Behind the much-feted victory in the
India-Pakistan limited war of mid-1999 (in the Drass-Kargil-Batalik-Kaksar sectors of Jammu & Kashmir) lurks colossal blunders—bungles which had involved
the top hierarchy of the Govt of India as well as the Indian Army (IA) and
Indian Air Force (IAF). In a gist, had the political and IA/IAF leadership
simply been more alert and alive to the situation, OP Koh-i-Paima (OP
Mountain of Resolve) need not have
been launched at all by the Pakistan Army (PA). As it transpired, India plodded
into a needless war costing Rs.19.84 billion, and bled itself in terms of
sterling men and material, before eking out a redeeming, if costly, military
triumph. It eventually took 11 weeks of bitter fighting by brave and
under-equipped Indian soldiers at forbidding heights along craggy mountain ridgelines
and peaks, and Washington’s considerable influence, to evict the PA intruders.
More 1,200 combatants, including 519 IA soldiers, died; another 1,100 were
injured, half of them permanently maimed. Yet, for all the to-do surrounding
this definitive episode, it is a shame that no questions are being asked-or
entertained-at the highest levels, and no answers being given even 20 years
after the conduct by India’s military of OP Vijay (of the IA), OP Safed Saagar (of
the IAF) and OP Talwar (of the Indian Navy), especially in terms of decision-making
failures/deficiencies at the strategic-level, and lessons learnt at the
operational and tactical levels. And it is due to this that India’s Ministry of
Defence (MoD) till this day desists from publishing the official history of
this limited war (which ought to include not only detailed reports on the
various AirLand battles/campaigns, but also archival records of India’s
Ministry of External Affairs and the Cabinet Committee on national Security).
Consequently, the 20th anniversary of
the limited war will be remembered across India in a celebratory manner over
three days (July 25-27), with the theme being “Remember, Rejoice and Renew”,
instead of “Analyse, Introspect and Learn”. This was pretty much the case 19
years ago as well when the Kargil Committee Report (KCR) was collectively
drafted by K Subrahmanyam, Lt Gen K K Hazari, B G Verghese and Satish Chandra. The
KCR failed to include (intentionally or otherwise) the most important lesson,
which was: past mistakes that are not acknowledged and corrected due to the
political more expedient craving for mass euphoria and exhilaration, always
tend to repeat themselves. As the following parts of the narrative will reveal
below, it was the severely flawed and executed war campaign (as a direct
consequence of strategically unsound higher directions of war laid down by the
then ruling political establishment) on the western front in late 1971 and the
refusal to officially acknowledge it (by not publishing till this day the MoD’s
official history of the 1971 India-Pakistan war) that was responsible for
sowing the seeds of the limited war in mid-1999.
The following slides
reveal that between October and December 1971, there was considerable
disagreement between within the military establishment about the operational
priorities, this being largely due to the inability of the then political
leadership leadership to clearly spell out the higher directions of war/war directives.
For instance, there was no clarity on whether to accord greater priority to
the capture of Pakistani territory across the International Boundary (IB) or
whether to go for maximum territorial grab across the CeaseFire Line (CFL) and
the Working Boundary (WB) along the Chicken’s Neck area.
The following slides
reveal that back in 1971 there was no dearth of tactical intelligence, thanks
to the several East Pakistani Bengalis who had defected from Pakistan’s
military and had sought asylum in India. However, at the strategic-level, for
inexplicable reasons, no heed was paid to information emanating from several
East European Warsaw Pact member-countries (that had in turn acquired the
information from sources in China) which had clearly indicated that: 1) Pakistan’s military, against which a
10-year arms embargo had been imposed by the US in 1965, did not possess the
resources/hardware assets required for waging multi-front offensive land
campaigns on the western front. 2)
The PA and PAF would take a considerable time to master the usage of
China-origin weapons that were being imported since 1968 as replacements for
their US-origin counterparts. 3) Consequently,
the PA and PAF would undertake only one offensive campaign, most probably
across the CFL against Jammu & Kashmir. 4) The rest of the PA and PAF would hunker down and brace for a
defensive war of attrition inside Pakistani territory in order to conserve
their war-waging resources/assets and war wastage reserves. Consequently, the IA was forced into adopting an all-out defensive
posture all along the IB, WB and CFL, which clearly prevented the IA and IAF
from adopting limited and clear-cut offensive joint warfighting objectives that
could be quickly achieved during an all-out but short conventional war.
Another reason that remains unexplained to date is why the IAF was denied permission to conduct tactical reconnaissance sorties till December 3, 1971 despite the PAF violating Indian airspace and conducting tactical air recce sorties over northern Punjab and southern Jammu since November 20, and commencing tactical air-strikes inside India out of East Pakistan since November 22. Consequently, the IA was denied vital intelligence inputs that would have possibly enabled it to checkmate the PA’s gamble in both Poonch and Chammb, and the Shakargarh Bulge.
As a result, the AirLand campaigns of the IA and IAF in both Chammb and the Shakargarh were nothing else but slugfest duels with no decisive outcomes on the battlefields, instead of the manoeuvre warfare originally envisaged by the IA's HQ Western Command.
As the evidence above
indicates, placing greater emphasis on offensive land campaigns across the IB
in 1971 (which produced only diminishing returns) resulted in the IA being
forced to accord lesser importance to the mountain warfare campaigns that would
have fetched over the following years highly value-added returns. For instance,
had the IA HQ authorised its HQ Western Command to allocate greater warfighting
resources to its XV Corps for the sake of realising all its envisaged tactical
objectives—especially the capture of Olthingthang—then the PA in 1984 would not
have been able to set up its firm logistics-support base in Goma for supporting
its 323 Brigade along the Baltoro Glacier, and by 1999 would have denied the sprawling
firm logistics-support base at Olthingthang from where OP Koh-i-Paima was
launched and supported.
Battlefield Gains & Losses of 1971
The then Indian Prime Minister
Smt.Indira Gandhi, from a position of strength, now really turned the screws on
the dismal Pakistani delegation. She would not budge from her three main
demands. First, to recognise the CFL as an International border. Second, to
merge Azaad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan into the main body of Pakistan and
bury the J & K issue forever, not to be brought up at any international
forum. And third and most important: recognise Bangladesh, which would mean
accepting the complete defeat of Pakistan and the Two-Nation Theory. Only then
would she release the Pakistani POWs and return the captured and occupied
territory of what was West Pakistan. Needless to say, the Pakistani delegation
could not and would not accept these conditions. The Shimla meeting was,
therefore, heading for a total failure. No joint statement or accord was
released and the Pakistani delegation prepared to return empty-handed. It was
then, at the very last minute, that Zulfikar Ali Bhutto asked Indira for a
one-on-one meeting—between only the two of them, behind closed doors. The two
leaders were inside for an hour, and then a frowning Bhutto emerged and told
the delegation to draw up a joint statement on all other matters like trade,
cultural exchange etc. But to leave the main points out. The only one mentioned—and
here he got a concession from Indira—was that the CFL would henceforth be
termed the ‘Line of Control’ (LoC) for each side and he gave the concession
that the J & K issue would not be raised by Pakistan in international forums.
What had transpired inside came to light later. Bhutto told Indira that if he
accepted her conditions, he would be publicly lynched when he returned to
Pakistan. A vacuum would be created, a PA General would take over and start
planning his revenge on India as well as the use of military force to release
the PoWs. Did she really want that? Or did she prefer to deal with a
democratically elected politician and popular leader? In the end he charmed her
with his salesmanship and asked her to give him time, promising to recognise
Bangladesh in his own way and time. He also got her to compromise on the J
& K issue by renaming the CFL as the LoC (just an interim ceasefire line)
rather than a permanent international border. He also committed to giving
Pakistani Passports to Azaad Kashmiris, thus ending the region’s independent
status and making it a de facto part of Pakistan. Now
what remained was for Bhutto to make good on his promise to recognise
Bangladesh.
(to be concluded)