
well, it's more or less related to 'comfort women' thing, there is some controversial video of some afsar (probably drunk at time) going "menu lady chahindi" - but can you really blame our men in forces who're estranged from their families for months, living under constant bugles of muh discipline and risking their lives in areas requiring high testosterone to start with? but is deploying women in name of soldiers and afsars a real solution to this?
then, i won't spill much but if you can ask someone who's into armed forces as well as UN Peacekeeping Missions, what had happened when Bikram Singh and Qamar Bajwa, who eventually became COAS in respective countries, served in african theatres under Blue Helmets, 'specially in Congo side? because well, we sent both male and female peacekeepers there, and paki male peacekeepers were also there, so, yeah
*ahem* mahila sashaktikaran is just a front, real reasons lies in things like this, but when it comes to empowering them, they often go through relaxed norms like how armed forces trialed T-90S with relaxed conditions but Arjun MBT was put through full acceleration on reverse gear

- but it seems to be happening to show off to leftshit liberandu globohomos that we are progressive something
now coming to main roles of the ladies in armed forces, it's true that they're vital in roles requiring sympathies - nurses, doctors, teachers, sometimes when they want to play "winning hearts and minds" games in regions like kashmir, even spies at times

; but most of them lack physical prowess in endurance or stamina terms at times to be able to serve under mainstream fighting force; and oh, less said about their attitude problems is better - didn't some afsar or general something himself criticised them with writing letters to high command about their ego issues ?
here, some diluted politically correct response for public consumption here