Sanjha Morcha

Knowledge of military history must for youth: Gen VK Singh

Knowledge of military history must for youth: Gen VK Singh
Union Minister of State for External Affairs Gen VK Singh addresses a seminar at Welham Boys School in Dehradun on Friday. Tribune photo

Tribune News Service

Dehradun, October 6

Union Minister of State for External Affairs and former Army chief General VK Singh today said politicians and people should come forward to ensure everlasting peace in Kashmir valley.He was interacting with mediapersons on the sidelines of a two-day seminar on Military History that started at Welham Boys School here today. General VK Singh asserted that Indo-China relations were good on economic front and other issues too should be sorted out. “Further, Prime Minister himself has said that it was in the interests of both India and China to work together,” former Army chief said. General VK Singh said it was important that politicians read military history of the country so they do not take wrong decisions. Admitting to shortage of officers in the Army, he said while a large number of students opted for defence forces as career after Class XII, same case not the case after they graduated. He said there were limited training resources after Class XII added to the problem.Darshan Singh, chairman, Welham Boys’ School, said it was important that the coming generations were made aware of military history of the country. “Perhaps today, people between the age of 10 and 50 years, know almost nothing of the action in Kashmir in 1947-48 or the wars in 1962, 1965, 1971and 1999. Such ignorance should be avoided and children should be taught military history,” said Darshan Singh.He said the seminar wasdesigned to promote collaborative thinking and deliberation among the students. Students of various schools from across the country are participating in the seminar. 


HIGHLIGHTS PRINT MEDIA NEWS ::05 OCT 2017

  1. CAPT AMARINDERS VIEWS ON RAHUL AND PM : ECONOMIC TIMES
  2. THE FORGOTTEN OCCUPATION BY LT GEN BHOPINDER SINGH
  3. ONE OF A KIND CHIEF BY WG CDR JS BHALLA (RETD)
  4. SRINAGAR ATTACK: TERRORIST DISGUISED HIMSELF IN CRPF UNIFORM TO AMBUSH SOLDIERS
  5. CHINA’S NEW J-20 FIGHTER JETS OUTCLASS REGIONAL RIVALS
  6. IMA CELEBRATES 85TH RAISING DAY
  7. LAC SUMMER VIGIL EXTENDS INTO WINTER
  8. DOWNSIDE OF VALLEY’S WAR THROUGH BOMBS, GUNS: YOUTH HIGH ON DRUGS
  9. CHINA IS DEVELOPING AN UNDERWATER PROBE TO BOLSTER CLAIMS IN DISPUTED SEAS
  10. Fidayeen determined, can’t stop attacks in J&K: BSF
  11. MAJOR KILLED, 3 HURT AS BMW CAR HITS TREE
  12. PAK VIOLATES CEASEFIRE FOR THIRD CONSECUTIVE DAY
  13. LAWRENCE FOUNDER’S DAY CELEBRATIONS DRAW TO CLOSE
  14. LAHAUL RESIDENTS EXCITED AS TUNNEL WORK NEARS COMPLETION
  15. IRAQ FORCES RETAKE CENTRE OF IS BASTION HAWIJA: ARMY

 

 


Hazare: Modi averse to appointing Lokpal

Hazare: Modi averse to appointing Lokpal
Anna Hazare on a day-long Satyagraha at Rajghat against corruption in New Delhi on Monday. Mukesh Aggarwal

New Delhi, October 2

Social activist Anna Hazare, who led a massive anti-corruption campaign in 2011, today threatened a rerun of his crusade as he denounced the Modi government over its “failure” to appoint a Lokpal and create a graft-free India.Hazare, who was the face of the impassioned movement for the creation of Lokpal at the Centre and Lokayukta in states to probe corruption in the government, targeted Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying “he is averse to appoint anyone to the office”.The announcement came after the octogenarian Gandhian visited Raj Ghat to pay tributes to Mahatma Gandhi on his 148th birth anniversary. “The movement I started for appointing a Lokpal is incomplete, which is why there is a need for another agitation.“The government failed to appoint a Lokpal in the last three years. In fact, it has weakened the Act (The Lokpal and Lokayukta Act, 2013),” he said at a press meet at the New Maharastra Sadan. The new movement, he said, would be launched by the end of the year or early next year. — PTI


Ambala IAF base getting Rafale-ready

GOVT HAS SANCTIONED ₹220 CRORE TO SET UP 14 SHELTERS, HANGERS AND MAINTENANCE FACILITIES; RAFALE COMBAT JETS WILL BE MODIFIED KEEPING LOCAL NEEDS IN MIND

AMBALA : The Indian Air Force (IAF) has initiated major infrastructure upgrade at its frontline base here for deployment of the first squadron of the Rafale jets which will give India greater “potency” over Pakistan as these will be capable of carrying nuclear weapons and other missiles.

The Ambala base is considered one of the most strategically located bases of the IAF as the Indo­Pak border is around 220 km from it.The government has already sanctioned ₹220 crore to set up 14 shelters, hangers and maintenance facilities at the 78-yearold base for the Rafale jets whose delivery is scheduled to begin from September, 2019, a senior IAF official said.

“We are creating infrastructure keeping in mind infrastructure requirement for the Rafale jets for next 40-50 years,” the official said on condition of anonymity as he is not authorised to speak to media.

The Ambala base is considered one of the most strategically located bases of the IAF as the Indo-Pak border is around 220 km from it.

Currently, the base has two squadrons of the Jaguar combat aircraft and one squadron of the MiG-21 Bison. Marshal of the Indian Air Force Arjan Singh, who passed away two weeks ago, was the first commander of the Ambala base in independent India.

Several teams from French defence major Dassault Aviation, the manufacturer of Rafale, have already visited the Ambala air force base and finalised the requirement for the first squadron of combat jets.

The IAF is also carrying out infrastructure upgrade at its Hasimara base in West Bengal which will house the second squadron of the Rafale jets, the official said.

In September last year, India had signed a Euro 7.87 billion (approx Rs 59,000 crore) deal with the French government for purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets. Eighteen Rafale jets will be deployed in Ambala while an equal number of the new generation jet will be stationed in Hasimara.

“We are planning to put in place all required infrastructure for Rafale squadron by end of next year,” said the air force official.

The Ambala as well as Hasimara stations will also have simulator-based training facilities for the air crew of Rafale jets. The Indian Air Force has already selected a batch of pilots to fly the jets and they are being given training by Dassault Aviation in France.

The Rafale squadron to be deployed in Ambala will be known as Golden Arrows which was originally based in Bathinda and was disbanded two years ago.

The Rafale combat jets will come with various India-specific modifications including Israeli helmet mounted displays, radar warning receivers, low band jammers, 10 hour flight data recording and infrared search and tracking systems among others.

The features that make the Rafale a strategic weapon in the hands of IAF, which is currently down to 34 squadrons as against a sanctioned strength of 44, includes its Beyond Visual Range (BVR) Meteor air-to-air missile with a range of 150 km.

Its integration on the Rafale jets will mean Indian Air Forcecan hit targets inside both Pakistan and across the northern and eastern borders while staying within India’s territorial boundary.


S Korea, US start military exercises

INCURRING KIM’S WRATH The joint drills by the two allies often viewed by North Korea as an invasion rehearsal

SEOUL: South Korean and US troops began five days of naval drills on Monday after North Korea renewed its threat to fire missiles near the American territory of Guam.

AP FILE■ The drills will see involvement of the American aircraft carrier the USS Ronald Reagan.

The South Korean and US militaries regularly conduct joint exercises, often enraging North Korea, which views such training as an invasion rehearsal. The latest drills in the waters off the Korean Peninsula come amid fears of a possible military clash following the exchanges of insults and fierce rhetoric between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The drills involve fighter jets, helicopters and 40 naval ships and submarines from the allies, including the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, according to South Korea’s navy. Spokesman Jang Wook said the drills are aimed at practicing how to respond to a potential naval provocation by North Korea and improving the allies’ combined operational capability.

The drills were to include livefire exercises by naval ships and aircraft and anti-submarine training.

In a possible show of force against North Korea, the United States also sent four advanced fighter jets — two F-22s and two F-35s — for an air show and exhibition in Seoul that are to begin Tuesday. Last week, the United States flew two B-1B supersonic bombers from its air base in Guam to South Korea to try to demonstrate its power against any North Korean aggression.

North Korea didn’t immediately respond to the start of the drills. On Friday, the North’s foreign ministry accused the US of provocation by mobilizing the aircraft carrier and other war assets near the peninsula.

“Such military acts compel (North Korea) to take military counteraction,” said Kim Kwang Hak, a researcher at the Institute for American Studies at the ministry. “We have already warned several times that we will take counteractions for self-defense, including a salvo of missiles into waters near the U.S. territory of Guam.”

In August, North Korea issued a similar threat, saying its military had presented Kim with plans to launch intermediaterange missiles to create “enveloping fire” near Guam.


LAST SALUTE TO BRAVEHEARTS

Indian Air Force officials paying homage to Garud commandos, K Milind Kishore and Nilesh Kumar Nayan, who were martyred in an encounter with Lashkar­e­Taiba militants in Bandipora in north Kashmir on Wednesday morning, at air Staion in Chandigarh on Thursday, at Air Force 12 Wing in Chandigarh on Thursday.

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In J&K, a battle of wits with ‘fidayeen’ by Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain

The Indian Army has faced insurgencies in the Northeast for decades and had a difficult experience in Sri Lanka in the late 1980s. (Photo: PTI)

Whenever the security forces led by the Indian Army create a position of dominance in Jammu and Kashmir and have the terrorists on the run, there is a flurry of so-called fidayeen action by the terrorists under the direction of their proxy masters across the Line of Control. Each time this happens the wheel is reinvented in the public mind, the media and the establishment, questioning the inability of the forces to prevent these intrusions into their camps, which often result in heavy casualties. We had Uri, with almost 20 soldiers killed at a base where they were meant to be safe. It happened in Pathankot and Nagrota, which are some distance from the border. Recently, we had the Pulwama camp incident and just a few days ago the attack on the 184 BSF camp at Humhuma in Srinagar. The security forces are trained to secure themselves, and the repeated ability of terror groups to gain entry into their camps is being questioned, quite justifiably. How valid is this criticism?

The term “fidayeen” is borrowed from the Palestinian conflict. It gives much respect to the individual who decides to sacrifice his life for the cause of his community or nation. No such respect is intended here for such enemies of the state and the term is used purely for convenience. The Indian Army has faced insurgencies in the Northeast for decades and had a difficult experience in Sri Lanka in the late 1980s. It suffered ambushes and had direct contacts with militants or terrorists, but there were hardly any cases of intrusions into its camps. The organised and focused attacks by a few well-armed and logistically-equipped terrorists willing either to blow themselves up with strap-on improvised explosive devices (IEDs) or to fight until death, is something that the Palestinians created and showcased to the world. In our context, I remember being hit with such tactics in the form of a campaign for the first time only in 1999, in the Valley, and a little later in the Jammu region. Pakistan and its proxies used this to try to recover lost space and did initially put the Indian Army and other security forces on the defensive. It was around the aftermath of Kargil, where Pakistan also made a sham of attempting to project that those involved in the operations at the heights were actually local “mujahideen”.  Initially, the target of fidayeen action were primarily military camps of a smaller size. Intrusions were by a varying number of fidayeen, from just two to almost 10-15. The concept was quite ingenuous. The targets were mapped with the assistance of inside sources, who are aplenty. The disguise was invariably that of soldiers or policemen. Thereafter, there was the employment of a ruse to divert attention with a dash by a few terrorists into the innards of the camp even through the gates, to merge with soldiers and systematically attempt to eliminate as many as possible. In a rare case, at a place called Chak Nutnus, near Handwara, a very well-coordinated and extremely daring intrusion, bordering on being a virtual raid, killed an officer and a number of jawans and even made away with a medium machine-gun. It was suspected the intruders were led by a Pakistani SSG regular officer who infiltrated and established a strong terror grid in North Kashmir.

In one of their very daring improvisations, two terrorists did make an attempt to join the tail end of an Army patrol returning to base in the early hours. Alert troops doing counting drill discovered the ploy in time. Thus, no attempt at the execution of a fidayeen action is without deep thought at deception, ingenuity to prevent detection and capability to fight till the end with intent to cause destruction and casualties out of proportion with that employed.

From the vicinity of LoC to camps in the interior, to large headquarters and ultimately institutions of significance, fidayeen attempts force a “fortress mentality” on the forces. That is the intent of the adversary — to  compel us into a defensive mentality, make soldiers jumpy and get larger deployment to secure camps and institutions. The attack on the J&K Assembly and on India’s Parliament; and the series of attacks on the Badami Bagh cantonment’s entry gate in Srinagar were designed with this in mind. To the credit of the security forces, they didn’t become defensive, and found answers through better drills, intelligence and sheer grit. Yet, it may not be possible to always prevent an intrusion as every inch of the perimeter of camps and institutions cannot have physical deployment. Besides, the securitymen can’t remain rooted to their camps. There must be a balance between defensive deployment and proactive domination operations. The forces are on operational duty 24×7, and limits of human stamina force the necessity of organised rest. Terrorists keep the camps under inter-clandestine surveillance to find weaknesses and attempt to exploit chinks in security or moments when the troops are excessively fatigued.

For the security forces, it’s a battle of wits. There can be no justification for any force being unable to prevent intrusions. If an intrusion does take place due to the success of a terrorist ruse or simply laxity of perimeter defences, the next step is to ensure earliest elimination of the intruders before any major harm can be caused. That requires a strong response system with well-trained troops and suitable equipment to neutralise the intruders before excessive harm is caused.

Most fidayeen attempts are made by foreign terrorists dependent on a network of local over-ground workers. Organisations which have control over over-ground workers’ activity succeed in preventing fidayeen action with early intelligence and stronger defensive measures after warnings are issued. The sheer numbers of potential targets gives scope for terror groups to pick and choose. The smaller the quantum of terrorists, the greater the chances of success for them. We have rarely seen suicide bombers in J&K. The fidayeen action there involve suicide attackers who are willing to fight to the last.

While the expectations from the forces are high and they have invariably delivered each time, the situation has slipped a few notches due to the machinations of our adversaries, infallibility in such irregular conflict conditions is something nobody can ever guarantee. Just like in the field of infiltration there can never be a zero-infiltration environment, there can be no such guarantee against the wily fidayeen ready to sacrifice his life and cause maximum harm to the security forces or other government institutions. That understanding doesn’t give leeway to the forces and its hierarchies to underperform. Every lapse must be judged on its merits and counter-measures initiated. It is, however, important for the public, the media and other stakeholders to understand the challenges that our men in the field face and to show empathy towards them.


Images of soldiers’ bodies in plastic sacks trigger row

Images of soldiers’ bodies in plastic sacks trigger row
A photo that Lieutenant General HS Panag tweeted claiming that these were bodies of the seven military personnel who dies in a helicopter crash. Authenticity of the photo has not been verified. Photo courtesy: Lt General HS Panag””s Twitter handle.

New Delhi, October 8

Two days after seven military personnel were killed in a helicopter crash in Tawang, purported images of their bodies wrapped in plastic sacks and tied up in cardboard surfaced today, triggering an outrage.This prompted the Army to come out with a tweet saying the wrapping of the bodies with local resources was an “aberration” and that the fallen soldiers are always given full military honour.“Seven young men stepped out into the sunshine yesterday to serve their motherland, India. This is how they came home,” tweeted former Northern Army commander Lt Gen HS Panag (retd), along with the images of the bodies.Reacting to the issue, the Army’s Additional Directorate General of Public Information tweeted that the carriage of the mortal remains in body bags, wooden boxes and coffins would be ensured.“Fallen soldiers (are) always given full military honour. Carriage of mortal remains in body bags, wooden boxes and coffins will be ensured,” it said.It said wrapping the bodies in local resources was an “aberration”. The photographs were taken when the bodies were in Guwahati, as per an official.Lt Gen Panag (retd) said proper military body bags must be used to transport bodies from forward locations until ceremonial coffins were available.Several people on twitter also expressed their anguish after the images surfaced. — PTI


IAF copter crash in Tawang kills 7 Mishap comes 2 days ahead of Air Force Day; court of inquiry ordered

IAF copter crash in Tawang kills 7

Bijay Sankar Bora

Tribune News Service

Guwahati/New Delhi, Oct 6

Seven military personnel died in a helicopter crash near Tawang, the Tibetan monastery town in Arunachal Pradesh, near the Line of Actual Control (LAC), the de facto boundary between India and China, this morning. Only yesterday, Indian Air Force Chief Air Chief Marshall BS Dhanoa, at a press conference  in New Delhi, had said: “Our losses (crashes) during  peacetime are a cause for concern.”The deceased are Wing Commander Vikram Upadhyay, Squadron Leader S Tiwari, MWO AK Singh and Sergeants Gautam and Satish Kumar of the IAF and Sepoys E Balaji and HN Deka of the Indian Army.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The IAF has ordered a court of inquiry to ascertain the cause of the crash, Tezpur-based Defence PRO Lt Col Sobmit Ghose said. “The Mi-17 V5 chopper was carrying supplies to a forward post in the hilly terrain. It crashed close to the dropping zone and caught fire immediately,” an IAF spokesperson said in New Delhi. The Russia-made copter was on its  second sortie of the day. On an air maintenance mission, it was scheduled to drop off kerosene jerry cans at an Army camp in Yangste, he said. Tawang SP Manoj Kumar Meena told The Tribune over the phone that the crash occurred around 6.30 am, 130 km from Tawang, after the chopper had taken off from the Khrimur helipad.A rescue team comprising Army and IAF personnel rushed to the crash site and found the bodies, which were transported to the IAF base at Tezpur, Assam.The crash comes two days ahead of Air Force Day on October 8 and is the second incident involving IAF helicopters in Arunachal Pradesh in three months. An Advanced Light Helicopter of the IAF had crashed at Saglee in Papum Pare district on July 4, claiming four lives.Minister of State (MoS) for External Affairs Gen VK Singh (retd) expressed grief over the loss of lives.


90 trainees scale 17,530-ft peak

90 trainees scale 17,530-ft peak
Trainees of the Army’s High Altitude Warfare School after scaling the summit.
  • Over 90 commissioned and non-commissioned officers undergoing mountain warfare advance training at the Army’s High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) have scaled a 17,530-ft peak in Kashmir
  • A Srinagar-based spokesman said the team started the expedition on September 27 and reached the top on September 29
  • “The team, led by Maj Gen Atul Kaushik, commandant, HAWS, traversed the treacherous route having ice walls, moraines, glacial fields and crevasses,” the spokesman said.  Srinagar, TNS