combat ships are berthed at the Karachi Naval Base, not out at sea.

The reasons are layered:

Why maintenance is falling apart