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Permission to bite the bullet’: Navy pilot’s marriage invite becomes hit on social media

‘Permission to bite the bullet’: Navy pilot's marriage invite becomes hit on social media

Panaji, May 15

A letter written by a Navy pilot to his senior, seeking permission to “bite the bullet”, and the latter’s response saying “welcome to hell” have gone viral on social media.

To be sure, it was a marriage invite by Lt Cdr Nishant Singh to Commanding Officer of INAS 300 (naval air squadron) of INS Hansa, the Indian Navy’s air base in Goa.

But Singh decided to be a bit unconventional and the commanding officer decided to match the tone.

The letter, dated May 9, was captioned: “Permission to Bite the Bullet”.

“I regret to be dropping this bomb on you at such a short notice, but as you would agree, I intend to a drop a nuclear one on myself and I realise that just like all the split second decisions we take up in the air in the heat of combat, I cannot afford to allow myself the luxury of time to re-evaluate my decision,” Singh said, disclosing that he was going to marry.

“In view of the above, I officially seek your approval to willingly sacrifice myself in absolute peace time, completely outside the line of duty, and follow up many other brave men into this graveyard spiral of matrimony,” the MiG pilot said.

“I promise to never repeat such a performance in air or teach it to my trainee pilots,” he added, inviting the senior officer to the wedding.

In his handwritten reply in red ink, the commanding officer reminded Singh that “I was your instructor in pre-solo phase, cleared your solo-check, saw your landing for first time on MiGs as ACP made me really proud.”

“Saw the spark in you and always believed you a different. When you become Qfl cleared you for instruction flying on MiGs….But all the good things have to finally come to an end,” the reply said.

“Welcome to Hell!,” the CO signed off.

A senior naval official said it was a private communication between the two.

“Finally, the couple has got married,” he added. PTI

Sandeep Ahlawat@SandyAhlawat89
  

This is how faujies seek permission (PERMISSION TO BITE THE BULLET from their respective Commanding Officers) to get married….

Don’t forget these are “trying” read “Covid 19” times!!!

View image on Twitter

Nepal protesting at someone else’s behest, says Army Chief

Nepal protesting at someone else’s behest, says Army Chief

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, May 15

Amid an ongoing India-Nepal diplomatic row, Army Chief General MM Naravane on Friday said there had never been an issue about the tri-junction (of India-China-Nepal) and added that Nepal might have raised the issue at ‘someone else’s behest’.

‘No issue about tri-junction’

We have made a road west of the Kali river. Nepal has accepted its territory is to the east of Kali. There has never been an issue about tri-junction… Nepal may have raised the issue at someone else’s behest — Gen MM Naravane, Army Chief

Though he did not name China, the hint was amply clear as Beijing was the only interested party to it. Nepal has been protesting after India opened a road on May 8 till Lipulekh pass in Uttrakahand for connecting India with Kailash Mansarover in Tibet. General Naravane was answering questions after a talk, “Covid and Indian Army: Responses and Beyond”, at the Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses via video-conferencing.

One being asked why Nepal was protesting on our road across Lipulekh and why it had decided to set up a border post at the spot, the Army Chief said there was no contradiction in Lipulekh. “We have made a road west of the Kali river. Nepal has accepted its territory is to the east of Kali river. There has never been an issue about tri-junction,” he said. Nepal is protesting that Lipulekh pass is not with India.

On a related question whether he saw a link between Lipulekh and recent clashes between Indian and Chinese troops in Ladakh and Sikkim, General Naravane, in a veiled reference to China, said: “Nepal may have raised the issue at someone else’s behest.” He, however, saw no connection between face-offs and any other events. On impending budgetary cuts, he said: “No cuts will be imposed at the cost operational efficiency or readiness…. there will be budgetary constraints, how much we cannot say.”


Has General Bipin Rawat reduced armed forces to a circus?

A fly past by IAF planes and naval helicopters, showering of petals on hospitals, music by army band and naval ships lit up in evening is how defence services will thank corona warriors on Sunday

Photo by Vipin Kumar/Hindustan Times via Getty Images

Since what America thinks today, India must think tomorrow, the press conference on Friday addressed by the Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat (when is he getting promoted as Field Marshal?) in the company of the three services chiefs should not have come as a surprise.

US President Donald Trump had announced on April 23 that thunder birds of the US Air Force would streak through the sky across the United States to thank medical professionals fighting the coronavirus. The White House explained that although each flying hour for a squadron would cost $ 60,000 (Washington Post put the cost of flying hour for each F-16 at $20,000) or ₹45 lakhs in Indian Rupees, there would be no extra burden on the taxpayers. It was already budgeted and the planes would be making up for exercises put off by the pandemic.So, when the services chiefs announced in New Delhi on Friday that Indian Air Force planes would fly past on Sunday from Kashmir to Kanyakumari and from Arunachal Pradesh to Gujarat to salute the ‘corona warriors’, it should have come as no surprise. Flower petals would be showered on select hospitals and army bands will play in almost every district. Indian Navy will light up its ships and naval helicopters will take off to shower petals on select hospitals on Sunday.

It is possible that the expenses were all budgeted and that it would actually boost the morale of the medical professionals, who are bearing the brunt of the deadly virus. But whether the medical professionals are excited or not, the few army and air force officers I spoke to are seething with indignation. “This does nothing to boost our morale; it looks like a political orchestra and defence services are being used as pawns. We look foolish,” said a young serving officer.

While discussing the issue with a few veterans, I drew their attention to what Sunanda K Datta-Ray had written in The Telegraph last month. Pointing out that China had sent 10,000 troops to Hubei province to assist civil authorities fight the coronavirus and the British Army had deployed 20,000 soldiers to assist the National Health Service in UK, he had suggested that it was time for the Indian Army to step in.

“The army can pitch tent and set up camps for stranded labourers. Military trucks and lorries can facilitate their repatriation. Experience of langars would enable kitchens to serve wholesome inexpensive food. The military can even police slums that house 24 per cent of the population to ensure social-distancing and hygiene in general to avoid a second wave,” is what Datta-Ray wrote before concluding by saying, “Swords are not easily beaten into ploughshares. But reports suggest troops are laying aside their guns to help out peacefully also in Israel, France, Mexico and Switzerland.”

I suggested to the veterans that the Army could put up make-shift isolation wards in every district –they have put up a few at Bikaner, Manesar and other places—set up tent cities to quarantine people and even put up special , temporary hospitals to treat COVID-19 patients.

The reaction of the veterans was one of shocked outrage. “While civilians lock themselves up to stay safe, you want our troops to risk their lives? This would demoralize them and we have been saying all along that this is not our job. Don’t involve us in cleaning the mess created by you,” said one.

But soldiers have helped in the past in time of natural calamity? And even now troops in various countries are engaged in helping health workers, I pointed out. This provoked another veteran to tell me bluntly, “If thousands of civilians lie dead and you have nobody to lift the bodies, we will be the first to volunteer. But don’t drag us to do your job.”

All the veterans and the two serving officers I spoke to had harsh and uncomplimentary things to say about the Chief of Defence Services.

The harshest comment was, “General Rawat has reduced the army to a circus”.

Has he?


How The Fist That Felled Chinese Army Officer In Sikkim On Saturday Packed Three Generations Of Valour

by Jaideep Mazumdar
An Indian Army soldier (Representative Image)
Snapshot
According to a senior officer, the young Lieutenant was provoked into the act by the PLA Major’s loud claim that Sikkim belonged to China and that the Indian Army had ‘transgressed’ into Chinese territory.
A young, lean and lithe Indian Army Lieutenant delivered a hard punch to a burly Major of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on Saturday afternoon, sending him sprawling to the rocky and sandy ground at Naku La in Northern Sikkim.
The punch left the Major with a bloody nose, but it badly bruised the collective ego of the formidable PLA.
Especially since it was delivered by a very young officer who was commissioned into the army barely a year ago.
According to a senior officer at the Army’s East Command headquarters in Kolkata’s Fort William, the young Lieutenant* was provoked into the act by the PLA Major’s loud claim that Sikkim belonged to China and that the Indian Army had ‘transgressed’ into Chinese territory.
This incident was the high point of the hours-long face-off and fist-fights between Indian and Chinese soldiers at Naku La, which is close to the Line Of Actual Control (LAC) in North Sikkim, on Saturday (May 9) morning.
A few Indian and Chinese soldiers sustained injuries in the standoff that was ultimately resolved after senior officers of both the sides intervened.
It is learnt that the PLA Major was shouting and moving menacingly towards another young Indian Army officer of the rank of Captain.
The young Lieutenant intervened and threw a punch at the Major, who went reeling and fell on the ground. Even his name tag came off.
The young Lieutenant was in the mood for landing a few more punches, but his colleagues pulled him away.
He was later admonished by his seniors who told him that the humiliating punch could have provoked the Chinese more. But they also lauded him in private.
Those who know the young Lieutenant would realise that he did what his father had done way back in 1986 at Sumdorong Chu in western Arunachal Pradesh.
His father, Colonel (retired) Ashish Das had, in the early winter of that year, also given the Chinese a bloody nose there.
The Colonel, who was a young Captain then, had led a fierce attack on the Chinese who had transgressed into Indian territory and built permanent structures at Zemithang in Arunachal Pradesh.
That operation was part of the legendary ‘Operation Falcon’ masterminded by then Army Chief General Krishnaswamy Sundarji.
The bravery of Das, who was commissioned into the Assam Regiment, led to the recapturing of a strategically important ridgetop, which was subsequently named after him as ‘Ashish Top’.
Ashish Das’ father, Master Warrant Officer (MWO) B.B. Das, served in the Royal Air Force and then the Indian Air Force.
He was stationed in Lahore during World War I and also saw action in the Bangladesh War of 1971.
He retired from a Signals unit in Barrackpur.
There is an interesting story about how Colonel Das’ daughter, also an Army officer (in the Judge Advocate General Branch, which is the legal arm of the Army), discovered that the ridgetop in Arunachal Pradesh is named after her father.
As a young Lieutenant posted at Tenga (on the way to Tawang in western Arunachal Pradesh) in early 2018, she was on an initiation tour to forward posts.
One such post she visited was ‘Ashish Top’. She wondered how the post got its name, and was told about the valour of a young captain by the name of Ashish Das who captured it from the Chinese.
She realised it was her father whose valour had been commemorated by naming the strategic feature after him.
She broke down and the commanding officer of the unit manning the post called up Colonel Das at home in Kolkata’s Kalighat area.
Incidentally, the retired Colonel’s son, a technical graduate from Bengaluru, was also commissioned into the Assam Regiment. Colonel Das also served in the IPKF at Jaffna in Sri Lanka, and in the Poonch sector in Kashmir from 1988 to 1990 when terrorism had just started there. He retired from the army in 2009.
The Das’ family home in Kolkata proudly displays many gallantry medals won by MWO Das and his son Colonel Ashish Das.
The young lieutenant grew up admiring those and fervently wishing to add to the proud collection.
He may have just won one on Saturday.
After all, it takes a lot of courage to punch a mightier adversary on his nose and send him sprawling to the ground.
* The braveheart’s name is not being mentioned in order to protect his identity
Jaideep Mazumdar is an associate editor at Swarajya.

SOLDIERLY- CAMRADERIE !* 40 POW CAMP MEERUT

SOLDIERLY-  CAMRADERIE !*
40 POW CAMP MEERUT .
1. I was preparing for SSB interview in 1972 at Meerut because my father Late Lt Col   RD Nikam was posted  OC 40 POW Camp  Meerut after the war .  He had 2 very young and dynamic Staff Officers – Capt Veer Pratap ( Adjt/ Grenadiers  ) and Capt Limbo ( QM / Marathas ). I joined NDA in Jan 73 / 49F. 
2. When I used to come home on leave i would visit the POW Camp and at times met the Paki officers. There were 4 cages in the Camp- Officers -1 , Families-1 and  Cages for JCO /ORs -2. There was an infantry bn guarding the Camp , I suppose from Madras Regt. One  day , I remember one tambi shot a prisoner on the fence at night and there was a  big commotion . My father walked alone in the cage and to get the body out of the cage . None of the Paki men did anything to him and did what he instructed them. My father would often visit thier cages , toilets and lungars during rounds , he also tasted meals at thier lungar and so they new him as a fatherly figure .
3. One day after the New Years party at the Wheeler Club , Capt Veer Pratap and Limbo picked up couple of  bottles of liquor and headed to the Camp. They asked the guard to open the Officers Cage and fall  in all Offrs  . Initially they thought that it was again some escape issue.  After a typical NDA bull shit , Capt Veer Pratap asked the Paki Officers what’s today . They were all surprised when Capt Veer Pratap broke the ice that it’s New Years eve and party is on. He pulled out the few bottles from his bullet and all Paki Officers had a drink. This is the spirit of  Indian Army. Later this incident got reported to my dad through the int channel. My dad being a good old Second World War Veteran brushed it  away telling the int Offrs that during WWII it was common to share cigarettes / drinks in Italy and North African Campaign.
4.  We were Tennant’s to Lt Col Khokar in Meerut Cantt  , his son was a pilot in IAF. He had flown quite a few mission in West Pakistan during the war . One day when on leave , he requested my dad to meet the prisoners. So I had accompanied him to the Camp and we  met couple of officers. I remember his conversation with Maj Arif . So Maj Arif asked him have you flown over  Sargoda  / Sialkot ?. Ft Lt Khokar asked him why , his reply was that I am an AD Gunner and my parent Regt is deployed there . Then he asked him how was the flak ?. 
6.My mom used to conduct Family Welfare Meet for the families of Pakistani Offrs , JCOs and OR  at the POW Camp.They would be given wool to knit sweaters or Cloth to make beautiful embroided table cloths etc, the aim was to keep them occupied.  Maj Arif ‘s wife and 2 children were also in the Camp. She was the senior most lady and very humble and  responsible .When the time came for repatriation , Mrs Arif had made a beautiful full sleeve sweater for my dad and presented it to him on behalf of all Families for taking care of them so well. She said ” Jab budape men panoge to hame yad karna !
7. Later Capt Peoples from Gurkhas and Capt Date from Marathas replaced Capt Veer Pratap ( Retired as Brig ) and Capt Limbu at the 40 POW Camp. In case this reaches any of the officers mentioned in the story above , I will be glad to connect with you all. 
Col SR Nikam ( Retd )
9860850619
*snikam.xthrill@gmail.com*


Army mulls proposal to allow civilians in force for 3 years

PUNJAB EXPRESS BUREAU New Delhi, May 13 The Indian Army is examining a proposal for allowing civilians to join the force for a three-year tenure, officials said. At present, the Army recruits young people under short service commission for an initial tenure of 10 years. “The Army is considering a proposal to allow civilians to join the force for a period of three years,” an Army spokesperson said in reply to a query. The Army has been making various efforts to attract talented young people to join it. Sources said the proposal is part of broad efforts to bring in reform in the 1.3- million-strong Army. They said the broad contours of the proposal are yet to be finalised. According to a report of Standing Committee of Defence, 2019, the deficiency in officer cadre of Indian Army stood at approximate 14 per cent. The Army had 42,253 officers and 11.94 lakh jawans according to the report. The Indian Navy had 10,000 officers 57,310 and personnel. Under the Short Service Commission, a person can serve in the force for a maximum of 10 years. Sources told ANI that the top brass in the Army is also reviewing the Short Service Commission to make it more attractive for the youth. Initially, the Short Service Commission was started with five years minimum service but later it was extended to 10 years. WITH AGENCIES INPUTS


CSD canteen to reopen on may 13

Our Correspondent

Hoshiarpur, May 11

The CSD canteen here will reopen from May 13. Sale of both groceries and liquor would be held as per instructions of the local civil administration between 9 am to 1 pm on all days except Sunday. The canteen management said the entry would be restricted and through pre-booking over phone. The canteen will accept only 250 bookings for sale daily.

Callers will be asked to give their details and mobile phone number during pre-booking and a token number will be allotted to them. Officers would make their purchases on Saturdays while the JCO and ORs from Monday to Friday.

The pre-bookings will be accepted one day prior to the visit between 9:30 am to 1 pm on 01882-221053 and 734-7553174.


Man ‘jumps’ check posts, shot by CRPF

Man ‘jumps’ check posts, shot by CRPF

A civilian driving a private car was shot dead by the CRPF after he allegedly jumped two security checkpoints on the Srinagar-Gulmarg highway in Budgam district.

The killing sparked fresh tension in central Kashmir and the authorities snapped the mobile Internet in Budgam to prevent protests.

The incident took place at around 10.20 am in Narbal Kawoosa, when Mehraj-ud-Din, 25, a resident of Beerwah Budgam, was going to drop his uncle, a police officer, to his workplace in a car.

A CRPF spokesman, Pankaj Singh, said the car (Wagon R) jumped two security checkpoints. “A convoy of the Army, at that point of time, was passing through the adjacent road and fearing sabotage, the CRPF jawan, manning the naka, fired warning shots. The private car was being driven on the wrong side of the road and that was even more alarming. When the car didn’t stop, despite warning shots, the jawan fired at the car and in turn, the driver was hit,” CRPF spokesman Pankaj Singh said. “Subsequently, he was shifted to SHMS Hospital, Srinagar, where, he was declared as brought dead by doctors,” he said.

The SMHS Hospital authorities said the youth was hit by the bullet in his chest. As the news about the death of the youth reached his native village, protests erupted in the area.

Former CM and National Conference vice-president Omar Abdullah demanded an impartial investigation in the killing. “…The circumstances surrounding this shooting need to be impartially investigated & findings made known..” Omar tweeted.

Ghulam Hassan, an ASI in the J&K Police, who was inside the car, contested the CRPF and police version and said his nephew was killed in cold blood.


3,000 rooms to house NRIs reaching state

Neeraj Bagga

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, May 12

The Amritsar Hotel and Restaurants’ Association (AHARA) has managed to arrange more than 3,000 rooms all over Punjab to quarantine non-resident Punjabis, who are expected to start landing from different countries at international airports in Mohali and Amritsar from Wednesday onwards.

APS Chatha, president of AHARA, said despite the lockdown, the association managed to arrange over 3,000 rooms for quarantine. About 9,000 persons would arrive in the next few days. These people are residents of different parts of Punjab.

AHARA opened these rooms on the request of the Punjab Heritage and Tourism Promotion Board (PHTPB). Occupants will pay for the rooms.

Of these, over 600 rooms will be available in 40 hotels of Amritsar. These hotels will be of all categories, including luxury, classified and non-classified.

However, all payments would be settled directly by guests to hotels. Performance on parameters such as hygiene would be the total responsibility of hotels.

AHARA has been able to procure hotels in Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Patiala, Mohalli, Zirakpur, Patiala, Bathinda, Sangrur and Mansa among other places.

This opening will infuse a fresh lease of life to the industry in this difficult time to earn some revenue to pay off salaries and electricity bills.


China claims its troops patrolling on Chinese side of LAC China said that India should refrain from taking any action to “complicate” the issue

China claims its troops patrolling on Chinese side of LAC

Beijing, May 13

Amid tensions between the Indian and Chinese soldiers at Pangong Tso lake area, China said on Wednesday that India should refrain from taking any action to “complicate” the issue and claimed that the PLA troops were conducting “normal patrol” on the Chinese side of the border.sked about the continued tensions along the border and whether the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops action was anyway related to the disagreements with the Indian government’s plan to lure business out of China, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said both the countries were in diplomatic contact over the face-off between their troops.

“China’s position on the border issue is consistent and clear. Chinese border troops have been upholding peace and tranquillity along the border areas,” Zhao told a media briefing here.

“China is conducting normal patrol along the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC). We urge the Indian side to work with China and refrain from taking any complicating move so as to create enabling conditions for the development of our bilateral relations and peace and stability at the border areas,” he said.

“The two sides stay in diplomatic communication on the relevant border issue,” he said.

The tensions began at the Pangong Tso lake area in eastern Ladakh on May 5-6 and continued.

On Monday, Zhao said Chinese troops there are “committed to uphold peace and stability.” At least a couple of Chinese military helicopters were spotted flying close to the un-demarcated Sino-India border in the area after the fierce face-off on May 5 following which a fleet of Sukhoi-30 jets of the Indian Air Force too carried out sorties there, the sources said in New Delhi.

The troops on both sides held on to their respective positions and even reinforcements were brought in an apprehension of further escalation in tension, they said when asked about the face-off.

They said tension was still prevailing in the area, though both sides agreed to disengage during a meeting of local commanders on May 6.

“The situation remains tense,” said a source in New Delhi.

The sources said the spotting of Chinese helicopters in the area was nothing unusual as India too flies a fleet of military choppers in the area from three bases in the region.

On May 5, scores of Indian and Chinese army personnel clashed with iron rods, sticks, and even resorted to stone-pelting, sources said, adding a number of soldiers on both sides sustained injuries in the incident.

In a separate incident, nearly 150 Indian and Chinese military personnel were engaged in a face-off near Naku La Pass in the Sikkim sector of the Sino-India border on Saturday. At least 10 soldiers from both sides sustained injuries in the incident.

The troops of India and China were engaged in a 73-day stand-off in Doklam tri-junction in 2017 which even triggered fears of a war between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

The India-China border dispute covers the 3,488-km-long Line of Actual Control, the de-facto border between the two countries. Both sides have been asserting that pending the final resolution of the boundary issue, it is necessary to maintain peace and tranquillity in the border areas.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping held their first informal summit in April 2018 in the Chinese city of Wuhan, months after the Doklam standoff.

In the summit, the two leaders decided to issue “strategic guidance” to their militaries to strengthen communications so that they can build trust and understanding.

Modi and Xi held their second informal summit in Mamallapuram near Chennai in October last year with a focus on further broadening bilateral ties. —PTI