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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mohan Marette who wrote (4837)6/30/1999 10:34:00 PM
From: sea_biscuit  Respond to of 12475
 
That would mean that the "hawks" in India would be made to eat crow! I don't think they will like it one bit. It will be interesting to see how the BJP comes out of this mess -- a mess, one may add, of their own creation.




To: Mohan Marette who wrote (4837)7/1/1999 3:12:00 AM
From: sea_biscuit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 

Jawan says that India is getting its butt handed to it in Kargil! Six HUNDRED dead Indian soldiers, and in just one sector alone...

Article follows :

Chindu Sreedharan in Kargil

Let's call him Soldier X.

Some 48 hours ago, he returned from a forward post in Batalik sector. A
post that gave an unobstructed view of the Indian Army operations against
intruders holding a ridgeline -- it has been sanitised now -- a few kilometers
away.

''It is open terrain there. No cover, no trees, no shrubs, nothing but rocks,''
he says, ''you can see miles around.''

The soldier, who belongs to central India, was at the post for two months. In
other words, an observer right from day one of the operations. He has now
finished his stint at the border and is off to more pleasant climes.

''There were a few Pakistani posts opposite us. Our assignment was to
engage them and prevent them from supporting the intruders,'' he details,
''We were firing at them all day and night.''

Still there was plenty of opportunity for Soldier X to watch his colleagues
trying to take the ridgeline (one of the four that the intruders occupied in
Batalik), see them shooting and being shot at, killing and being killed. He
could also see clearly artillery shells from both sides bursting all around.

''How many does the army say have been killed in Balalik? 78? That's not
true. We have lost much more than that,'' he claims.

The soldier's estimate of the casualties is pretty steep -- around 600 dead --
but may not be necessarily accurate. And he has more controversial
information: nine Indian troops, including an officer, were captured by the
intruders. The official version, however, is that no one has been taken by the
enemy.

''Most of the snow in the area has melted. Now it's only rocks with snow at
the top,'' Soldier X continues. ''It's hot in the day there, but the nights are
cold.''

He blames the high casualty figures on the terrain more than bullets. The
area of operation provides very few opportunities for medical evacuation.
The injured have to be carried down, out of firing range, before helicopters
can take them out.

''You can't walk at those heights (over 4,500 meters) without panting,'' he
explains, 'T'he stretcher party has a very tough job. They can only come in
the night. They have to carry the wounded down very narrow paths -- Just
about wide for one person -- in darkness. It can take two to six hours before
they reach them to the helipad.

''It's a tough battle. We will clear the area. But it will take time and we'll
lose more men,'' he says, winding up a conversation that the army brass
actively discourages and calls sarcastically 'a worm's view'. ''In my opinion
declaring war would be a better option than fighting like this.'' And with that
Soldier X gets up. Reminds us our promise not to identify him and walks off.