How Indian Air Force made history
with the Kargil Wa
24
July 201
[This Kargil Vijay Diwas, spare
a moment for the uniformed heroes who gave their today
for our tomorrow.]
Operation "Safed Sagar" commenced on May 26, 1999 and concluded on
July 11, 1999 after all military objectives were
achieved.
This was the first time in the history of
military aviation that air power was used at
a height of upto 32,000 feet by the Indian Air
Force.
From April 1999, the Pakistan Army along with
elements of Mujahadeen (irregulars) crossed the 168km Line
of Control (LoC), along Kargil and occupied high ground
and vantage points.
The intrusion was
announced by the Indian Army by May 7-8 and had come as a
complete surprise to the military as well as
intelligence agencies.
The decision to
induct the IAF was taken on May 24 after due
deliberations at the highest levels of the Indian
government and instructions were issued to jointly, with
the Army, evict the intruders. It was emphasised that
the IAF must not cross the LoC.
The targets were small sangars (shelters made
of boulders) and isolated tents. This made close air
force support to the army extremely difficult.
Initially, the targets
were not known to the Indian Army and little or no
information was available to the Air Force.
The stinger was
also formidable. This shoulder fired missile system,
managed
to hit a Canberre aircraft, on a recce mission on
May 21. Fortunately, the aircraft returned safely.
An
Mig 21 was lost on May 27 and an MI-17 Heptr the very
next day due to stingers.
Thereafter, a change of
tactics and attack patterns was necessitated to stay above
the stinger "bubble".
This implied that weapon delivery would
need to be above 26,000ft and upto 32,000ft.
At such height, the aircraft performance reduces
drastically due to less atmospheric density as also the
ballistics of bombs. The
piloting skills of the Indian Air Force overcame the
difficulties and ensured discernable results.
The first phase of Air Force operations
was to conduct a Reece to identify the targets, the
second was interdiction, which was to hit the
logistics and administration camps that
supplied ammunition, food, fuel, et al to the occupied
posts in the higher mountain reaches.
Then the Air Force
moved to the final phase -of providing close
air support after the target systems were clearly
identified.
All the phases were
executed in close co-operation with the Army.
Credit must be given to the
Mig 21 and Mig 27 pilots, who, with primitive
navigation/attack systems, were very effective.
The use of hand held
GPS (Global Positioning System) was an innovation that
produced great results when used for area targets.
The constant
bombardment had a tremendously demoralising effect on
the adversary's psyche.
The terrain consisted of the
Himalayas running in the northwest-southeast direction,
with peaks reaching above 22,000 to 25,000 feet.
On the northern side of
LoC, the valleys were running in the north-south direction
with gradual slopes to the peaks. Most targets were on
the northern slopes. This made it rather difficult to
evolve a strike pattern without crossing the LoC.
Wind speeds were somewhere between 50-100 knots per hour.
The sun rise cast shadows in the valleys from
8AM, when visibility was considerably reduced and targets
could not be seen. The clouds engulfed the ridges and
peaks by 11AM.
Therefore, the
window of opportunity was only the three-hour period
between 8AM and 11AM.
The tide turned from the middle of June 1999.
At this time, the areas of occupation became known.
The Army was now in a position to make an attack plan
versus the target systems.
As a consequence,
the Air Force was able to coordinate with the Army the
"close Air support" requirements.
The
Mirage 2000 aircraft, the pilots and engineers performed
exceptionally well.
In a very short period
of time, the "Laser Guided Bombs" were made
operational. No pilots or engineers and technicians were
trained at the beginning of the campaign, but within a
week they carried out trials and training.
The
accurate delivery of "Laser Bombs" on Tiger Hill - a
command post in the Mashkoh sector - was devastating.
Innovations like
cheating the computers, for different than authorised
weapon carriage, were commendable.
The lasing time of the
laser pods was altered manually with good results. There
were no fuzes available for the 1000lb bombs, so pistol
fuzes were modified and used effectively.
Clearance for carriage
of 1000lbs indigeneous bombs was done at Gwalior, the home
base of the Mirage 2000 aircraft.
There were other
innovations like using the "laser designator pod" for
recce.
The largest logistics
camps at Muntho Dalo in the Batalik sector and Pt 4388
in the Mashkoh sector were identified through this method
and neutralised effectively.
The Mirage 2000
aircraft flew a total of 500 missions with only
three drops outs.
The IAF flew a total of 1,235
missions, striking 24 major
target systems and ensuring air dominance over the area of
operations through Air Defence Interceptor aircraft like
Mirage 2000 and Mig 29s.
Significant air strikes that altered the
course of the conflict:
1. June 13 1999 Tololing
Ridge Complex in the Batalik Sector
2. June 17
1999 Muntho Dalo the Main Admin and Lgs camp in the
Batalik sector
3. June 24
1999 Command and Control structure on Tiger Hill.
Direction Centrefor forward artillery in the Dras Sector.
4. June 23
1999 Logistics Camp at Pt 4388 in Mashkoh Nallah
The Pakistan side's armed intrusion across the
LoC during May to July 1999 at the Kargil sector was a
misadventure with severe consequences.
The Indian side had
achieved its final objective of evicting the intruders
with the successful Air Force-Army joint operation.
The Kargil conflict was
a limited Pakistani effort to internationalise the Kashmir
issue, which was seen to be losing its momentum.
They had assessed that
a counter attack would only last a few
days and, thereafter, a ceasefire through international
pressure, would allow them to stay in their occupied
positions and renew their supplies.
The
Pakistani planners failed to assess the involvement of
air power, the capability of the IAF and the Indian
Army's determination.
The
hesitation, at the political and military leadership,
for the use of air power, delayed the induction of the
IAF for over two weeks.
It
was nearly a repeat of the 1962 Chinese conflict, where
air power was not utilised with disastrous consequences.
Perhaps
a "declaratory policy" to confirm that there will be
no hesitation to use air power for any willful
violation of the LoC or the international border is
warranted.
This would have a
deterrent effect.
Intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance capability are of utmost
importance to national security and the induction of two
Pakistan Army battalions in the region should have been
monitored.
Gilgit, Skardu
and Gulteri in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK) should have
been under surveillance round the year.
Strategic
reconnaissance is a core competency of all Air
Force and in India, it is included in external
intelligence gathering under R&AW (Aviation Research
Centre).
The gap between
satellite and tactical recce (UAVs, fighters, et al) is
strategic recce, which must be with the IAF and resources
provided.
The importance of technology cannot be
overstated.
Induction of
technology would give us greater and sustainable
capability, enhancing national security considerably.
Do we need high tech,
well trained and motivated defence forces in smaller
numbers or superior forces in large numbers?
Higher
level military leadership must be selected through
merit.
During
the Kargil War, it was the middle and junior level
leadership that rose to the occassion.
The Kargil operation would have never
happened if the higher leadership had ensured
realistic threat assessment and planning.
There should be greater interaction between
the political and military leadership. Thus far,
it is non existent.
Military leadership
does not only include the chiefs of staff, but also the
Air Force, Army and Navy commanders who formulate and
execute the operational plans. This would expedite and
rationalise the decision making process during conflict
situations.
In the final analysis, Kargil was a military,
diplomatic and political success for India.
However, the loss of
nearly 500 military men and over 1,100
serious casualties, subdues the success.
During this Kargil Diwas, we should spare a
moment for the great uniformed personnel who gave
their today for our tomorrow.
Jai
Hind.
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India hasn't learnt from Kargil war; Bigger
battles lay unattended
Pallavi Sengupta
25
July 2015
The real victory of the Vijay Diwas is far from
reality. The martyrdom of 4,000 soldiers in the Kargil War
is all but a waste if the international border issues
between Pakistan and India continue to happen. The ceasefire
violations over the past two years are proof enough that
nothing has changed since the Kargil war. We continue to pay
our respects on the marked day and then continue to forget.
- - -
-. OROP: Why
do soldiers and ex-army men still have to fight for their
rights?
Just going gaga over their services does not
help.
The scheme was supposed to be implemented in 2008
and was adopted by the government in the budget of
2014-2015, but has now gone under wraps.
Protest
as much as you want, veterans, the
government will just salute you and march off to
another election victory with a different agenda.
http://www.oneindia.com/feature/india-hasnt-learnt-from-kargil-war-justice-orop-defence-army-1817190.html