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Kargil Remembered
A Homage to the Indian Army Martyrs
by Dr. Subhash Kapila

Seven years ago in 1999 at about this time the incredibly brave Young Officers of the Indian Army leading from the front, their gallant teams of soldiers, were hurtling themselves against Pakistan Army occupied mountain tops in the Kargil Sector. These mountain tops were deep inside Indian territory and been treacherously occupied by the Pakistan Army when in winter these positions stood vacated as a result of very heavy snowfall conditions. It was an unwritten convention and a honor code between the two Armies, ever since the 1947-48 Kashmir War that positions vacated in winter by either Army would not be occupied by the other. But in the winter of 1998-99 this honor code was broken and the Pakistan Army stealthily came to these hill features and began fortifying them so that by early spring when Indian Army would come to reoccupy them they would be presented with a fait accompli.

The mastermind of this Pakistani treachery and what was ultimately to turn out to be a military misadventure, was none other than the man who now parades himself as the President of Pakistan – General Musharraf. He was the Pakistan Army Chief and had planned this operation behind the back of his Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif and was later to use his failure as a pretext to displace Sharif by a military coup. It is amazing that two successive Indian Prime Ministers were ill-advised to do political business with him, despite being the master-mind of the Kargil War and the Islamic Jihad launched against India with greater intensity after he usurped power. It is further amazing that Indian media leading columnists including ones who had been press advisers to Prime Ministers in the past should be pressing the present Prime Minister to sell off Siachen to the Pakistani military dictator and also de-militarize Kashmir for his benefit. More amazing was Dr. Manmohan Singh’s statement some months back that he can trust General Musharraf and can do business with him! All this is an insult to the hundred of martyrs of the Indian Army who selflessly sacrificed their lives to win back the Indian territory occupied by Pakistan Army under direct orders of General Musharraf.

The Kargil War, even eulogized by Indian film makers in a number of moving films, is a saga of heroism and sacrifice which few armies can boast of. It involved fighting at high altitudes under extreme cold conditions. The fighting involved leading infantry assaults along narrow tracks in rocky and cliff terrain with no vegetation cover against peaks held by Pakistani troops dug in fortified positions. The challenges were superhuman but in the finest traditions of the Indian Army they were squarely met. In the process hundreds of promising lives were lost and nothing is more moving than reading the gallant accounts of the Young Officers who charged into Pakistani positions even when severely wounded and exhorted their men to eject the enemy. Does the Indian Republic remember them?

These days every morning when one opens the morning newspapers and comes to the obituary pages one sees the photographs of so many of these Young Officers and soldiers in remembrances by their Regiments and Battalions. The mind and one’s head gets bowed in homage to these brave martyrs, and they seem to be reminding us of the famous lines etched on the Kohima War Memorial:

“ When you go home,
Tell them of us and say,
For theirs tomorrow,
We gave our today. ”

Touching words, and invariably one’s mind wanders towards the thought as to how many Indian political leaders have for our tomorrows given their today ?  

July 2, 2006

Image courtesy: Bharat-Rakshak.com

Top | PlainSpeak   

The Week of July 2, 2006      
Nuclear Notions: Critics of Indo-US N-deal Miss the Larger Picture by Rajinder Puri
Kargil Remembered: A Homage to the Indian Army Martyrs by Dr. Subhash Kapila
The Flood Story of the Hindus, Hebrews and Sumerians by Gaurang Bhatt, MD
Toxic Tourism by J. Ajithkumar 
Achievement of Liberation by TA Ramesh 
Know AIDS for No AIDS by Naira Yaqoob
Suicide Tourism by Kusum Choppra

How Rejection Becomes A Writers Tonic by Michael Levy  
The Art and Science of Water by VK Joshi 
Feeding Your Toddler by Garima Gupta
Yudhishthira: A Game of Dice with Dharma by Satya Chaitanya
Hidimba: The unacknowledged Heroine of the Mahabharata by Dr. Saroj Thakur
Restlessness Itself is Mind by A. Thiagarajan 
To Be or Not To Be ... Happy by Anjali Anand Seth 
On My Way to Haridwar – Uttaranchal Diary by Ragini Puri
Ram Swarup : A Fearless Intellectual by V. Sundaram 
Marking Women Through Status Indicators by Dr. Ajit Kumar Sinha  
Version Control System by Ruchi Gupta  
Chicken 'n' Robed A Recipe by Davidbhai Jodhpurwala
A Bride Hunt by PGR Nair 
The Witty Side by Melvin Durai  
Love Stories from Mahabharata A review by Amreeta Sen 
The World of Tamil Politics by G Swaminathan
Tales with a Twist by Lekshmy Rajeev   
Ram Naam Bolo, Rahim Naam Bolo by C.R. Gopalakrishna 
   

 

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