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Dear Readers,
DJ’s
first interview of the series “Remembering Our Warriors” with Maj
Gen (Retd) Naseerullah Khan Babar got a tremendous response from our
readers. His forthright comments were a welcome and refreshing change
to the routine answers we normally hear. The DJ piece on national
security and defence has been followed up by Gen Babar’s interview
for GLOBE on politics. Even though it is likely to evoke reaction his
reminisces needed to be recorded for posterity. If we have to reach
for our destiny as a nation, we must do so on a foundation of truth.
By spinning a web of lies we only fool ourselves and lose the
credibility that is the bedrock of history. For our second interview
we have chosen Pakistan Navy’s Vice Admiral (Retd) Ahmad Tasneem SJ
& Bar, as an authentic naval war hero. One of our first
submariners he represents the dauntless courage of the few in the Navy
who “run silent, run deep”. We hope readers will give us
suggestions for our living heroes, hopefully we intend to get some
compatriots to speak out about the Shaheeds they know closely. The
Indians have carried out a Corps plus hot weather exercise called
“Poorna Vijay” in the Rajasthan desert from May 5 to May 10. I
wrote a News Analysis for THE NATION entitled “COMPLETE NUCLEAR
LUNACY”, which I am taking the liberty of reproducing.
Since
May 5 an Indian strike force of 60,000 plus is conducting Corps-level
exercise code-named “Poorna Vijay”
(Complete Victory) in the Bikaner sector of Rajasthan, the
final assault on “enemy positions” (believe it or not, that’s
us) is scheduled for Thursday May 10, 2001. Armour might in the form
of T-72 tanks make up the centre-piece of the manoeuvres, supported by
mechanized infantry, self-propelled artillery and about a 100 combat
and transport aircraft which will launch mock ground attacks. Even
though not stated, heliborne assault forces are certainly making up an
integral part of the deployment. The exercise “aims to evaluate
concept and practice, battle procedures during defensive and offensive
operations on the future battlefield, with a nuclear backdrop”. The
Indian Government further states that “the operation’s aim is to
enhance the army’s operational preparations through the conduct of a
number of tactical exercises with troops under simulated battle
conditions. Drills and procedures to meet challenges of a nuclear,
chemical or biological strike will also be practiced”. Air Marshal
(Retd) Kak, a noted defence analyst, opines that “the exercise also
aims to prove India’s nuclear deterrent is indeed credible and that
our (i.e. Indian) retaliation will be massive. Our doctrine is to
escalate conflict beyond battlefields to strategic targets in case of
nuclear war”, unquote. In violation of the ground rules agreed upon
in April 1991 about exercises conducted in the proximity of each
other’s borders (i.e. within 75 kms) and in the presence of the
hotline between each other’s Military Operations, India conveniently
failed to inform Pakistan that it was carrying out offensive
manoeuvres so close to our borders. This deliberate omission signals a
provocation of sorts, such manoeuvres will certainly lead to friction
if Pakistan chooses tit-for-tat escalation.
On
28-30 January 1999, a war game entitled “International Game 99,
Crisis in South Asia” was conducted between India and Pakistan by
the United States Naval War College. Participants came from South
Pacific and Asia (Australia, China, India, Iran, Japan, Pakistan,
Philippines, Singapore), Europe (Finland, France, Russia, UK), Latin
America (Peru) and North America (Canada and USA). After the opening
scenario, India made a massive conventional attack on Kashmiri
militants and across the Ceasefire Line (CFL) and the international
border at their supporting bases in Pakistan (Operation Resolute
Sword). This followed a supposedly grave provocation by the militants,
the shooting down near Srinagar of an Indian transport aircraft
carrying India’s Defence and Interior Ministers, as well as the Army
Chief of Staff, by a ground-to-air missile fired by Kashmiri freedom
fighters. Faced with massive incursion, Pakistan in retaliation
supposedly launched “Operation Resolute Shield” and gained some
Indian territory. After an initial setback, the Indians then war-gamed
to have gained conventional superiority due to their sheer numbers.
Depicted as unable to withstand this, Pakistan uses tactical nuclear
strikes to destroy three armoured columns of invading Indian forces in
the desert as well as the rail-hub at Jodhpur. India sees this as a
major crossing of the nuclear threshold, an “unwarranted”
escalation by Pakistan. Pakistan says the strikes are only surgically
directed against military targets. While the western nations and
Russia, China and Japan struggle to contain the conflict from
spreading into a full scale nuclear conflagration, even a possible
World War 3, India launches a comprehensive nuclear strike on 12 of
Pakistan’s command and nuclear installation, mostly in and around
the major cities, supposedly destroying most of the Pakistan
Government as well as the Pakistan Armed Forces command and nuclear
control mechanism, causing millions of casualties, mostly civilian.
Survivors of the Pakistan Government say they are unable to control
isolated commanders who are still in possession of nuclear weapons and
as a matter of vengeance (an eye for an eye!) could retaliate at their
will. The war game ended in a diplomatic stalemate, with Russia openly
supporting India, China as usual defending Pakistan and the western
nations playing neutral, giving lip-service only to the massive Indian
nuclear attack on mainly civilian population.
While
the present Indian exercise closely resembles the desert war portion
of the war game model, a number of factors govern why India has opted
for holding exercises in the desert during the extreme hot weather.
During the Kargil crisis, to take pressure off its vulnerable
strategic border road connecting Occupied Kashmir to Leh, and more
importantly Siachen, India had three military options. These included
(1) retaking the heights along the strategic Leh road (2) to make a
massive conventional ground attack in (a) across the Ceasefire Line in
Kashmir (b) in the Punjab and/or (c) Rajasthan or (3) to do a naval
blockade of Pakistan. The third option fizzled out because of (a) the
bad state of operational readiness of the Indian Navy (b) the weather
in the Indian Ocean not being conducive to “blockade operations”
during the months May to July and (c) the capability Pakistan Navy’s
submarines and the PAF’s land-based aircraft to take heavy toll. A
“quarantine” has no teeth (US-USSR missile crisis Cuba 1962)
unless the enforcement is backed by firepower. As for the second
option there was not much reward in attacking across the fixed
defences in Kashmir (along the CFL) and in the plains of the Punjab.
The other available option for them was to attack in strength in
Rajasthan and threaten Pakistan’s vital North-South Line of
Communications (L of C) where Pakistan is most vulnerable i.e.
Rahimyar Khan - Sadiqabad area. Here India was faced by three very
significant problems, viz (1) were the troops acclimatized to fight a
(very) hot weather campaign in the desert and the necessary logistics
support to go with it (Coca-Cola may kuch bath hain?) (2) faced with
such a loss would Pakistan forswear the use of tactical nuclear
strikes? And (3) would the world accept a full-scale Indian invasion
of Pakistan on the Kargil pretext? With a no-no to all questions,
India went for the first option, drowning its tremendous losses in
Kargil in a crescendo of media publicity, declaring military victory
where the victory (and that was considerable) was really diplomatic.
India always takes into consequence ground reality and in the backdrop
of the developing scenario of the war game conducted by US Naval War
College, the present manoeuvres were conceived to overcome India’s
weaknesses in the desert during May-June 1999 and is now being
implemented. It assumes considerable strategic significance, not the
least being a warning to Pakistan and China (and Bangladesh?) that
India can (and is ready to) fight a conventional war even in
nuclearised conditions.
While
our present available forces in the area are well balanced to resist a
massive Indian attack in Rajasthan, we must take to heart the lessons
of 1971 in the desert, the most important being, viz (1) we need
better air cover and (2) we have no tactical depth. Obviously the
Indian attack, if and when it comes, will be at a level of a Command
i.e. two corps plus, as envisaged in the original “Brass Tacks”
exercise conducted in Rajasthan in 1987 by Gen Sunderji, then Indian
COAS, with his newly conceived RAPID Divisions. This had brought India
and Pakistan perilously close to war, only Zia’s cricket diplomacy
defused the situation. In the desert and with little air cover, we
cannot depend upon the “three to one” theory for repulsing enemy
offensives i.e. the enemy has to be at least three times stronger to
overwhelm us. In the desert we need almost equal firepower and
mobility, if not numerical strength to fight mobile battles. As such
we need to strengthen our conventional armoured forces at Pano Aqil
and Rahimyar Khan, seriously thinking of putting a Brigade plus each
at Daharki, Ubauro and Sadiqabad. We cannot escalate to the tactical
nuclear stage without giving a chance to our conventional forces to
withstand the enemy offensive.
If
India had young leadership we would not be so apprehensive but given
the geriatric lot (with one foot in the grave) now running India,
adventurism leading to nuclear holocaust cannot be ruled out given
what these leaders have most to lose (life), is almost lost to them
anyway. What do they care what happens to the youth of India as long
as they can take India to glory, even a “nuclear-holocausted” one?
We have to give ourselves a fighting chance on conventional terms
before we use the nuclear option. There is one satisfaction in all
this, the Indian leadership (and the world) knows that if push comes
to shove, Pakistan has the means of rendering their so-called
“complete victory” hollow. In a perverse way this “complete
nuclear lunacy” (Poorna Pagalpani) is a form of d’tente, a no-win
situation which could well lead to a possible solution of the many
problems between Pakistan and India.
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