Sanjha Morcha

Maoists forge ‘rocket­powered’ resurgence to take on forces

ONE STEP AHEAD The more we learn their tactics, the more they learn ours, says CRPF

PUNE/RAIPUR: One night this February, six rockets whooshed out of the forest and burst into flames, raining shrapnel into trees surrounding a police camp in Chhattisgarh. No lives were lost but the explosions sounded a loud alarm for the security forces fighting a decades-old Maoist insurgency.

Until recently, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) cleared all the trees and shrubs before pitching their camps in the forests where the rebels hold sway. But now the trees are left to stand as a shield against projectiles the insurgents seem to fire with worrying frequency.

Security specialists say the Maoists are adapting themselves to the changing ground situation. With the region teeming with 118 paramilitary battalions comprising 120,000 troops, they are taking to the aerial route to attack.

“The more we learn their tactics, the more they learn our tactics,” said a senior CRPF officer involved in anti-Maoist operations. “As we improve, so do they.”

The Maoists’ crude rockets and mortars were on show even during the ambush in Sukma two weeks ago that killed 25 CRPF men. The guerrillas used five kinds of airborne projectiles in the ambush, officials said.

One of the projectiles seized from the spot was what security forces describe as the “Rambo arrow”. Fired from a traditional bow, the arrowhead carried lowgrade gunpowder that explodes on impact after hitting a target.

“Rambo arrows don’t cause much damage but they disorient you in the fog of war,” said a CoBRA trooper who survived the ambush. The CoBRA is a commando unit that specialises in guerrilla warfare.

Intelligence officials who studied the ambush said the projectiles were used to force troopers to abandon cover positions and come into the open, where they were picked off with gunfire.

The crude artillery bear testimony to the Maoists’ changing tactics under pressure from the swelling number of security forces. Their area of influence has shrunk over the years and mounting ambushes are becoming difficult, though not entirely rare. Triggering improvised explosive devices (IEDs) is also becoming a challenge.

“We have been recovering IEDs of increasing sophistication,” Jamal Khan, the principal of CRPF’s Institute of IED Management at Pune told HT. “As we have grown better at identifying and defusing IEDs, the Maoists have been forced to adapt”.

The CRPF has been in Chhattisgarh since 2003, but troopers began venturing into the forests in 2009-10 during Operation Green Hunt. “As forces increased and training improved, the Maoists started to rely more on IEDs and less on ambushes,” said a senior CRPF officer, who served at the time in Dantewada, a small town in the conflict zone.

In 2012, the CRPF set up the IED institute to combat this threat. That year, the force identified and defused 587 IEDs, which rose to 1072 IEDs in 2016. As the forces grew more adept at finding IEDs, the guerrillas changed tack. The Maoist rocket was first seen in a 2012 attack on a paramilitary camp in Narayanpur.

“That version was very crude and didn’t fly very well,” said Khan. But since 2015, the Maoists have fired rockets on CRPF camps four times.

The newer versions are more sophisticated: A conical nose filled with explosives is welded into a tail-section filled with lowexplosive propellant fuel. A funnel-shaped nozzle on the tail produces thrust and “fins” loosely screwed to the tail provide stability to the rockets in flight and increase their chances of landing on the nose. Once they strike, a spring-loaded nail strikes a detonator and triggers an explosion.

The rockets have rattled security forces, though they have not resulted in deaths yet. One worry is that the Maoists seem to have retained their technically skilled cadre despite the surrender and capture of many high-profile leaders over the past few years.

“What is left is the real hardcore, the real experienced fighters,” said an officer who recently confronted a Maoist military company.

“Right now they are going from village to village, showing the weapons they looted, saying – We have bounced back.”


The Downside Of BAT Actions  Syed Ata Hasnain

The Downside Of BAT Actions

SNAPSHOT

Pakistan’s Border Action Team’s (BATs) proactive and provocative stance on the LC needs to be handled with an offensive response by Indian Army units.

But what is BAT, and why has India lost its soldiers to them?

During the 06 August 2013 flare up on the LC (LoC) in Poonch Sector and the beheading incident in January 2013 the common string of information was that the targeted killing of Indian jawans on the LC was executed by Border Action Teams (BATs). The same has happened again in Poonch sector’s Krishna Ghati (KG) area on 30 April 2017.  Even in the Army, not many would boast of knowing what BATs are, how do they function (modus operandi), what effects they have and how the Indian Army handles the threat.

The public does question some things but there isn’t any information available for it to be better informed. My intention is to satiate that desire within precincts of security which will always remain the supreme consideration.

The world of the LC is the domain of just a few who have had the honor and the ‘high’ of serving in the razor sharp environment that presents itself daily in the ‘border areas’ of Jammu and Kashmir.  It may be appropriate to clarify some of the basic ingredients of this high drama environment.

What is the LC?

The LC is different to the LAC (Line of Actual Control), quite different to the Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) and  much different to the Working Boundary (a term used only by Pakistan).  The LAC alludes to the land boundary between the areas currently held by China and India along the northern borders. It is un-demarcated and both India and China have their different perceptions on its alignment, leading to frequent patrol clashes.

The AGPL refers to the un-demarcated area north east of NJ 9842, the point up to which the Suchetgarh Agreement had done the demarcation; it runs primarily along the Saltoro Ridge which prevents the Pakistan Army from even a glimpse on the Siachen Glacier.  To detail these aspects would be to digress from the main issue and that is the LC. LC is quite often called LoC by the media but the Army prefers to shorten it to the more colloquial LC.

The LC is an imaginary line running along the current frontier between India and Pakistan in the state of Jammu & Kashmir.  Although the Instrument of Accession of 26 August 1947 and Joint Resolution of the two Houses of Parliament in February 1994 place the entire area of Jammu and Kashmir with India, the ground situation changed over the last 65 years commencing with Pakistan’s invasion in 1947 the conflicts of 1965, 1971 and 1999 (Kargil), as also the proxy war launched by Pakistan since 1989.

The LC runs well towards east of the actual International Boundary (IB) and is the alignment along which the operations of 1947-48 came to a halt thus creating Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK-often referred as Azad Kashmir, or AK, by Pakistan).

Unlike the International Border or IB which exists in Punjab, Rajasthan or Gujarat, there are no boundary pillars (BPs) delineating the LC, however, there are a series of mostly unrecognisable landmarks such as boulders, trees and nalas which have undergone change over years.

The Indian and Pakistan armies are in eyeball contact in their various pillboxes and piquets all along the alignment but at places terrain constraints may separate the two by two or more km.

The Jammu IB considered not in dispute by India is manned by the Border Security Force (BSF). The Indian Army is reinforcing some segments through depth and second tier deployment ever since the Samba and Kathua terror attacks in 2013.

The LC is the responsibility of the Army and this deployment is in tiers. Yet the BSF provides a few units to the Army for this deployment without which undeniably the Army will have manpower problems.

It is an environment little known to the outside world, where the notion of ‘Grabbers, Keepers’ exists.  Translating this into reality it means that any side grabbing a piece of ground for a tactical advantage gets to keep it unless forcibly evicted (recall Kargil 1999).

Events Leading to Current Status

All was well on the LC till 1989 or so except the sporadic shootouts of lower intensity which took place for the sake of ‘moral ascendancy’.  A much misunderstood term, ‘moral ascendancy’ remains even today a task for the wily infantrymen and encompasses a range of sub tasks primary being the sanctity of the LC, (no loss of ground) and prevention of rogue actions by Pakistan.

In 1989 things started to change drastically with the belief among the Kashmiri populace that ‘Azadi’ or merger with Pakistan was becoming a reality.  The proxy war within the Valley had to be sustained by Pakistan through induction of terrorists, explosives, military hardware and finances.  The LC became the obvious conduit through which all this happened.

Much against the common belief that the LC is manned meter to meter the ground reality is that there are large gaps dictated by terrain factors, logistics and climatic constraints.  It is these gaps which were exploited and converted to ‘highways’ (a terrorist term) for movement of terrorists,  potential terrorists (recruits), hardware, explosives and finances.

The Army was forced to re-deploy and selectively reinforce at the cost of its counter terrorist operational grid in the Valley floor.  This left many of its LC piquets weaker as a new dimension was added to the task of ‘sanctity of the LC’ – this was Counter Infiltration.

Sensing a great opportunity the Pakistan Army commenced selectively targeting Indian piquets with a mix of regular troops and well trained terrorists (those who had undergone Daura-e-Khas training).  The purpose – force back Indian Army counter infiltration ambushes, located between piquets and thus create the gaps needed for infiltration.  Unprovoked firing by Pakistani posts further forced the creation of gaps.  All this occurred in the nineties and progressive lessons learnt by the Pakistan Army refined the BAT concept.

Characteristics of BATs

BATs comprise a mix of Pakistan Army regulars, Pakistan Special Forces elements and high profile terrorists (Jihadis) who are trained to cross the LC to execute raids on Indian picquets, ambush and patrol parties or logistics elements. Strength of the team has mostly been 15 to 20 members.

Beheading has been one of the modus operandi adopted by these teams to cause fear and impose immense caution on their targets.  The immediate effect of information about concentration of a BAT opposite a particular segment of the LC is an inevitable strengthening of the defensive stance; stronger patrols, more protection for logistics elements such as mule trains which carry advance winter stocking stores; all this at the cost of the counter infiltration grid.  The situation can then be exploited for strong infiltration bids through gaps. Quite obviously BAT actions are in the mould of terrorist acts launched with the intent of imposing caution and creating the tactical conditions for terrorist infiltration.

The Coming of the LC Fence

The inevitable question – does the Indian Army sit on its haunches waiting to be attacked; far from it.  Indian infantry units are known to have avenged ghastly acts by delivering telling blows on Pakistan Army and terrorists.  In years before the Cease Fire came into place on 26 November 2003 exchange of Arty Fire and direct firing heavy weapons was common place.

Many an ingenious Indian gunner and infantry commander innovated and caused much destruction on the Pakistan Army.

Among others the name of Brigadier Jasbir Lidder (later Lieutenant General),  Commander of the high profile 12 Infantry Brigade (Uri) is well known for his famous quip – “When Uri rumbles, Chakhoti (PoK town opposite Uri) crumbles”.

The ingenious LC fence constructed along the 16 and 15 Corps frontages under the outstanding leadership of then COAS Gen Nirmal Vij, in 2003-4 greatly altered the odds of infiltration.

This needs to be understood in the right perspective as the annual reconstruction of the fence (an expensive exercise in men and material) is very often questioned within the Army and the less informed bureaucratic circles.

The LC Fence

The LC Fence changed much more than just the awe inspiring landscape of the Pir Panjal and Shamshabari ranges.  It altered what I call the ‘mathematics of terror’ in Jammu and Kashmir.  Prior to 1 July 2004 (the date the fence officially came in existence) Pakistan successfully infiltrated 2,000 terrorists or more across the LC each year.  On an average 1400-1500 were killed in engagements with the Indian Army on the LC or in the hinterland.

The residual figures were always in favour of Pakistan.  Then came General Nirmal Vij who led the construction of the fence from the plains to the obscene heights of the Shamshabari, flaying the ‘nay sayers’.  It altered everything.

The Indian Army now had an obstacle to concentrate upon and converted it from a mere line of barbed wire to a system comprising steel, lead, electronics, ether and human beings.

By 2006 the Indian Army had acquired the knowledge and experience of exploiting the LC fence which was leaking just a few hundred terrorists annually while the Army eliminated double the number in its operations.  The mathematics were now reversed leading to the situation in 2011-12 when less than 300 terrorists roamed the Valley and 19 top terrorists leaders were eliminated with focused counter terrorism operations. Only 42 terrorists could enter the Valley, as  confirmed by the Multi Agency Centre (MAC) The transformational ‘Heart Doctrine’ combined with this approach almost brought Kashmir to the doorstep of conflict stabilisation awaiting conflict resolution.

The media and the public have often questioned how BATs can enter 400 – 500 meters into our side and conduct an operation. There is a simple answer to this.

In 2003-04 when the LC fence was constructed there was no ceasefire for most of the period; hence the fence had to be constructed well away from the LC at most places.

Where ever we were or are in domination the construction was well forward, hugging the LC. The fence gives natural protection against rogue actions but where it is aligned well inside we per force have picquets/posts/detachments ahead but not necessarily on the LC as long as the area ahead can be dominated by fire.

Small patrols are used to dominate this space and these are the patrols which are vulnerable to BAT actions. If you do not patrol and acquire a defensive mindset you are open to ceding that piece of territory to Pakistan. BATs can therefore enter minefields with considerable risk but no other obstacle prevents them from accessing the Indian Army’s patrol bases or routes of patrolling near (400-500 metres) the LC.

To expect Pakistan Army to use BATs more extensively after the Indian Army’s successful handling of the situation in J&K is to state the obvious.  We often hear of the phrase ‘keeping the pot boiling’ in Kashmir while Pakistan handles the Afghan border and its internal security threats.

The elimination of Burhan Wani in 2016 became a trigger for Pakistan to extend full support after it sensed an opportunity. While street turbulence is the chief modus operandi and local terrorists are ruling the roost, Pakistan has to establish its own significance, contribute to the movement and also control it.

To execute this concept Pakistan requires its terrorist foot soldiers (boots on the ground) in J&K; to allow the fast dwindling strength to reduce even further would be a catastrophe for the ISI’s post 2016 strategy in J&K.  Thus the necessity, to once again force creation of gaps on the LC, to facilitate infiltration.

Many veterans of the Army would recall some of the well-known BAT actions which were launched against Indian Army units and the counter actions taken by the same units.  The Indian Army has foiled many BAT actions than the ones which have succeeded. In 2012,  16 Punjab foiled a major action  in the Tangdhar Sector.

Handling BATs at Different Levels

In my long years handling the LC from sub unit to a Corps Commander I always found the threats from BATs as the most challenging, relished countering these and taking the battle into Pakistan’s territory.  Here is an example.

In 2008, a Pakistan Army unit decided to send a 15 man officer led team across the LC to dislodge a small detachment of my brave Rajputs who had temporarily occupied a patrol base to dominate an area of the LC not visited or patrolled for long; I observed this during a visit and had directed that the area be dominated.  In the ensuing clash between four young Rajput soldiers without a senior leader and the 15 Pakistanis the Rajputs lost one soldier and killed 7 Pakistanis.

All hell broke loose by day on the LC in a frontage of about 3 to 4km.  The CO was adamant about crossing the LC and razing a post from where the Pakistani soldiers had come.

My orders to the CO were crystal clear – “The night is yours, I do not want the Pakistani bases, from where the soldiers had emerged, to remain standing but you will not cross the LC. You have all other means to do so.” The Rajputs shocked me next morning when they reported the destruction caused to the Pakistan Army posts, confirmed through photographs and video clips. The last hurrah was when a Pakistan Army helicopter emerged late the next afternoon and took away the Pakistani Brigade Commander; it was later learnt that he was removed from command; so much for the moral ascendancy achieved by the Rajputs.

As the General Officer Commanding of the division I asked no one and no one advised me. It was my calling and the risk was also mine. However, to give the leadership its due, not one superior commander asked any questions.

The above example displays just how Pakistan Army’s proactive and provocative stance on the LC needs to be handled.  The offensive response by Indian Army units has to be reflected in their attitude from the moment they step into the designated area of responsibility.  Most BAT actions take place during handing/taking over between units when command and control is supposedly loose.

Infantry units do not realise that each action of theirs even before they arrive in their AOR, is under surveillance.  Many units having fearsome reputation will never be tested; others with lesser credentials and poor body language of their troops would get tested early.  The first engagement if handled with professional aggression will allow a unit a tenure with little turbulence. Destiny has brought many units of both Armies from the Kargil war once again face to face on the LC.

The reader must not go away with the impression that the Pakistan Army and terrorists rule the roost on the LC, far from it. Yet, it is imperative that our commanders be bold, trust their instinct, train their troops hard and war game contingencies regularly. This is 24×7 soldiering where every movement has to be controlled and reactions kept ready; most important of all – time is the worst enemy of effectiveness on the LC.

As a sector cools down so does the vigil and then one fine day it happens; there is only one solution to this – constant reminders to all at the oddest time of the day or night. The most awkward aspect of my command style was the calls I would give to subordinate officers down to young captains. These were almost always late at night so that it became a one to one private chat.

Never was any negative sentiment conveyed, always a positive word. Just a few tips on protection of the patrols and logistics parties, strengthening of the forward picquets and ensuring that an administrative attitude never entered into troops, were spoken about. The effect was that the young officer went back to his CO, who went back to his Brigade Commander, who then sent the reminder down to the last man.

It was reverse communication and sometimes this works far better. There is no rest on the LC and no room for not innovating; those who rest bodies or minds seldom live to tell the tales which at the LC are aplenty.  I know 22 Sikh, the unit which suffered the recent BAT action and I know when you challenge it, this kind of a unit cannot take an insult.

That it will give it back after keeping the enemy on tenterhooks for some time, is inevitable.

This article has been adapted and updated from the write up by the author in South Asia Defence and Strategic Review published in October 2013.


As Pak Strikes Again, Allow Indian Army to Act Quietly in Kashmirby Syed Ata Hasnain

The Nation has reason to be up in arms. Two incidents in J&K on 01 May could significantly change the complexity and nature of threats in the 28 year old Pakistan sponsored proxy war in J&K, thus demanding appropriate response. The first at Krishna Ghati (KG) in the Poonch sector, a location famously known in the Army for its frequency of cross LoC exchanges. A Border Action Team (BAT – a term with which India is quite familiar) from Pakistan comprising Special Forces and highly trained Pakistani terrorists created a local concentration and targeted a segment of the KG defences focusing on an LoC patrol. It may still have been acceptable up to that point because LoC actions by both sides are not dictated by any rationale. However, the BAT proceeded to mutilate the bodies of the two Indian personnel killed before fleeing across the LoC. This too is not something new but it’s the first time it has happened in 2017 and the first in the tenure of General Qamar Bajwa, the Pakistan Army Chief who was expected to bring more sanity to the attitude of the Pakistan Army relating to its obsession with J&K. However, nothing has changed and it is obvious that a day after Bajwa’s visit to Haji Pir near the LoC in POK it was a message that was being delivered to India.

The cleavage between the military and the civilian government in Pakistan manifests many times in major differences in the handling of relations with India and J&K in particular. It is obvious that there was some form of backroom activity by the civilian government of Nawaz Sharif with Sajjan Jindal, an Indian businessman reportedly close to Prime Minister Modi, meeting the Pakistan Prime Minister at Murree. The Pakistan Army and its cohorts do not usually wait long if they sense that there is potential of some positive moves on the political front. Pathankot attack occurred within a week of Prime Minister Modi’s grand initiative of an impromptu visit to  Lahore on 25 Dec 2015. Now KG has taken place. Some linkage to the presence in Delhi of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan could also exist but it is yet early to conclude that. Erdogan is known to have expressed the need for “multi-lateral dialogue” on Kashmir and offered his services to mediate. This is anathema to New Delhi but has been the stance that Pakistan has taken for long. Was KG therefore a symbolic reminder that Erdogan’s words needed to be heeded to avoid such acts of violence on the LoC.

Before any further analysis it is important to take stock of the other event on 01 May, the Kulgam incident,  so that the joint impact of the two events can be assessed. Sources in Kashmir stated that there was general happiness about the loss of five local policemen and two local bank security guards in an ambush on a J&K Bank van which was in the process of distributing cash to branches and was then returning. Four weapons were lost in the incident. This response of Kashmiris is quite different to that when a local soldier from JAK Light Infantry was killed in an ambush in the Shupiyan area in Feb 2017. There was a huge and respectful turnout for his funeral. That is as far as the Valley is known to have gone; supporting the killing of local policemen and security guards is a new low for the Kashmiri people and is reflective of the alienation being faced by us in the Valley. It is not even known whether the perpetrators were foreign or local terrorists. If local then it changes the nature of proxy internal conflict making the confrontation with security forces much more viscious. Commanders of the Army are known to follow a less stringent campaign against locals to allow them to come on board through surrender unless they are known to be more than hard core.

The two events have no sync but if read together appear to indicate that 2017 and beyond will probably be difficult years in J&K in all domains. It appears to stem from a distinct increase in Pakistan’s strategic confidence; a series of ‘perceived’ foreign policy successes which can be very temporary in nature. Pakistani diplomats are speaking of 5 percent growth in Pakistan’s economy and expect a spurt in the near future. It is perception more than reality which drives such policy. The other perception Pakistan appears to be drawing much solace from is what it feels is an emerging victory in J&K. Is Indian media is responsible for giving this idea?

Whatever it be, the Central and State Governments and the security establishment have much to consider in terms of stabilizing the Valley. It is security first and the people along with that which have to be the focus. Engagement with Separatists or Pakistan will probably be far from anyone’s mind. Engaging the people can always be done without engaging the Separatists. It has been successfully done in the past and once people are in engagement mode the degree of antipathy and alienation does dilute. On the LoC and the counter infiltration grid there can be no let up and no restrictions should be placed on the Army which should shun a high media profile and quietly do what it needs to do. No one has to tell the Army what it needs to do and the Army does not have to announce anything from the hill and roof tops.

J&K is surely in for some turbulent times in 2017. 

The writer is a veteran Lieutenant General, who commanded the Srinagar based 15 Corps. He is now associated with Vivekanand International Foundation and the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. The views expressed above are of the author’s own and The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)


Himachal IAS-IPS couple offers to look after slain soldier’s daughter

CHANDIGARH:An IAS-IPS couple of Himachal Pradesh has offered to look after Khushdeep Kaur, the 12-year-old daughter of naib subedar Paramjit Singh, who was killed by the border action team of the Pakistan army in Jammu and Kashmir’s Poonch sector earlier this week.

HT FILEKullu deputy commissioner Yunus Khan and his wife and Solan SP Anjum Ara with their son; (right) Khushdeep Kaur, 12, holding the photo of her father, Naib Subedar Paramjit Singh.

The couple has contacted the martyr’s wife, Paramjit Kaur, and expressed the desire to look after Khushdeep, the younger daughter of the soldier, till she grows up and is independent. Khushdeep is a student of Class 7 at a private school in Goindwal Sahib, 12 km from Vain Poin village in Tarn Taran district of Punjab. She has an elder sister, Simardeep Kaur, 15, and a twin brother, Sahildeep Singh.

“My wife and I will be visiting the soldier’s village in Punjab on Saturday. We have spoken to the family. We want to build the child’s career. This is just a small contribution that we believe everybody should make for the country and its people,” said Yunus Khan on Friday.

Born in Malerkotla, Punjab, Khan is an Indian Administrative Service officer of the 2010-batch and is posted as deputy commissioner, Kullu. His wife, Anjum Ara, is an Indian Police Service officer of the 2011-batch and is posted as the superintendent of police, Solan. The couple has a four-year old son.

The gesture was received with gratitude by the naib subedar’s family. His brother, Ranjit Singh, said: “DC saab has shown a great act of humanity and our entire family welcomes this. It is great to know that a person thought about the child of the martyr and came forward for help.”

He couldn’t help draw a historical parallel. “I simply can’t express gratitude to this kindhearted couple. It reminds me of what the Muslim ruler of Malerkotla, Nawab Sher Mohammad Khan, had done for the youngest sahibzadas (sons) of Guru Gobind Singh Ji,” he said. Nawab was the only Muslim ruler who raised a voice against the execution of the Guru’s sons in 1705 after they were captured in Sirhind.

Ranjit Singh said, “I will speak about this at the bhog ceremony of my brother for all to know. I appeal to all senior officers across the country to follow the example of this couple.”


INDIA : A NATION OF CRY BABIES !!!  By Col (Retd) Rajinder Singh- BIHAR Regt

India is led by CRY BABY POLITICIANS and her army is led by CRY BABY GENERALS. Both just talk and shed tears while our enemies have a hearty laugh. The duo, also, make a proper combination of a ” Doom India” story. But still our politicians and Generals think that India was heading to be a Super Power! How? Perhaps, on the ocean of their tears!!!!
Politicians cried when other day in Chhattisgarh , 25 CRPF men were gunned down by Maoists. Army Generals cried when yesterday  two Indian soldiers were killed in Poonchh by Pakistan and their bodies were mutilated. Politicians did KADI NINDA (Strong Criticism) and Generals talk about ” Strong Retribution” at an appropriate time. And this is where it ends till a fresh incident occurs.
Politicians talk of “teaching a lesson” and Generals speak of “unethical Conduct” of enemy soldiers.  Hey  “teaching a lesson” is only a subdued reaction. Good leaders make enemies react by creating difficult situations and do not talk about giving lessons on moralities of war. Our political bosses can not sort out anti- national elements in JNU and HCU, how should one expect them to stand up to Pakistan and China? They cow down before a bunch of “hooligans” in these universities but talk of ” teaching a lesson” to Pakistan.
Stone pelting of Soldiers has made our soldiers nincompoops and our General harangue them on moralities  and ethics, if they react with innovation , in self defence. It seems our blood does not boil because it has become a polluted water of Ganges, where reptiles of doubts grow. Heckling and beating of helpless jawans of CRPF or Army was acceptable to these Generals but not tying of a stone pelter to a jeep.
Such a stance of Retired Generals encourages so called “secularists and liberalists”. Soldier – bashing has become a latest fad of leftists media and liberalist politicians. Not a word is uttered by the likes of Mamta Bannerjee, Nitish Kumar and others on the heckling of CRPF Jawan. This is India of the year 2017.
And our Generals should know that in war there were no ethics and moralities. There is no “Dharam Yudh” of “Mahabharata Time” between India and Pakistan—- It is a military conflict of 21st Century. There are no ethics to be followed—– just strike and strike hard. Do our Generals have this in them? I am reminded of an old military saying: I AM NOT AFRAID OF AN ARMY OF HUNDRED TIGERS LED BY A SHEEP , BUT AN ARMY OF HUNDRED SHEEP LED BY A TIGER.
This is the crux of the problem. We have all sheep at the top of the ladder, who keep issuing statements to hide their incompetence. Hit back and then talk—- Israel does it; USA does it. Why are we helpless? Simple, because weak and inefficient have risen to be Generals. Remember Gresham’s law of economics : BAD MONEY DRIVING OUT GOOD MONEY. Similarly, in army CAREERISM  has replaced Good officers of Army with Bad officers. This is a harsh reality!!!!!
Our incapable and incompetent leaders and Generals resort to these moralistic rants because they are weak hearted. I am particularly incensed with retired Generals who talk about unethical conduct of Pakistan army. Simple, who has stopped you from doing this. Moralistic stance is the weapon of the weak and poor generalship.
Result of these CRY babies heading the nation and Indian armed forces is daily loss of life of our poor soldiers. We once conducted a so called SURGICAL STRIKE and living in that glory. We need to do it daily. We need to be proactive on MAOISTS and our adversaries. Go for it— do not tell the nation what you will do; just do it and then speak.
And all these RETIRED GENERALS just shut up. Do not talk—- your own  horoscope of army service is a tale of missed opportunities you had done nothing to be proud of. At least I know your history from 1971 WAR to Kargil-99 and Operation Prakaram.
 Our problem is that we are a confused nation. Right from the days of Gandhi- Nehru, we have been bitten by a moralistic bug and as such we created Kashmir problem. We allow a problem to fester till it becomes so dangerous that it threatens our existence. I am disappointed with Modi , too— he is just not interested in these matters. Being a Gujju, he is primarily interested in business, trade, commerce and economics. He thinks defence and security comes through economic well being. He forgets it is other way around. China and USA are primary example— Germany, Japan, UK and France rose to be economic powers because of military strength. Your international stature comes through military muscle.

Outrage on the LoC Beheadings are meant to provoke

There are many conjectures on why the Pakistan army violated the LoC and inflicted the horrendous punishment on two Indian security personnel. According to one line of thought, Indian industrialist Sajjan Jindal had recently met Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and this was the Pakistan army’s chosen method of scuttling any chances of an Indo-Pak dialogue. The second conjecture attributes the violence as an attempt to reinforce the visiting Turkish President’s observation that Kashmir needs urgent mediation. Either could be right because the Pakistan army has ratcheted violence on several such junctures in the past. The third possibility, which finds few takers, is that a local flare-up went horribly wrong for the Indian side.The entire nation is anguished by the killings but passions were unreasonably inflamed when the remains of the two bravehearts accompanied by the byte brigade reached their respective villages for the final rites. But one would want to know why two middle-aged soldiers (one was 42 and the other 50) were in frontline combat operations? Did they have a chance against the much younger Pakistani commandos who also had the advantage of surprise with them? The Ajay Vikram Singh committee, learning lessons from Kargil, where ageing battalion commanders struggled to perform, had lowered the age for officers in combat. Was this option also considered for the second-rung leadership? For a government that swears by the soldier and has a large contingent of former services and intelligence chiefs on its roster and in closely linked think-tanks, isn’t it time it considered this aspect in double time? Perhaps this issue will come on the front-burner whenever the nation gets a full-time Defence Minister. Till then, it is best to rely on the Indian Army to even the scores which it has always done. The deteriorating situation in Kashmir hardly gives space to bouts of self-righteous anger. The cancellation of the Anantnag elections reinforces the need for a political approach. The guns and lathis have tried their best and managed to keep the situation under relative control. It is time for the politicians to step up to the plate.


Pak forces cross LoC, mutilate bodies of 2 soldiers in Poonch India hits back , destroys 3 Pak posts; several casualties

Pak forces cross LoC, mutilate bodies of 2 soldiers in Poonch
Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh From Tarn Taran in Punjab and (R) BSF Head Constable Prem Sagar From Deoria in Uttar Pradesh

Arteev Sharma

Tribune News Service

Jammu/Poonch, May 1

A day after the Pakistan army chief visited the Line of Control (LoC), Pakistan’s Border Action Team (BAT) today killed two Indian soldiers and mutilated their bodies in the Krishna Ghati (KG) sector of Poonch district.In retaliation, Indian troops reportedly damaged the Pimple, Roza and Buttal posts on the other side of the LoC, killing a number of Pakistani soldiers, sources said.Pakistani troops violated ceasefire by firing rockets at two forward defence location (FDL) posts — Kripan-I and Kripan-II — along the LoC in Poonch. The BAT, comprising special forces, simultaneously intruded about half-a-kilometre inside the Indian territory and ambushed a patrol of about half-a-dozen jawans.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)An Army junior commissioned officer (JCO) and a Border Security Force head constable were killed, while another soldier was injured. The Pakistani forces mutilated the bodies of the two soldiers, before escaping under cover fire by their army. The deceased have been identified as Head Constable Prem Sagar (from Deoria in Uttar Pradesh) and Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh (from Tarn Taran in Punjab).In Delhi, Defence Minister Arun Jaitley said the mutilation of bodies was “reprehensible” and an “extreme form of barbarism”. He said the armed forces would react appropriately to the “inhuman act” and their “sacrifice will not go in vain”.An official statement of Udhampur-based Northern Command said: “In an unsoldierly act by the Pakistan army, the bodies of two of our soldiers in the patrol were mutilated. Such a despicable act of the Pakistan army will be appropriately responded to.”The ceasefire violation took place around 8.25 am when Pakistani troops deployed at Pakistan FDL Pimple, manned by 647 Mujahid Battalion, fired four rounds of rocket-propelled grenades and three to four bursts using automatic weapons towards Indian FDL Kripan-I manned by 200th Battalion of the BSF.“Around 8.40 am, Indian troops deployed at FDL Kripan-I also fired with automatic weapons towards Pak FDL Pimple. Four jawans, including Head Constable Prem Sagar, Constable Rajender Kumar, both of 200 Battalion, and Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh of 22 Sikh Regiment suffered splinter injuries. The identity of another trooper, who received minor injuries, is yet to be revealed,” a source said.Sagar and Singh later succumbed to their injuries.Sources said the BAT members attacked the patrol team 400 to 500 metres inside the Indian territory. “The geographical location of the area is very tough and the BAT action seems well-planned. Although the Indian troops were sitting at a higher altitude, the BAT members managed to intrude 500 metres inside the Indian territory and attack the patrol team. The Pakistan army used RPG to give cover fire to BAT members after they killed and mutilated soldiers’ bodies,” a source said.On Sunday, Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa toured the areas along the LoC in the Haji Pir sector of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. He was briefed about the operational preparation of its army along the LoC.In March, Pakistani troops had violated the mutually- agreed truce along the LoC in Poonch and Rajouri sectors seven times. They violated the ceasefire in the Poonch sector on April 19 and also targeted Indian forward posts in the Noushera sector with mortars on April 8 and 17. The Pakistan army had resorted to firing in Poonch district on April 5, in Bhimbher Gali sector on April 4 and twice on April 3 in Balakote and (Digwar) Poonch sectors.BAT — A mix of special forces, terroristsPakistan’s Border Action Team is a group of special forces with highly trained terrorists from outfits such as Lashkar-e-Toiba specifically employed for trans-LoC action. Their action distance from LoC varies from 1 to 3 km. In Pakistan, the SSG (special services group) forms the core of BAT. Its primary task is to dominate the LoC by carrying out disruptive actions in form of surreptitious raids.Previous BAT attacks

  • November 22, 2016: Three soldiers killed, while one soldier’s body mutilated near LoC in the Machhil sector of Kupwara district
  • October 28, 2016: Terrorists, under cover fire by Pakistan army, cross LoC and kill a jawan and mutilate his body in Machhil sector
  • January 8, 2013: Bodies of two soldiers, Lance Naik Hemraj and Lance Naik Sudhagar Singh, mutilated in Mankot sector of Poonch

 


Steps initiated to treat ECHS ills

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, May 30

Several measures have been introduced to streamline the functioning of the Ex-servicemen Contributory Health Scheme (ECHS), the functioning of which had been affected by financial and administrative ills over the past several years. The measures include easing norms of procuring medical supplies, revamping the command and control structure and issuing smart cards.A major relief to ECHS beneficiaries is a policy introduced to de-link supply of medicines from the Armed Forces Medical Supply Depots (AFMSD) and empowering the Senior Executive Medical Officers (SEMOs) at military stations to be solely responsible for procuring medicines.Earlier, all medicines to ECHS polyclinics were routed through the AFMSD and the non-availability of medicines at polyclinics had become a serious issue due to logistics as well as budgetary constraints.The scheme was launched in 2003 to provide medical cover to retired armed forces personnel and their dependants and reduce the workload of service hospitals. At present, it caters to 52 lakh beneficiaries through a nationwide network of 421 operational polyclinics and 2,247 private hospitals.ECHS members are also being issued new smart cards having security features to guard against fraud and misuse. These will have an embedded chip to store personal and medical information of members and their family members.The income criteria from all sources for being eligible to become a member’s dependent has been revised from Rs 3,500 a month to Rs 9,000 plus dearness allowance.The scheme has also been extended to eligible Army Postal Service pensioners and the Defence Ministry has been accorded sanction for follow-up treatment from government hospitals and Regional Cancer Centres. The expenditure so incurred will be reimbursable as per rates of the hospital.


J&K’s dirty war calls for innovation: Army chief

If my men ask me what to do, should I say wait & die?’

PEOPLE SAID THE MILITANT MANAGED TO ESCAPE FROM THE ENCOUNTER SITE ON SATURDAY IN WHICH BHAT AND ANOTHER MILITANT WERE KILLED

NEWDELHI: The Indian Army is facing a “dirty war” in Jammu and Kashmir which has to be fought through “innovative” ways, army chief Gen Bipin Rawat has said, stoutly defending the use of a Kashmiri as a ‘human shield’ by a young officer.

In an exclusive interaction with PTI, Rawat said the main objective of awarding Major Leetul Gogoi, when a Court of Inquiry was finalising its probe into the incident, was to boost the morale of young officers of the force who are operating in a very difficult environment in the militancy-infested state.

“This is a proxy war and proxy war is a dirty war. It is played in a dirty way. The rules of engagements are there when the adversary comes face-to-face and fights with you. It is a dirty war …. That is where innovation comes in. You fight a dirty war with innovations,” Rawat said.

The Army Chief’s Commendation medal to Gogoi, who had tied a man to an army jeep and used him as a human shield from stone throwers was criticised by activists, Kashmiri groups and some retired army generals. A video of the incident had triggered a row with many condemning it.

Gogoi was awarded for his sustained efforts in counter-insurgency operations.

“People are throwing stones at us, people are throwing petrol bombs at us. If my men ask me what do we do, should I say, just wait and die? I will come with a nice coffin with a national flag and I will send your bodies home with honour. Is it what I am supposed to tell them as chief? I have to maintain the morale of my troops who are operating there,” Gen Rawat said.

Talking about the complexity of the security challenge in the state, he suggested it would have been easier for the armed forces if the protesters were firing weapons instead of throwing stones. “I wish these people, instead of throwing stones at us, were firing weapons at us. Then I would have been happy. Then I could do what I (want to do),” he said.

Gen Rawat, who had served in Jammu and Kashmir extensively, said if people in any country lose fear of the army, then the country is doomed.

“Adversaries must be afraid of you and at the same time your people must be afraid of you. We are a friendly army, but when we are called to restore law and order, people have to be afraid of us,” he said.

At the same time, he asserted that maximum restraint is being maintained while handling the situation in the Valley.

Gen Rawat said that as the Army chief, it was his duty to lift the morale of the army personnel in Jammu and Kashmir and he did it by awarding Major Gogoi.

“As Army Chief my concern is morale of the Army. That is my job. I am far away from the battle field. I cannot influence the situation there. I can only tell the boys that I am with you. I always tell my people, things will go wrong, but if things have gone wrong and you did not have malafide intent, I am there,” he said.

Gen Rawat said there was a ploy to break the trust between various security forces, and Major Gogoi could not have refused to provide security when polling agents had sought security assistance.

“Tomorrow elections have to be held in Anantnag and similar things may happen. If the army does not respond to call for assistance, then the trust between the people whom we are protecting, police and army will break.

“That is something I cannot allow to happen. This is what the militants want. It can create a divide between the army and other security forces,” he said. SRINAGAR: An unknown ‘militant’ showed up in the local graveyard of Ratsuna in south Kashmir’s Tral during the burial of Hizbul Mujahideen’s Sabzar Ahmad Bhat on Sunday morning.

He did not have a gun but appeared to carry a grenade in a pouch. His appearance triggered commotion among the mourners in and outside the graveyard.

Locals said he escaped from the encounter on Saturday in which 29-year-old Sabzar and another teenaged militant Faizaan were killed. HT could not independently verify the claims of the locals.

People jostled to touch him and made way for him to reach the grave which was being dug for the slain militant.

Dressed in black, tears rolled down his face as people swarmed around him to touch his face and beard. Some even kissed him and at one moment people carried him on their shoulders.

Just when he reached the grave, he shouted loudly: Hum Kya Chahte (What do we want) and people responded with ‘Azadi’ in unison.

No one seemed sure about his name, though. ‘Adil’, ‘Shakir’ and ‘Azaan’ were the names bandied about. Eyewitnesses said that the militant had also addressed people on Saturday when they had gathered around Sabzar’s body. “We will take revenge,” he reportedly told the gathering.

Deputy inspector general of police, South Kashmir SP Pani and superintendent of police (SP) Awantipora (Tral) Mohammad Zaid were not available for comment.

The funeral prayer of Sabzar was scheduled at 11 am but was offered in an orchard near his home at Ratsuna at 9 am and then taken to the Martyrs’ Graveyard for burial.People continued coming till noon and funeral prayers in absentia were offered multiple times.

The General has it wrong

Justifying Gogoi’s action could undermine the Army’s prestige

It is highly regrettable that Gen. Bipin Rawat, the Chief of Army Staff, has chosen to justify and extol the actions of Maj. Leetul Gogoi, who used a Kashmiri civilian as a human shield against stone-pelters in Budgam on April 9. It is understandable that Gen. Rawat feels a loyalty to his men, and a concern for the morale of his troops. But his defence of Maj. Gogoi achieves neither of those objectives. If anything, it undermines the prestige of the Army, and makes even worse a bad situation in the Valley.

The General has suggested that the Major was right to violate one man’s human rights in order to get his soldiers out of a difficult situation. He has also argued that it is necessary for the Army to engender a sense of fear, not only among India’s enemies, but also among its own citizens. Gen. Rawat’s assertions are the more disappointing because they come, not from some desk-bound general, but from a decorated veteran of Kashmir, an officer with vast experience in counter-insurgency operations. As a soldier’s soldier, Gen. Rawat knows that his men daily demonstrate that there are ways to tackle stone-pelters without violating human rights. To defend the one soldier who does is to tell the thousands of others that their noble restraint is unnecessary. It is one thing for hyper-nationalistic paper patriots to celebrate Maj. Gogoi with unthinking enthusiasm, but coming from the Army chief, this is a message with potentially dangerous consequences.

It is hardly reassuring that the nation’s top soldier thinks it is necessary that Indians should be afraid of those in uniform, but in any event the use of human shields doesn’t engender fear: it invites contempt. Nor are these the words of a mature leader of men: “In fact, I wish these people, instead of throwing stones at us, were firing weapons at us. Then I would have been happy. Then I could do what I (want to do).” The most charitable interpretation of Gen. Rawat’s statements is that they are the outcome of his being put in a profoundly unnatural situation. Perhaps it is inevitable, then, that the country’s top soldier has started to talk like a politician.

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Snow cleared, Rohtang Pass thrown open

1,200 vehicles will be allowed daily, except Tuesday, the day reserved for maintenance of the road

Snow cleared, Rohtang Pass thrown open
The Rohtang Pass attracts a large number of tourists during summer. Photo: MC Thakur

Dipender Manta

Tribune News Service

Kullu, May 23

The district administration, Kullu, has opened (13,050 feet) high Rohtang Pass for tourist activities in Himachal Pradesh today. A total of 1,200 vehicles will be allowed toward it daily in the coming days, except Tuesday, as this day is marked for maintenance of road toward the pass.Deputy Commissioner Kullu Yunus Khan today inaugurated the online permit facility for tourist vehicles, which is mandatory to ply the vehicles toward Rohtang Pass for tourism related activities. Permits can only be applied for the next two days from the current date.According to National Green Tribunal (NGT) directions only 1,200 tourist vehicles will be allowed toward Rohtang Pass in a single day. Out of these, 800 vehicles would be petrol run, while 400 diesel run.The permit will be available online on payment of Rs 550 and can be obtained on Google by inserted ‘Rohtang permit’. The permit costs Rs 500, while Rs 50 will be taken as congestion charges.The Deputy Commissioner said that “the online facility to avail the permit is very simple and tourist can avail it easily. Besides, we have provided the online facility to pay green tax. However the tourists can pay it manually at green tax barrier, Manali, as well.”“In the morning hours between 6am to 9am 400 petrol and 200 diesel vehicles having permits will be allowed toward Rohtang Pass, while between 9:30 am and 12pm the same number of vehicles will be allowed for tourism purpose”, the Deputy Commissioner elaborated.However, the tourists heading toward Lahaul Spiti and Leh Ladakh will not be charged any amount, except Rs 50 as congestion charges, to provide the permit. The amount for heavy vehicles is Rs 100.To foil any mischief, the district administration has decided to verify vehicles at Koksar and Keylong, which will have the permit to visit Lahaul.“If any taxi driver violates the order the action will be taken and vehicle will be blacklisted to ply on that route”, said the Deputy Commissioner.However, the vehicles of the residents of Lahaul Spiti and Pangi region are allowed to ply on the route and cross Rohtang Pass without paying any congestion charges. Apart from this, a POS (point of sale) machine has been set up at green tax barrier in Manali, where cashless transaction facility will be available and tourist can swipe their card to pay the green tax.Permits available online for Rs 550

  • As per the NGT directions 800 petrol and 400 diesel vehicles will be allowed per day
  • Permit will be available online on payment of Rs 550
  • It can be obtained on Google by writing ‘Rohtang permit’
  • The permit costs Rs 500, while Rs 50 will be taken as congestion charges.
  • However, the tourists heading toward Lahaul Spiti and Leh Ladakh will be charged only Rs 50 as congestion charges