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Keeping Pace With Change: Indian Army Through 70 Years by Lt Gen Ata Husnain

Keeping Pace With Change: Indian Army Through 70 Years

SNAPSHOT

How the nature of military threats, and warfare, India faces from its neighbours has changed over the last 70 years, and how the Indian Army has responded to them.

Classically, when one reviews a complex and operationally diverse organisation such as the Indian Army, there are mainly four areas to be examined. First, the organisation and structure itself. The second is operational and tactical tenets, which always remain dynamic. Third comes the technology and advancements which enable matching, or better capability than adversaries. And the fourth and last is the sociology of the organisation, whether it has supported the professional culture through the growth process. This review can be as elaborate as one may wish to make it, and given my passion as a second generation soldier it can border even on the inane and irrelevant. To keep it balanced, only some of the major issues will be addressed. The aspect of military sociology will be touched upon only perfunctorily.

The purpose here is to review the Indian Army’s ability to withstand threats through 70 years of Independence, in a short essay without getting too bogged down with detail. The areas described above will concurrently run through the essay in each described phase of the Indian Army’s existence. The 70 years can be broadly divided into phases as follows:-

– Post-Independence, from 1947 to 1962

– The Reorganisation and retrieval, from 1962 to 1971

– The consolidation, from 1972 to 1991

–  Multiple threats and challenges in the path to modernisation, from 1992 to 2017

Post-Independence, from 1947 to 1962

Emerging from the victory of the Allies in 1945, the then British Indian Army went through a phase of virtual chaos till 1950. First came the downsizing from the war time strength of almost 2.5 million soldiers, which was followed by Partition and the division of the British Indian Army into the armies of independent India and Pakistan.

Two Indian gunners, contributing their services to the Allied Army, at their machine gun in the Libyan desert. (Keystone/Getty Images)
Two Indian gunners, contributing their services to the Allied Army, at their machine gun in the Libyan desert. (Keystone/Getty Images)

The ensuing confusion was exacerbated by the fact that within three months of Independence, the Indian Army was at war with an awkward mix of regulars and criminal tribals led by the newly formed Pakistan Army’s officer cadre. Even as the two armies remained at war from 27 October 1947 to the end of 1948, the assets of the pre-Partition British Indian Army were being divided and handed over to the Pakistan Army. Armies at war do not aid the other by parting with assets, which may be due to be given under any agreement. Yet, the code of ethics of the Indian Army remained intact through a strange war in which old friends and comrades in arms continued to remain in touch even as battles between their two armies raged.

The Indian Army ensured that Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) did not fall into the hands of the marauders through the valiant battles it fought at Zojila, Leh, Uri, Poonch and Naushera among many others. The ceasefire halted what would have been a sure culmination of the campaign with capture of the entire territory of J&K. The operational experience and training of the Second World War was a great contributor to the professional capability and ingenuity displayed during the 1947-48 campaign in J&K. The transportation of light tanks to Zojila in semi-knocked down condition, to be assembled and employed in battle, and the manner in which Gurez was captured by manually pushing artillery guns up the Razdan Pass, were just some of the examples of ingenuity.

In September 1948, the Indian Army launched Operation Polo to wrest Hyderabad in five days of fighting against the Nizam’s state forces once the Nizam had refused to accede to India. The government obviously did not wish to have a balkanised subcontinent of independent states and parts of the Indian union mixing with each other.

After the J&K campaign, the Army underwent little change in organisation, operational concept, doctrine or even weapons and equipment. Armour and artillery continued to be characterised by tanks and guns from the Second World War and the Infantry had the vintage .303 rifle as its main personal weapon. Even as the Army entered Nagaland in its first counter insurgency operation in 1955, there was no attempt to acquire any specialist equipment to successfully pursue the operation. In 1961, the Army launched a swift operation to capture Goa where it met little resistance.

The period up to 1962 did not see any other conventional operations after the hard fought success of 1947-48. The only other deployment was of an Indian infantry brigade as the Custodian Force of India to oversee peace in Korea and the 60th Parachute Field Ambulance Company as part of the UN force to fight the invasion by the Chinese and North Koreans. A brigade was also deployed in Congo as part of the UN forces and it participated in some robust operations too.

In terms of training institutions, the Defense Services Staff College at Wellington which moved from the original location at Quetta, was re-established with much care and attention, thus retaining its premier status as a leading centre for joint training. Two more major institutions were established. In January 1955, the National Defence Academy (NDA), Khadakvasla, was inaugurated at the culmination of a long process with much care and focus of the civilian and military leadership. NDA ensured the concept of joint training at the entry level, something rarely found anywhere else in the world. The other institution which has met the challenges of the times till today is the National Defence College (NDC). Established in 1960, as an institution of strategic learning for various departments of the government and housed centrally at Tees January Marg at New Delhi, this institution was established on the lines of the Imperial Defense College, now called Royal College of Defence Studies. All three institutions exemplified the early realisation of the need for joint operational philosophy.

The social makeup of the Army remained essentially steeped in British traditions. The Army succeeded in retaining the British Army’s regimental system, its strict code of conduct and discipline, never mixing on and off parade stances of its officers. Indian officers pushed into senior ranks at relatively young age and service profiles displayed much maturity and yet ruthlessness in ensuring the highest standards of probity. The officer man relationship remained one of deep mutual respect.

The Sino-Indian border war of 1962 did not come as a surprise as there was a gradual buildup leading to the show down. A little more than a division worth of troops was involved from the Indian Army in three broad areas – Ladakh, Kameng division of North East Frontier Agency (NEFA), and the Rest of NEFA. Unfortunately, the then government of India had failed to appreciate threats to the nation as they would manifest and invested little in the Armed Forces. The result of the Chinese invasion was an ignominious defeat which shook the nation and led to a dented psyche for long.

Indian officers occupying one of the forts in the Ladakh region of northern India during border clashes between India and China. (Radloff/Three Lions/GettyImages)
Indian officers occupying one of the forts in the Ladakh region of northern India during border clashes between India and China. (Radloff/Three Lions/GettyImages)
Indian officers occupying one of the forts in the Ladakh region of northern India during border clashes between India and China. (Radloff/Three Lions/Getty Images)
Indian officers occupying one of the forts in the Ladakh region of northern India during border clashes between India and China. (Radloff/Three Lions/Getty Images)

The Reorganisation And Retrieval, From 1962 to 1971

Post 1962 saw the sudden expansion of the Army. Specialist terrain related organisations such as mountain divisions and scouts units were raised for the Himalayan front while additional infantry divisions were raised for the plains. The semi-automatic 7.62 mm SLR rifle, L1A1, became the personal weapon of the Infantry. The Centurion Mk 7 and the indigenous Vijayanta emerged as the main battle tanks for a short period even as the Soviet T-55 competed for space. The need for manpower resources for expansion at the level of enrolled ranks was met by increasing the capacity of training centres and resorting to emergency commission (EC) for officers. There was no shortage of officers and the performance of EC officers in subsequent operational situations was always at par.

The India-Pakistan conflict of 1965 was triggered by Pakistan on the premise that the reorganisation and re-equipping of the Indian Army would make it near impossible for the Pakistan Army to defeat it in a battle. Thus Pakistan decided to launch operations in 1965 before the Indian Army’s makeover could be complete. The intent was to wrest J&K and make maximum inroads into the plains sector of the western theatre. The 22-day war of August–September, 1965, preceded by another short war in the Kutch sector of Gujarat, was largely a stalemate, although Pakistan celebrates 6 September each year as Victory Day.

The truth is that Pakistan failed to achieve its stated objectives. The Indian Army made some spectacular gains in the mountains capturing Haji Pir in J&K but lost ground in Akhnur and in Southern Punjab. A major defensive armour battle at Asal Uttar destroyed a large part of Pakistan’s pivotal 1st Armoured Division. Pakistan’s attempt to motivate the local population of J&K to rise against India through Operation Gibraltar, did not succeed.

The Indian Army thoroughly reviewed its failings of 1965 and conducted a major training event to validate changes that were envisaged after lessons learnt. Exercise Betwa, conducted in early 1967, examined and practised operations of the then only offensive Corps size formation. In September 1967, serious clashes broke out at Nathula on the Sino-Indian border. The ability of the Indian troops to resist Chinese attempts at intimidation was a major morale booster although there were large scale casualties on both sides resulting from the rogue action by Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). This action, coming after the successful dissuasion of any Chinese pro-activeness to assist Pakistan in 1965 by opening another front, helped the Indian Army redeem much of its lost self-esteem resulting from the reverses of 1962.

Although India accorded a lower priority to the then territory of East Pakistan in terms of threats and own equipment profile, it was the eastern front which got activated in 1971. The possibility of a two-front war was overcome by ensuring that no hostilities took place before the winter of late 1971. General (later Field Marshal) Sam Manekshaw bought time for preparations once it was evident that war could be a possibility given Pakistan’s rogue handling of the civil strife in East Pakistan. The broad strategy if India was pushed into a war dwelt upon sufficient buildup of forces on the East Pakistan front with forces deployed to prevent any Pakistani ingress in the West; only short offensive thrusts were activated to tie down Pakistani reserves along the entire western front. Despite winter, the troops on the Sino-Indian border remained deployed at battle stations to dissuade any Chinese pro-activism. A rapid switch of selected formations from east to the western front was planned and executed.

Indian troops repairing the Jessore Road from Kolkata in India to Jessore in Bangladesh, during the India-Pakistan War of 1971, (William Lovelace/Daily Express/GettyImages)
Indian troops repairing the Jessore Road from Kolkata in India to Jessore in Bangladesh, during the India-Pakistan War of 1971, (William Lovelace/Daily Express/GettyImages)

The 1971 war was a spectacular success on the eastern front resulting in the surrender of 93,000 Pakistan Army soldiers, although success on the western front was limited as intended.

The Consolidation, From 1972 To 1991

Despite the spectacular military victory of 1971 the nature of threats to India’s borders did not dilute. In fact, the clear Pakistani intent for retribution for the military disgrace remained a threat in being. The Pakistan mindset which remains fixated to the day is that the loss of East Pakistan (Bangladesh) was not a result of the competent military showing on the part of the Indian Army but rather the disloyal actions of the Mukti Bahini and the Bengali people. It continued to perceive that the war on the western front remained in its favour, and given more time and resources, it could have executed a breakthrough on this front. This psyche and mindset remains till today and much of the threats arise from the arrogance of this thinking.

Lt Gen Niazi signing the Instrument of Surrender on behalf of Pakistan in 1971 (Indian Navy. Wikimedia Commons) 
Lt Gen Niazi signing the Instrument of Surrender on behalf of Pakistan in 1971 (Indian Navy. Wikimedia Commons) 

To meet the threat from Pakistan the then Army Chief, General TN Raina, ordered a review of the mobilisation procedures. This resulted in the move of operational formations to stations closer to the western front. Regimental centres at Dehradun, Meerut and Nasirabad made way for fighting formations and moved into Central India. However, India’s stance still remained reactive contingent upon any offensive intent of Pakistan. A second armoured division was raised as also more independent armoured brigades to add teeth to strike forces which were now more potent having been organised into two corps sized forces with an armoured division each. A major decision in the reorganisation of forces was the setting up of Headquarters (HQ) Northern Command at Udhampur and the move of HQ 15 Corps to Srinagar thus effectively splitting up the rather large Western Command whose responsibility had been from Ladakh to Southern Punjab and North Rajasthan. Simultaneously, HQ 16 Corps was raised at Nagrota to take responsibility from south of Pir Panjal to Pathankot.

Alongside the reorganisation, which anyway remained an ongoing process, an experts committee comprising Lieutenant General (later General) KV Krishna Rao, and Major General (later General) K Sundarji, deliberated on the future organisational structure and operational doctrine of the Indian Army. These deliberations were to be largely the basis upon which all subsequent raising of additional resources and the restructuring of the order of battle was to be based. An aspect which assisted in the discourse of future expansion to meet threats was the assured supply of weapons and equipment from the Soviet Union. Since the 1971 India-Pakistan conflict was followed closely by the Arab-Israeli conflict of 1973, much of the Soviet equipment employed effectively by Egypt in the latter conflict was made available to India. It led to a revamp of the air defence with induction of missiles and anti-tank resources through anti-tank guided missiles (ATGMs). The T-72 tank became the main battle tank and the BMP 1 followed by BMP 2 became the infantry carrying vehicle (ICV). The focus remained very largely on the mechanised battlefield and the deployment in the mountains on the line of control (LoC) did not receive matching attention primarily as the winning ability in the mountains was perhaps considered questionable.

T-72 FWMP Tanks pass through the saluting base on Rajpath during the full dress rehearsal of the Republic Day on 23 January 2012 in New Delhi, (Mohd. Zakir/Hindustan Times via GettyImages)
T-72 FWMP Tanks pass through the saluting base on Rajpath during the full dress rehearsal of the Republic Day on 23 January 2012 in New Delhi, (Mohd. Zakir/Hindustan Times via GettyImages)

It was in the late seventies that a potential nuclear threat from Pakistan started to emerge. Gloved in frequent denial and deliberate leaks to create a psychological effect, Pakistan was desperate to acquire nuclear capability in order to conceptually offset India’s asymmetric conventional advantage. The concept of nuclear red lines did not seriously emerge at this time although this has today become a major factor in our operational doctrine. Through the eighties, the Indian mechanised forces were expectedly gung ho with their numerical and qualitative advantage. Deep objectives were sought and planned for, with destruction of the Pakistan war machine as the prime intent of battle.

What really assisted in the adoption of some offensive concepts was the early decision after 1972 to construct the ditch cum bund (DCB), a continuous anti-tank obstacle through the plains sector of J&K, Punjab and the Rajasthan-Punjab border. Although linear obstacles have been known to have been breached many times in history, they do prevent surprise and early loss of territory. Defensive stance can then be lighter with dependence on reserves that are available for both defensive and offensive operations. Progressively, the offensive content of the doctrine for the plains, obstacle ridden and desert terrain has thus witnessed an increase. The same could not be said of the mountains where the doctrine remained largely defensive. Till 1991, except for the raising of one mountain division for the Kameng sector in the East, no accretions took place signifying how much more the commitment of India was towards the threat emanating from Pakistan.

From 1978 to 1984, India witnessed increasing intimidation by Pakistan in the Siachen area. It was an area with an un-demarcated LoC . Left to the Pakistan domination it would have meant a broader swathe of territory to give depth to the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK)–China border and thus assist in their collusive strategy. Rightly, in one of the finer strategic decisions, the Indian Army occupied the Saltoro Ridge and denied the Siachen Glacier to Pakistan. An additional division was raised to take charge of the LoC in Ladakh and a new terminology came into being – the Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) in the general area of Siachen. It is important to remember that Siachen’s strategic importance cannot simply be wished away; its holding is even essential for the defence of Leh.

In 1987, the Indian Army ventured on its first out of area operation; Operation Pawan was perceived as necessary to retain the regional influence, but assessment about the way the operation would pan out went completely awry. Admittedly, an unclear aim and an uncertain strategy ensured that 30 months of deployment resulted in little gain except in refining the infantry’s basic tactics and getting many units battle inoculated under fire. In late 1988, another out of area operation (Operation Cactus) led to the scuttling of an attempt to overthrow the legitimate government of Maldives. By any yardstick it was a highly successful operation launched with uncharacteristic decision-making which was speedy and correct. If anything, India did learn from Operation Pawan that launching out of area operations or deploying forces in assistance of another government should only be done with extreme care and full war-gaming of contingencies. Without a matching strategic and logistics air-lift capability, taking decisions on out of area operations will always be fraught with danger.

The threat scenario came to a head in 1989 when Pakistan took full advantage of the prevailing chaos in the world order and the political and financial instability at India’s centre to launch a proxy war in J&K and instigate the population to revolt. This was far bigger than Operation Gibraltar attempted in 1965 and was a result of the elaborate strategy of Zia ul Haq and the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI). The aim was to tie down India in a ‘war of a thousand cuts’, instigate separatist tendencies, restrict the achievement of India’s aspirations. Although the conflict was centred on J&K, the intent was to target different parts of India. By 1991 the proxy war was already raging through Kashmir. The Indian Army undertook responsibility for countering the proxy war, which over a period of time has evolved into an effective hybrid war against India. The Rashtriya Rifles (RR) was raised for the purpose of fighting the insurgency to relieve the main Army units and formations from the responsibility. However, the campaign has evolved into a mixed responsibility model.

The period 1972 to 1991 did not see a conventional conflict but the threats kept the Indian Army deeply involved in low intensity conflict of different kinds which kept its ranks actively involved and sufficiently inoculated. It was the well thought through structural changes, the regular induction of military wherewithal, reorganisation of support organisations such as Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) and Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) plus a score of other progressive changes which kept the Indian Army sufficiently geared for combat across the spectrum of conflict. The one single fault that one could pin point now was perhaps the lack of sufficient attention towards infrastructure at the northern borders, something we rue even today.

Multiple Threats And Challenges In The Path To Modernisation, from 1992 to 2017

In the nineties, the main theme in the threat scenario was terror and its manifestation in J&K. The Northeast also remained unstable. On the conventional front, China was in the process of its modernisation and involved with high percentage economic growth. Agreements not to disturb the status quo at the Line of Actual Control and remain in engagement helped create a more congenial relationship with China. However, Pakistan continued to sponsor a proxy war in J&K ensuring at the same time that it kept the threshold just below India’s limit of tolerance. The degree of success gained in neutralising foreign and local terror groups through the nineties was a remarkable achievement leading to the showdown at the Kargil heights.

The Kargil conflict (Operation Vijay) was a high octane war fought by the zeal and leadership of India’s new generation officers and soldiers. However, it was a landmark event in that India and its Army were taken by surprise even as the operations revealed glaring intelligence, equipment, ammunition and organisational frailties. The fact that Pakistan could re-energise the Valley simply by forcing out a full formation from there, as a response force did prevail on the minds of India’s strategic planners. The strategic space lost in North Kashmir took almost three years to regain.

Kargil operation, 1999 
Kargil operation, 1999 

The one aspect made reasonably clear by the Kargil conflict was the relative reluctance of India to expand the ambit of the conflict beyond the localised scope of Kargil to the entire international border. At least that is how it was perceived by Pakistan. The reason Pakistan perceived it as such was the nuclear angle which could emerge should Pakistan feel it was threatened conventionally.

The entire J&K experience in fighting proxy war operations has matured the Army to a great extent in the finer nuances of hybrid conflict. However, a full understanding is yet to dawn on middle and lower level functionaries. The resistance towards soft power, over reliance on kinetic operations to bring about conflict resolution and the inability to convincingly see the larger picture through balanced employment of hard and soft power may prevent the emergence of a fuller understanding. However, the higher leadership is fully seized of this and conceptually is following the right course. What it needs today is to take the state government on board in a more pro-active way to ensure that the hard earned stability through robust counter terror operations is not lost due to inability of the government to cash the success. Inanities like attempted removal of Armed Forces (Special Powers) Acts, which became the bane of our success of 2011-12 must be guarded against.

The Kargil Review Committee, which took stock of various nuances of India’s security, made a number of recommendations which were then reviewed by the Group of Ministers (GoM). Almost every facet of functioning of the Army was touched upon, but even after approval of the GoM many recommendations did not see the light of day. The delegation of powers to the Service HQ should have been progressive, not a one-time exercise. The integration of the MoD and the creation of the Chief of the Defence Staff (CDS) for single point advice have not seen the light of day despite the half way measure of creating a HQ Integrated Defence Staff (IDS).

The other major landmark of this period was Operation Parakram, the response to the Pakistan-sponsored attack on India’s Parliament on 13 December 2001. The yearlong mobilisation and stand to of the Armed forces did not result in any major achievement except that it spawned the new doctrine, then called Cold Start and now referred as proactive strategy. It was the arrival of a major change in that instead of responding to Pakistan’s pro-activeness India would undertake the initiative if it felt threatened or subjected to a Pakistan-sponsored targeting by proxy groups. It would not await full mobilisation and would launch trans-border operations as its battle groups arrived or were ready for launch. It forced Pakistan to redeploy its formations to meet the threat. It also forced Pakistan to look at tactical nuclear weapons (TNWs) as a means to counter the ingress of Indian battle groups. The claims by Pakistan of having developed TNWs remain shrouded in the same strategy it followed in the eighties when it developed nuclear weapons.

The ceasefire at the LoC, in November 2003, helped calm the threat scenario and gave peace a chance but 26/11 upset the momentum of peace parleys. Getting increasingly restive about its inability to drive its J&K agenda successfully, Pakistan has exploited every possible situation to promote alienation in the Valley and counter the Indian Army’s successful marginalisation of the terrorist strength. The brief hiatus with the coming of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government in 2014 was entirely upset with the Pathankot and Uri attacks in 2016. Pakistan continues to maintain its belief that keeping slow fires burning will serve its eventual purpose. The Indian surgical strikes were a one-time message of capability and not a deterrent action. There will be fresh situations which will demand fresh responses at the LoC and in the hinterland.

The last is reserved for modernisation and the response to China’s challenge. On modernisation, the much touted transformation, the study of which was undertaken in 2005-2006 remained only on paper as the then government lacked the imagination or the concern of the Army. With procurement of essential equipment in the field of artillery and air defence at stake as also ammunition stockpiles dwindling, the hollowness in the Army’s critical stocks and capability took a beating. The NDA government has made efforts towards preventing the free fall in capability, but there is much, which is yet to be done. The streamlining of defence procurement through revision of the defence procurement procedure (DPP) has been an achievement but its true worth is yet to fructify on ground. What is actually required is to return to transformation as a concept, meshing a full rooted revamp of doctrine and capability in a given time bound programme.

Although China deserves a couple of pages it would suffice to say that India remains threatened by the possibility of a two or two-and-a-half front war with Pakistan and China in collusion with ongoing insurgencies providing the half front. We may be in the process of raising an additional Corps to undertake contingency tasks, yet we severely lack infrastructure to optimally employ such a formation. It is China’s intent to keep India pegged to the continental domain so as not to concentrate on the one area where it can upset China’s intentions; that is the maritime zone. China’s vulnerability lies in the oceans where it needs to be confronted.

Modernisation to meet collusive threats, especially in the light of an ever deepening Sino-Pakistani relationship is a prerequisite. Earlier the stranglehold on procurement is loosened the quicker will the targets be achieved.

This essay has not touched upon issues concerning military diplomacy and UN operations, two areas which contribute to India’s image in the world. It has also paid a comparatively low key focus to issues concerning nuclear aspects of security. It is time that cyber and space domains are also given their due and the higher organisation for the management and employment of Special Forces is professionalised.


Army’s Poona Horse turns 200

Image result for Army’s Poona Horse

Image result for Army’s Poona Horse

New Delhi, July 17The Poona Horse, a tank regiment of the Army, which took part in the 1948 Hyderabad operation and 1965 and 1971 India-Pakistan wars, has turned 200, an Army official said today.Within six months of its raising on July 15, 1817, at Sirur, near Poona, the regiment proved its mettle at the Battle of Coregaum and was awarded the first battle honour.“As part of British Indian Army for 130 years, the regiment fought in 13 countries. Displaying raw and fearless courage and raising its flag at each juncture, the regiment has been conferred with 34 battle honours,” Lt. Gen. Ajai Singh (retd), who has served the regiment, said. — PTI

Image result for Army’s Poona Horse

NCOs during 1965 war, Hony Capts Nahar Singh, Ajaib Singh Malhi and Malkiat Singh Grewal, flanked by Hodson’s Horse soldiers in ceremonial dress at USI, …

Image result for Army’s Poona Horse

INS Sahyadri affiliated to Indian Army’s Poona Horse


A CAREER SPENT IN COUNTER­INSURGENCY OPERATIONS

In his long service in counter­insurgency operations, Brigadier Sanjive Kumar Singh always led his troops from the front and by example. He was the pivotal liaison with Kuka Parray, the top Ikhwani and his group of turned terrorists.

THE BATTLE OF HAIFA, IN A SENSE, WAS THE FIRST SUCCESSFUL TEST OF INDIAN MILITARY LEADERSHIP AT THE MICRO LEVEL IN MODERN TIMES

Brigadier Sanjive Kumar Singh, a third-generation infantryman and a popular figure in Chandigarh, looks back with satisfaction at a career of 36 years with extensive experience in counter-insurgency operations in Jammu and Kashmir and the North East.

WIKIMEDIA COMMONSMysore and Bengal Lancers with Bikanir Camel Corps in the Sinai Desert, 1915.As a young Captain, he carried out reconnaissance across the LoC (Line of Control) in Siachen, monitoring Pakistani troop movements in 1984.

Serving with the Assam Rifles in Imphal, he established an effective intelligence network which led to successful operations against NSCN (Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagaland) insurgents and PLA (People’s Liberation Amry of Manipur) separatists.

Commanding a company of 16th Rajputana Rifles in Kupwara in the 90s, he worked with Jallaluddin Chaudhary, a top surrendered militant whose information he developed to carry out successful operations.

This was the time when Captain Sanjay Chauhan of his battalion carried out a daring operation, disguised as a Pakistani terrorist in the Rajwar forests, killing ten terrorists before his four-man team was overwhelmed.

Posted on the staff with HQ 5 Sector, Rashtriya Rifles, Sanjive synchronised terrorist surrenders.

He was the pivotal liaison with Kuka Parray, the top Ikhwani and his group of turned terrorists.

This was the crucial time when strenuous efforts resulted in the restoration of uniformity which led to the holding of assembly elections in 1996 — a singular achievement of the security forces.

Commanding his battalion in the Mahadev Gap and in Naushera-Pir Badesar, Sanjive used unconventional methods to lay ambushes on the LoC leading to an appreciable fall in infiltration.

As many as 35 terrorists were killed with the recovery of a huge amount of weapons and ammunition.

Finally, as deputy commander of Victor Force in South Kashmir, the handsome Brigadier used his long experience of counter-insurgency to coordinate area dominance in his formation’s zone and the incidentfree organisation of two Amarnath Yatras.

I feel privileged to have been his friend for over 40 years.

LAST HURRAH OF THE OLD INDIAN HORSED CAVALRY

There was considerable excitement in the media when the Prime Minister visited the Haifa War Cemetery in Israel giving our people an education they lacked.

Haifa, a Turkish rear guard position was captured by two regiments of the States Forces — Jodhpur Lancers and Mysore Lancers (now part of 61st Cavalry).

The main lesson that emerged from World War I was the redundancy of horsed cavalry as an arm of decision because of advances in warfare.

Haifa, a fortified town was taken by a full-fledged old-style cavalry charge by the Jodhpur Lancers followed by their Mysore comrades.

In a sense, it was the last great hurrah of the old Indian horsed cavalry.

Another unique distinction that these regiments shared has eluded the media and historians.

They were led to victory by Indian officers at a time when the first Indian commissioned officers were barely making an entry into the British Indian Army.

It would take another quarter of a century before the first Indian took command of a unit.

TALK ON THE BATTLE OF TIGER HILL

Brigadier MPS Bajwa who commanded the formation that captured Tiger Hill, will talk about the Battle of Tiger Hill during the 1999 Kargil War on July 19, Wednesday, at the Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development, Sector 19A at 10.30am.

This is part of the Centre for Indian Military History’s War Experiences Talks.


Wake up, it is already too late on China front

Arun Joshi

Tribune News Service

The Indian establishment has been lax in its response to the emerging challenges in Kashmir, resulting in China flexing its interventionist muscles as a big brother to resolve the issue between India and Pakistan. This is a marked change from its earlier stand that this was a bilateral issue between Delhi and Islamabad.Delhi has a reason to take Beijing’s interventionist instincts seriously, not only that China is a bigger country with almost a superpower status but also because of its known hostilities towards India — Doklam standoff being the latest — and its friendly ties with chronic India-obsessed Pakistan. China has drawn closer to Kashmir as it has virtually colonised Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and poses a serious threat to India’s strategic Siachen glacier which Pakistan has been eyeing for decades now.China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuan on Wednesday summed up intentions of his country in 90 words vis-à-vis Kashmir in response to a question that centered on the Organisation of Islamic Conference’s condemnation of the “tense situation in the Indian administered Kashmir.” His words: “China hopes relevant parties to do more to help with regional peace and stability and refrain from escalating the tension. China stands ready to play a constructive role to improve the relations between Pakistan and India,” were an obliging statement to Islamabad’s unending calls to the international community to intervene in resolving the Kashmir issue.Pakistan would definitely be emboldened by this and Kashmiri separatists have already started dreaming of their wish being fulfilled by Beijing. Prominent separatist Shabir Shah has advised India to take “China’s words seriously” implying that Delhi should prepare itself for international intervention on the Kashmir issue, while other separatists Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq have elevated the status of China as one of the “stakeholders in Kashmir”. This campaign had started in early 2000s and now it has reached a point where Beijing is suggesting openly its intervention, while it itself is guilty of intrusion from across the Line of Actual Control (LAC), especially in the Ladakh sector. It is in illegal occupation of 38,000 sq km of J&K territory.The Chinese foreign ministry’s assertive suggestion, almost sounding like a threat couched in diplomatic lexicon, has come after Chinese media hinted that the Chinese army would enter Kashmir at the “request of Pakistan.” The context should be viewed against the backdrop of intrusions and standoff along the LAC, China aggressively dictating the stoppage of development works in Ladakh as also forcibly chasing away Indian shepherds and their livestock from pastures on the Indian side of the LAC. The Indian foreign ministry has adopted a squeamish approach and never asked China to demarcate border in clear terms. This has its own pitfalls.As of now the situation is very serious because China is now openly supporting the idea of intervention, which is a nectar to the separatist sentiment in Kashmir. And, it needs to be admitted that rhetoric of “integral part” is unable to hide the grim situation in the Valley, where every symbol of India is under attack.


India, US, Japan begin Malabar naval drill

India, US, Japan begin Malabar naval drill
File photo of the US Ship Nimitz. Reuters

Chennai, July 10

The Indian, US and Japanese navies on Monday began the Malabar Naval Exercise-2017 aimed at achieving deeper military ties between the three nations.

Taking part in the trilateral naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal would be US Ship Nimitz (CVN68), guided missile cruise USS Princeton (CG59), guided missile destroyers USS Howard (DDG83), USS Shoup (DDG86) and USS Kidd (DDG100), a Poseidon P-8A aircraft as well as a Los Angeles fast-attack submarine.

Besides, Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force ships JS Izumo (DDH 183), JS Sazanami (DD1 13) along with Indian Naval Ship Jalashwa and INS Vikramaditya would participate in the joint Naval exercise, an official press release said.

The 21st edition of the exercise, conducted ashore and at sea, would include professional exchanges on carrier strike group operations, maritime patrol and reconnaissance operations, surface and anti-submarine warfare.

Medical operations, damage control, explosive ordinance disposal, helicopter operations and anti-submarine warfare would also take place.

The at-sea exercise includes events such as submarine familiarisation, air defence exercises, medical evacuation drills, surface ware fare exercises, communication exercise and search and rescue operations.

Indian, Japanese and US maritime forces have an understanding and knowledge of shared working environment at sea. As members of Indo-Asia Pacific operations, the three maritime forces would look forward to continuing to strengthen the bonds and personal relationships, a press release said.

The Malabar exercise is taking place amid the military standoff between armies of the India and China in the Sikkim section and Beijing ramping up its naval presence in the South China Sea. PTI


TA jawan, wife killed in Poonch as Pak shell lands at their house

TA jawan, wife killed in Poonch as Pak shell lands at their house
There have been 23 incidents of ceasefire violation in June. — Tribune file photo

Tribune News Service

Jammu, July 8

A Territorial Army jawan who was on leave and his wife died and a few others were injured on Saturday as Pakistan Army violated ceasefire in Poonch sector.A shell landed on the house of jawan Muhammad Showkat, killing the couple.The Pakistan Army initiated unprovoked and indiscriminate firing from small arms, automatic weapons and mortars on Indian Army posts along the Line of Control (LoC) in Poonch sector from 0630 hours, a defence spokesman said.

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The Indian troops retaliated effectively, he said.The Pakistani troops rained mortar bomb shells and resorted to heavy firing targeting civilian villages as well, a police officer said.“Very heavy shelling is going on. So far two civilians have died in Pakistani shelling at Khadi Karmara village along the LoC,” he said, adding that some other people suffered injuries. With PTI


Military standoff, civil distance China fires another salvo, high-level group to sort out

Military standoff, civil distance

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, July 5

China today again asked India to pull back troops from Doklam in the Sikkim sector to “avoid worsening of the situation” as it accused New Delhi of “trampling on” the Panchsheel pact by “illegally entering” its territory.It was weighing options on a travel alert for citizens visiting India, China added, charging India with “misleading” the public by saying that the Chinese had built a road near the Siliguri corridor.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd) Amid the military standoff, on-ground postures of the forces are, for now, “non-aggressive” as a high-level dedicated group set up in 2012 is mandated to discuss such flare-ups.  The military standoff is being conducted from a “civil distance” even as both sides have dug in heels at a spot on the Doklam plateau (10,000 feet) at the tri-junction of India, Bhutan and China. Both sides have pitched in tents and maintain a line for supplies, indicating readiness for a long haul. The area is disputed between Bhutan and China. India is there to help a friend.In January 2012, the two countries established a “Working Mechanism for Consultation and Coordination on India-China Border Affairs”. It has representatives of the Ministry of External Affairs as also the Ministry of Defence of either side.Its mandate under Article VI of the agreement says: “The working mechanism will address issues and situations that may arise in the border areas that affect the maintenance of peace and tranquility and will work actively towards maintaining the friendly atmosphere between the two countries.”It is tasked with meeting at fixed intervals and “emergency consultations” can be convened mutually.In the past, similar standoffs have been resolved through diplomacy. The two countries do not have a demarcated border and the Line of Actual Control (LAC) is the de facto boundary all along the 3,488-km frontier.The Border Defence Cooperation Agreement inked in 2013 says: “If the forces come face to face… both sides shall exercise maximum self-restraint, refrain from provocative action, not use force or threaten to use force, and prevent exchange of fire.”

With agency inputs

 

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Telephonic encounter with Hizb chief, via Chandigarh

RAMESH VINAYAK I WORKED THE PHONE LINES FOR TWO DAYS IN VAIN. ON THE THIRD DAY, THE CALL GOT THROUGH. MY PRODDING FOR AN INTERVIEW WITH SALAHUDDIN WAS MET WITH A SLEW OF QUESTIONS ABOUT MY ANTECEDENTS. I WAS TOLD TO CALL AGAIN NEXT DAY.

One of the thrills of journalism is to experience twists and turns of history and being up, close and personal with the makers or breakers of such events.

The Trump administration’s surprise but hugely symbolic tagging of Syed Salahuddin as a global terrorist unlocked memories of a telephonic encounter I had with this longest-surviving top gun of the Hizbul Mujahideen.

For reporters on the Kashmir beat – as I was with India Today in the 1990s – there was, and still is, never a dearth of adrenaline rush.

But the August of 2000 was packed with more than its share of suspense, hope and despair. Post-Kargil, terror had acquired a new and deadlier edge of “fidayeen” (suicide) attacks. Gloom was the dominant mood across the Kashmir Valley.

On July 24 came the dramatic announcement of a ceasefire by a local Hizb commander, Majid Dar, who also offered talks. For New Delhi, it was an unexpected window of opportunity to end the Kashmir logjam.

A series of behind-the-scenes fast-paced parleys set the stage for the first – and the last since – direct contact between the dominant and deadly indigenous militant outfit and the Centre. The violence-weary Kashmiris sensed a tantalising augury of a new autumn.

But the optimism was shortlived. Hours after the icebreaker, Salahuddin called off the ceasefire, demanding Pakistan be included in the talks. The high-stake initiative lay in ruins, while militant depredations were back, with a vengeance.

THE TURNING POINT

For once, Salahuddin was the man of the moment. The shadowy figure with a flat cap and a cascading jet-black dyed beard seemed like the lynchpin of the Kashmir gambit. Indeed, he was a strategic asset for his permanent but ever-in-denial host across the border.

During my numerous reporting forays in Kashmir – it was like a second home since the first outing in 1993 – I heard fascinating stories, some apocryphal but most real, of how the cataclysmic circumstances had morphed ordinary mortals into fearsome figures. In the pantheons of home-grown militants, Salahuddin stood out for his sheer longevity and larger-than-life image.

The tale of his tryst with the gun was no less intriguing. A small-time preacher from a village near Srinagar airport, he was born Yusuf Shah. He was a polling agent for the Muslim United Front, a conglomerate of Kashmiri outfits known for disputing Jammu and Kashmir’s accession to India, in the 1987 assembly election that was marred by rigging by the pro-India National Conference (NC).

When Shah protested, a senior NC candidate slapped him publicly. The slap, as the story goes, was the turning point. He crossed over to Pakistan, floated Hizb and cast himself as its commander in a new avatar as Syed Salahuddin.

THE CONVERSATION

The collapse of peace talks only whetted my curiosity about the Hizb commander. But how does one reach a man safely ensconced with his masters in Pakistan? He had remained elusive for the Indian media. A glimmer of hope came during a chance meeting in Srinagar with a French woman journalist, who had a brief stint in Islamabad. She shared the satellite phone number of a Hizb spokesman, Hashmi.

Back in Chandigarh, I worked the phone lines for two days in vain. On the third day, the call got through. My prodding for an interview with Salahuddin was met with a slew of questions about my antecedents. I was told to call again the next day.

At the appointed hour, the call linked up with Hashmi, who handed over the phone to the man I desperately wanted to speak to on his next move on Kashmir. “As salam ale kum, Ramesh bhai. Main Salahuddin bol raha hoon (Greetings, I’m Salahuddin speaking),” said the gruff voice.

For the next 20 minutes, he answered a string of questions. “Our gun struggle is a quest for peace,” he said.

I had got what a journalist always craves for – an exclusive. But, before it appeared in the weekly magazine I worked for, there was an unintended consequence of cross-border phone calls. Now, it was the turn of intelligence sleuths to knock on my door to cross-check my antecedents.

THE FACES OF TERROR


Chinese troops transgress Sikkim sector, jostle with Indian forces, destroy Indian bunkers

In another transgression, Chinese troops entered India in the Sikkim sector and jostled with Indian army personnel guarding the Sino-India frontier, besides destroying two bunkers.

The face-off has been going on in Doka La general area in Sikkim for the past ten days and the Chinese troops have also stopped the batch of pilgrims that was proceeding for Kailash Mansovar yatra, official sources said today.

The Indian troops had to struggle hard to stop the Chinese personnel from advancing further into Indian territory. They formed a human wall along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) to stop the PLA personnel, some of whom also videographed and clicked pictures of the incident.

The bunkers have been destroyed in Lalten area of the Doka La area. A flag meeting was also held between senior army officers of both the sides on June 20, but the tension still continues.

It is not the first time that such a transgression has happened at the Doka La, a place at the Sikkim-Bhutan-Tibet tri-junction.


HEADLINES “”23 JUN 2017

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OPEN LINK TO KNOW GST AND IGST ACTS .

SHAMEFUL BEHAVIOR OF ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES : RUCKUS IN PB ASEMBLY :PROVOKED BY SAD

VIEWS OF COL CJS KHERA UPLOADED

3 LASHKAR MILITANTS GUNNED DOWN, ARMY OFFICER INJURED IN PULWAMA PROTESTER KILLED IN CLASHES FOLLOWING THE ENCOUNTER IN SOUTH KASHMIR

INDO-PAK MATTERS HAVE TO BE RESOLVED BILATERALLY: MEA ON UN CHIEF’S SUGGESTION

FIGHTING A FLAWED ARMY PROMOTION POLICY BY LT GEN OP KAUSHIK (RETD)

 

2 SOLDIERS DIE IN PAK BAT ATTACK

WIFE’S EFFORTS YIELD RESULT AS J&K COP IS HOME FROM PAK JAIL

NGT ALLOWS 100 MORE VEHICLES TO ROHTANG

CENTRE TO LOOK INTO ‘LACK’ OF BULLETPROOF VEHICLES

ARMY TO DEPLOY 2 MORE BATTALIONS IN SOUTH KASHMIR

MILITANT KILLED AS ARMY FOILS INFILTRATION BID AT LOC

PAK CLAIMS JADHAV HAS FILED MERCY PETITION, RELEASES ‘CONFESSIONAL VIDEO’

CHINA SAYS NO CHANGE IN STAND ON MASOOD

KILLING OF JAWANS AT SUKMA NOT RIGHTS VIOLATION: CRPF

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