Monday, November 7, 2016

It Will Take More Than Force for India to Win the Terror Endgame

SOURCE::
http://carnegieendowment.org/2016/10/14/not-war-not-peace-motivating-pakistan-to-prevent-cross-border-terrorism-event-5390

It Will Take More Than Force for India to Win the Terror Endgame


                   Not War, Not Peace?
          : Motivating Pakistan to Prevent
                     Cross-Border Terrorism

      [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLDnAxhpaNI ]

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Only a combination of Indian coercive and non-violent capabilities, and a willingness to bargain, can motivate Pakistan to remove the threat of violence. And just as threat of force alone will not work for India, terrorism won’t get Pakistan what it wants from India.
 
 
 
 
                   Swearing-in ceremony of Narendra Modi.
 (L-R) President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif and Prime Minister of Mauritius, Navin Ramgoolam. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

 
 
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent public references to Balochistan and Gilgit-Baltistan confirm for many Pakistanis what they have long suspected:
 that India is employing covert means to destabilise and foment violence in Pakistan. If India is pursuing covert operations to punish Pakistan, it would be a disturbing development in the nearly 70-year security competition between the two states; but it should not come as a great surprise.


The prospect of covert Indian operations and rhetoric regarding Balochistan and Kashmir widens the front that Pakistani leaders must defend. While alarming to Pakistan, these tactics reflect the Indian leaders’ attempts to find ways to motivate the Pakistani establishment to demonstrably renounce anti-India terrorism and to neutralise actors that threaten to conduct it. “It’s a Rubik’s cube – dealing with Pakistan,” a former Indian national security adviser told us in late 2014. “You keep fiddling with squares. As you move one set, others are affected or become problems.”


Since the terrorist attacks in New Delhi and Jammu in late 2001 and early 2002, in Mumbai in November 2008 and, most recently, on the Pathankot air base, Indians have increasingly concluded that eschewing forceful responses does not work. As one retired senior Indian military officer lamented to us in 2014: “How do you prove deterrence if you don’t use force at any time?” Modi won the 2014 election in part because he displayed his resolve to use force to fight threats against India.
Pakistan’s conventional and nuclear forces make Indian conventional military operations against Pakistan exceedingly risky. Indian leaders are trying to find alternatives that could simultaneously satisfy domestic demands to punish Pakistan, deter Pakistan from escalating conflict in reaction to Indian punitive actions and bring conflict to a close in ways that do not leave India worse off – in terms of casualties, costs and overall power. Pakistani officials and strategists, too, should have a keen interest in understanding these alternatives.


Our focus on possible Indian options for changing Pakistan’s behaviour regarding terrorism does not ignore Pakistan’s legitimate interest in motivating India to redress the grievances of Kashmiri Muslims and create conditions in and around Kashmir that are acceptable to Kashmir, Pakistan and India. The best solution would be for both states to eschew violence against each other and to take reciprocal, verifiable steps to demonstrate to each other that they are doing so. Indeed, Pakistani experts as diverse as Munir Akram and Pervez Hoodbhoy, in recent contributions to the daily Dawn, have sketched non-violent steps that Pakistan and Kashmiris, on both sides of the Line of Control (LoC), could take to increase pressure on India to pacify the situation.


Akram urged Pakistan to “launch a major diplomatic offensive in international forums and the world’s capitals to halt India’s massive human rights violations in occupied Kashmir,” and to revitalise “the legitimacy of the Kashmiri struggle” as something distinct from “terrorism”. Hoodbhoy noted that Pakistan could increase international support by highlighting the indigenisation of the Kashmir movement and “cracking down upon Kashmir-oriented militant groups still operating from its soil.” Combined, such developments would strengthen Pakistan’s position in talks with India and with outside powers.


Yet, as long as Pakistan and groups such as Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LT) do not clearly demonstrate their renunciation of cross-border violence, and India does not demonstrate that it will reciprocate by accommodating the interests of reasonable Kashmiri stakeholders in a peace process, more violence with the potential to escalate the conflict remains all too possible. This is why we have written Not War, Not Peace? – to analyse the implications of possible Indian policies and capabilities to deter and to respond to another major terrorist attack on India.

At stake is the potential for war that could escalate to nuclear devastation of Pakistan and India. This would be the most destabilising and catastrophic event in the international system since World War II.



George Perkovich and Toby DaltonNot War, Not Peace?: Motivating Pakistan to Prevent Cross-Border TerrorismOxford University Press, 2016
George Perkovich and Toby Dalton
Not War, Not Peace?: Motivating Pakistan to Prevent Cross-Border Terrorism
Oxford University Press, 2016



For a problem this profound, it is notable that no theories in the existing international relations literature, or in other states’ practices, offer guidance as to how India and Pakistan could most effectively proceed here. Unlike any other nuclear-armed antagonists, India and Pakistan directly border each other, have unresolved territorial disputes (Kashmir and Sir Creek) and have engaged in armed conflict four times, not to mention multiple other militarised crises in places such as Siachen and across the LoC in Kashmir. Furthermore, terrorism poses a threat that could instigate future conflict. Studies on deterring and defeating terrorism have not addressed situations in which the major antagonists possess nuclear weapons. Theories and case studies of nuclear deterrence and escalation management have not involved cases in which terrorists are the instigators of aggression and may not directly be under the control of state leaders.


India cannot reasonably expect that Pakistani authorities will be willing and able to destroy groups, such as LT, and simultaneously eradicate the numerous militant groups that now threaten the internal security of Pakistan more directly. “They can’t stop everybody,” a senior Indian official acknowledged to us in 2014, “but we need to know they are trying … via signals we can mutually understand.” In other words, the reasonable objective is for Pakistan to make demonstrable, persistent efforts to pacify the tactics Pakistan based actors use to pursue their political demands towards India, regarding Kashmir and other issues.


India’s primary coercive options could centre on army incursions, or more limited airborne strikes, or covert operations. India’s development of operational military and intelligence capabilities to support these options aims to deter cross-border terrorism through the threat of future punishment. Depending on which of these options India pursues, nuclear strategy and capabilities would play a reinforcing role. For example, if Indian leaders decided to unleash major ground and air operations – as envisioned in ‘Cold Start’ – they would have to anticipate possible Pakistani nuclear responses and deploy more credible nuclear forces and plans to counter Pakistan than the current Indian doctrine of ‘massive retaliation’ implies. Since these are the options most discussed in India, they require deep analysis.


To optimise the potential of any strategy, Indian policy making processes and military-diplomatic capabilities need to be improved. Meanwhile, our extensive analysis suggests that none of India’s most likely options – army-centric, air-centric, covert and nuclear – could confidently achieve the desired changes in Pakistani behaviour with acceptable risks to India. This suggests that India could channel more effort into developing capabilities and strategies to exert non-violent pressure on Pakistan to prevent cross-border terrorism.


Army-based operations, that would damage the Pakistani military enough to (theoretically) motivate leaders to curtail terrorist threats against India, would probably also reduce the capabilities of the Pakistani military and intelligence services to combat terrorist groups. This challenge could grow if Indian incursions drove more people to join anti-India militant groups in Pakistan. And the more damage India might inflict on the Pakistani military, the greater the probability that Pakistan would resort to nuclear weapons, leading to escalatory destruction that would cause much greater harm to India than the terrorist attack that instigated the conflict.


More limited, precise air strikes could entail lesser risk of escalation. However, strikes calibrated to mitigate escalation could signal to Pakistani leaders that India lacks resolve to actually force fundamental changes in Pakistani behaviour. Pakistan has the means to defend its airspace and to mobilise ground forces to widen a conflict in response to Indian air attacks.


Finding a sufficient mix of destructiveness and restraint would confront India with challenges that, for example, US and Israel have not faced when they have used aircraft and missiles to attack their adversaries. This is not to ignore the potential value of air strikes against terrorist-related targets to satisfy Indian political necessities and mobilise international pressure on Pakistan. Still, whether such gains would durably alter Pakistani behaviour is highly uncertain.


As noted above, changes to the nuclear doctrine might provide a more credible buttress to punitive conventional military operations, especially those that involve major army campaigns in Pakistan. However, that alone would be unlikely to motivate Pakistani leaders to meet India’s counter terrorism demands. Moreover, creating capabilities and options for a battlefield nuclear war would raise significant concerns about how such a war could be controlled and terminated. There is no history to draw upon here: no states have ever exchanged nuclear attacks.


Finally, covert or special forces operations might actually degrade the capability of terrorist groups to attack India and could harm Pakistani interests enough to motivate Pakistani authorities to do more to prevent cross-border terrorism against India. Of course, covert Indian operations also could invite Pakistani retaliation, which Indian policymakers acknowledge is a significant vulnerability.


In any case, covertness necessitates restraint in claiming credit for such operations. To the extent that if India’s covert activities in Pakistan became apparent to Pakistan and the wider world, India could lose reputational and political leverage over Pakistan, as many Indian commentators have pointed out in the wake of Modi’s Independence Day speech. An exceptionally experienced counsellor to several Indian prime ministers told us, “It is not in our interest to have people think we are little different from the ISI [Inter-Services Intelligence] … if Pakistanis assert we are just like them … the international community will say ‘they both do it’, and the pressure falls off Pakistan.”


Contrary to military options, utilising diplomatic, economic and other means of international censure in a strategy of nonviolent compellence may be a better way to motivate Pakistan. The punitive benefits of a non-violent strategy may be less direct than military action but it also comes with far lower risks of an escalating military conflict. With a clear comparative advantage over Pakistan in economic clout and soft power, India could utilise these tools to isolate Pakistan internationally in response to another major terrorist attack.


However, in order to be successful with this strategy, India would have to develop greater deftness in international coalition-building. The Indian government’s own behaviour in Kashmir, and willingness to address grievances there, would need to be positive enough to make outside powers feel they will not be accused of hypocrisy if they side with India against Pakistan.


Overall, India and Pakistan are approaching rough symmetry at three levels of competition: covert, conventional and nuclear. One of the countries may be more capable in one or more of these domains, but each has now demonstrated enough capability in all three to deny the other confidence that it can win more than it loses at any level of this violent competition. India drove Pakistani forces out of Kargil, but Pakistani conventional and nuclear capabilities prevented India from escalating the war.


India mobilised its forces massively after the 2001 attack on the parliament and Pakistan took some steps to curtail terrorist groups but the balance of power made neither of them want to fight. Despite trying to develop the ‘Cold Start’ doctrine, India did not respond militarily to the 2008 attack on Mumbai; but Pakistani authorities have hinted to us and others that damage to Pakistan’s reputation and vulnerability to Indian destabilisation efforts made Pakistan take unspecified steps that have prevented further Mumbai-like attacks since 2008.


Pakistan subsequently also tested a short-range nuclear missile with the stated intention to deter Indian army incursions that might follow another cross-border terror incident. This condition of rough balance and deterrence across the spectrum of conflict amounts to an unstable equilibrium. Any number of actions by leaders and non-officials, taken by mistake or on purpose, could destabilise it.


The basic balance in useable force creates an opportunity for leaders to take steps to stabilise and pacify the India Pakistan competition. Diplomacy and deal making cannot shift balances of power and deterrence but they can solidify them through explicit agreements that clarify expectations and standards of behaviour. Two recent examples demonstrate that bargaining can result in stable outcomes that address the core concerns of contending parties. In August 2016, the government of Colombia and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) signed a comprehensive peace agreement to end the civil war there.


This agreement followed years of secret negotiations and a series of interim steps, including mutual paying of reparations to victims of the conflict and a commitment by FARC to end its relationship with the drug trade on which it had relied for funding. In July 2015, after similarly lengthy talks, the P-5 plus Germany reached a landmark nuclear deal with Iran to address concerns that Tehran was pursuing nuclear weapons.


Such agreements – essentially, negotiated accommodations – raise the costs for any authorities that would subsequently violate them. This is all the more relevant when major outside powers have a stake in the stabilisation that has been achieved. China and US both have great interests in stability between Pakistan and India. Both could be expected to press India and Pakistan to uphold any agreements, to contribute to fact-finding if there are disputes over compliance, and to reward both states by increasing investment and urging others to do so, when the security establishments in India and Pakistan demonstrate commitment to stabilisation.


Notwithstanding some intermittent high-level diplomatic engagements with Pakistan, including Modi’s own dramatic visit to Lahore in December 2015, the Indian government has toughened its position on Kashmir. This, too, should not be surprising given the doubts voiced by Indian officials about the intentions of the Pakistani security establishment. Yet, if the Indian government persists in the belief that it can manage Kashmir as an internal matter, without Pakistan’s negotiated cooperation, New Delhi will be unable to build an international coalition that would significantly raise the cost for Pakistan of future major attacks on India.


Indeed, by acting as if there is nothing to negotiate with Pakistan, Indian leaders would encourage proponents of violence in Pakistan and discourage international players who would like to fully embrace India, but are reluctant to do so if India insists that they reject Pakistan at the same time. India has the power, the habits of mind and institutions to sustain a war of attrition with Pakistan. But India cannot achieve its ambitions to be a global power if it remains bogged down in such a war.


The analysis presented in Not War, Not Peace? shows that there are no clear solutions that India can unilaterally pursue to end the threat of violence from Pakistan. Some are more likely to be effective, at greater or lesser risk and cost, for India and Pakistan. But only a combination of Indian coercive and non-violent capabilities, paired with a willingness to bargain, can motivate Pakistan to remove the threat of violence. And just as threat of force alone will not work for India, neither will support or tolerance of anti-India terrorism enable Pakistan to get what it wants from India. Both have to demonstrate willingness to compromise through bargaining, which is only possible if both reassure each other that they are eschewing violence. It is up to Indian and Pakistani leaders and societies, with encouragement from the international community, to find a combination that will work for them.


This piece has been co-published by Herald, the monthly magazine of the Dawn group in Pakistan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Sunday, November 6, 2016

MINOR TACTICAL WARFARE Revealed : : How The Surgical Strikes Ops Unfolded

SOURCE:
http://www.rediff.com/news/column/revealed-how-the-surgical-strikes-ops-unfolded/20160930.htm

                           
                      
         MINOR  TACTICAL WARFARE 

                          Revealed
: How The Surgical Strikes Ops Unfolded
                               By
                    Nitin Gokhale


September 30, 2016


 
'A couple of hours before the H-Hour, the Kupwara division opened small arms and mortar fire on posts opposite its area of operation.'

'This was a diversionary tactic.'


'As Pakistani forces began to react to the firing, special forces teams began to slowly cross the LoC into PoK.'


Nitin Gokhale reveals how planning for the surgical strikes began hours after the Uri attack.







On Thursday morning, a long-standing taboo in the minds of India's strategic decision-makers was broken.

As news about the Indian Army's surgical strike on terrorist camps in Pakistan occupied Kashmir broke around noon on Thursday, it was clear that India was no longer afraid of a possible escalation with Pakistan, its empty nuclear threat notwithstanding.


In fact, Pakistan's nuclear bluff has been called: Both armies understand nuclear escalation requires a much higher threshold.


Even the threat of first use of tactical nuclear weapons is just bluster: Both armies are professional, whatever image they may project.


After this event, at least in the public mind and thus of the politicians, the fear of nuclear escalation will recede.
The entire episode has changed the India-Pakistan dynamics on the LoC.


A decisive move by the political leadership to declare to the world the action the army took has brought in an element of unpredictability that Pakistan is not used to.


So far, Pakistan could always predict an Indian response to any terrorist attack. Condemnation, shock, presentation of dossiers would complete the Indian action.


By going beyond the rhetoric, the Narendra Modi government has injected a new element to which Pakistan is not used to.
In Islamabad, the reaction have therefore been extremely muted or confused.


While the Pakistan army has denied any surgical strike by India, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his defence minister have condemned the attack and said any such future attack will get a befitting reply!


For India, arriving at this decision was not easy.


On September 18, when Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar and army chief General Dalbir Singh were flying together back from Srinagar late that night after taking stock of the aftermath of the attack on an administrative camp near the army's Uri brigade that killed 18 soldiers ( two soldiers died later), the mood in the aircraft was somber.


India had not lost so many soldiers together in one attack in the past decade. The nation was downcast.


It seemed India had no answers to Pakistan's continuing proxy war in Jammu and Kashmir.


Mid-way through the flight, Parrikar, who is about to complete two years as defence minister in November, told the army chief to give him at least three options that would involve demonstrable action against the perpetrators of the attack early the next morning.


Parrikar wanted the options in his hand before he attended the Cabinet Committee on Security meeting the next day.


The Military Operations Directorate worked through the night and presented the possibilities that existed to launch operations along and across the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir.
Armed with the options, the defence minister went for the CCS meeting.


The CCS, taking inputs from various agencies -- the Research and Analysis Wing, the Intelligence Bureau, the National Technical Research Organisation -- and National Security Adviser Ajit Doval decided to order preparations for a retaliatory strike.


The CCS, India's highest decision making body on matters of strategic affairs, was determined to go off the usual beaten track of 'we-condemn-the heinous-attack' that has been India's standard response to any terrorist attack in the past two decades.


The prime minister had already promised that the sacrifice of the 18 soldiers would not go in vain. So preparations began in right earnest.


All of India's top decision-makers on security affairs had a series of meetings between September 18 and 25 to decide on multiple steps to hurt Pakistan.


Revisiting the Indus Waters Treaty, boycotting the SAARC summit in Islamabad, describing Pakistan as the 'Ivy League of Terrorism' in the UN, was all part of the well thought out, coordinated strategy to corner Pakistan.


Even as these steps were being initiated, preparations for a punitive strike on terrorist camps located in Pakistan occupied Kashmir, not very far from the LoC, were underway.


The NTRO and R&AW were tasked to get accurate assessment of the camps and launch pads, the strength of terrorists present there along with Pakistani army regulars.


The Indian Army's Northern Command also had local intelligence through their Humint (human intelligence) about what was happening across the LoC.



 







Initial reports spoke about heightened defences in these camps. Some of the 30-odd camps that the Pakistan army maintains and nurtures along the LoC were emptied immediately after the Uri attack, fearing retaliation from the Indian Army.


After 10 days had passed without any visible action or even any overt preparation for an attack across the LoC, the guard seemed to lower perceptibly in the camps.


Pakistan was lulled into thinking India's response will be on expected lines: Every other measure but a military strike.
Little did they know that targets had been selected, assessments done and a crack force assembled to hit the camps and Pakistani army posts in an arc between Poonch and Kupwara.
On Wednesday, September 28, the CCS was presented with the plan.


The basic aim was to hit the terrorist infrastructure in PoK and send a message that India would not allow the attacks to go unpunished.


It was immediately approved.


Defence Minister Parrikar and NSA Ajit Doval were tasked by the prime minister to oversee and coordinate the operation.
The MO Operations Room (mistakenly described by many as the War Room) became an intense hub of activity between Wednesday noon and early morning on Thursday.
By noon on Wednesday, the strike teams had been staged forward from three directions.


The chosen targets were across the areas under the jurisdiction of 19 Division (in Uri), 28 Division (in Kupwara) and 25 Division (in Rajouri).


The H-Hour (the specific time at which an operation commences, or is due to commence) was half past midnight on Wednesday.
A couple of hours before the H-Hour, the Kupwara division opened small arms and mortar fire on posts opposite its area of operation.


This was a diversionary tactic. As Pakistani forces began to react to the firing, special forces teams began to slowly cross the LoC into PoK.


A couple of teams slipped out between the Beloni and Nangi Tekri battalion areas in Poonch sector south of the Pir Panjal and across the Tutmari Gali in the Nowgam sector.


By 2 am, the teams were on target.


Five launch pads and two Pakistani army posts -- which were co-located with the launch pads -- were destroyed and all occupants killed.


The Indian Army has refused to put a number to the fatal casualties among the terrorists so far. As the DGMO said in a statement, the operation is over and India has no further plans at the moment.


Clearly, its advantage India for the moment.


Now the government must keep up the pressure on all fronts -- economic, political, diplomatic -- besides retaining the option to use a military response whenever it feels Pakistan needs to be punished.


The decisiveness shown by Mr Modi and his colleagues needs to continue even in the face of grave provocations that Pakistan may unleash in coming weeks although further escalation could stretch the Pakistani army even more -- they are heavily committed on the western borders, FATA, and controlling internal insurgencies/terrorism.
 
Nitin Gokhale











































 

MINOR TACTICAL WARFARE India's Surgical Strikes Ops: Just Sufficient and Right on Time

SOURCE:
http://www.rediff.com/news/column/indias-surgical-strikes-ops-just-sufficient-and-right-on-time/20161003.htm



              MINOR  TACTICAL WARFARE 

             India's Surgical Strikes Ops
         : Just Sufficient and Right on Time
                                   By
             Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain



October 03, 2016


The current trans-LoC operations is a trailer projected to the Deep State that India can throw caution to the winds and calibrate its response, says Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain (retired), former commander of the Uri Brigade.








Exactly the opposite of ‘too little, too late’; the Indian Army’s response with surgical strikes on the terrorist bases across the Line of Control should be classified as ‘just sufficient and right on time’.  Yet, a credibility gap is now taking shape regarding the actual conduct of these multiple operations and the level of damage inflicted. These are the type of operations hardly witnessed anywhere else in a continuing military stand-off between two armies.


The reason why few can realistically relate to such operations is because the LoC remains a grey zone as far as information is concerned. On our side hardly do any scribes, political leaders or any other personalities ever visit the ‘real’ LoC? They usually do so as part of conducted tours, by helicopter to selected posts which are dominating and have a good view. Or they proceed by road to landmarks such as Kaman post near the Aman Setu or the Chakan da Bagh crossing point in Poonch.


There are hundreds of posts along the LoC, in eyeball contact, in areas completely devoid of, or with negligible population, at foreboding heights or with jungle and broken terrain; posts which no non-uniformed person has probably ever been near. The characteristics of the terrain and the defensive posture on the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir side is similar except that in many places special exclusion areas have been created to conceal terrorist holding camps many of which are co-located with the Pakistan Army. Assessments are therefore being made on pure guesswork or by querying a few veterans who too may have had little exposure to the LoC environment. 


There is a history of surgical strikes in the LoC environment of north and south of Pir Panjal going back several years and particularly after the launch of the proxy war by Pakistan in 1989. However, ownership of these has never been taken by either side leaving the other to usually respond in kind and with denial. The objectives have usually been small static posts, domination patrols moving between posts or logistics elements on foot undertaking maintenance.


The nature of these operations has been characterised by swift, shallow missions undertaken by small teams by day and night with presence across the LoC in adversary territory for just a few hours. In the case of Pakistan, these have been launched invariably by a combine of regulars and well-trained terrorists and are called Border Action Teams. In the recent past, attempts on our facilities a little deeper have been made in Tangdhar, Poonch and Uri.


A review is therefore called for, to answer a few questions about the surgical strikes. In a typical cryptic military approach to analysis, we may ask what the planning considerations were. Further, what were the objectives and what was the desired effect?


Add to the above questions, issues related to the Pakistani claims that there were no trans-LoC strikes and only firing occurred in which two Pakistani jawans were killed. A large Pakistani media delegation was apparently taken to the LoC on October 2 and briefed, including an interaction with some villagers. The conclusion -- there were no strikes, surgical or otherwise.


With its reputation at stake, the Indian Army’s options to avenge Uri were manifold. We have encountered such a situation before too. It could have been a single large scale offensive action against a Pakistani deployment on the LoC, resulting in some surprise, some Pakistan Army casualties with no terrorists struck at all; the ignominy would also be casualties to own troops. Second guessing from experience planning considerations would probably have been as follows:-


>> Multiple strikes by small bodies of troops with officer intensive composition, to a distance dictated by necessity to move to, execute and withdraw within six hours on a dark night.


>> Silent operations with contingency planning for failure of surprise.


>> Selected area to be devoid of population or sparsely populated.


>> Known history of presence of terrorists in vicinity of or in Pakistan Army posts in second or third tier. The month of September is advantageous as concentration of terror groups enhances in order to exploit the season preceding the extreme winter.


>> A deception plan following up the lulling operations undertaken at the strategic level.


>> Whether the ownership taken by the political authority in India wished to put on display the same through calculated revelations remained a choice as per the dynamics of the envisaged political-diplomatic game.


>> Facilitation of Post-Strike Damage Assessment would be necessary.


The aim would have been to neutralise maximum terrorists without sustaining casualties. If
interference from Pakistan Army came in the way, the targeting of Pakistani troops and equipment would be considered as authorised. Otherwise the meaning of ‘surgical operations’ is understood as an operation specifically targeting an objective in depth of the periphery (in this case the LoC) without collateral and any diversion. The choice of units to execute the operation was between regular Infantry units and Special Forces. If the desired effect was to be in the strategic domain, SF was the natural choice, being a strategic asset.


The desired effect was reasonably clear; keeping escalation under control, cause attrition to the terror resources and infrastructure. That was the tactical domain. It would have remained at that if the government did not wish to stake a claim of having conducted the ops and kept them limited to the covert dimension.

The moment the government gave sanction and wished to take ownership, the strategic dimension was breached. For Pakistan to admit that the Indian Army could infiltrate undetected  through five or six LoC gaps and strike at specific terrorist holding camps/launch pads, would be a major dent to its military ego especially when the army chief is due to retire in seven weeks.

Secondly, it would place public pressure on the Pakistan Army to retaliate within an acceptable time frame. The retaliation at Baramulla’s 46 Rashtriya Rifles camp appears to have been the handiwork of resident foreign terrorists from the Handwara-Rafiabad belt probably hurriedly tasked by the Deep State so as to gain some time for a more coordinated response. So more attacks will follow and the choice of alternating between the LoC and the hinterland remains with the Deep State.

Let us see the credibility of Pakistan’s denial against our credibility of claimed success.

Firstly, would a nation of 1.3 billion and its political leadership risk reputation and credibility by fudging a military operation? Would that make sense in relation to an army battling terror for 27 years in the same region and coincidentally with an army chief also superannuating in three months. The Indian Army is very high in the honour index which when connected to operations leaves simply no scope to claim what it has not done. Agreed that denial in hybrid war is a weapon but that isn’t much a part of the Indian Army’s DNA.


Secondly, the UN Military Observers who have disclaimed any Indian intrusions are on the other side of the LoC and are deployed in pockets extremely far apart. They have no locus standi with us. It is also not as if every area is under observation. Thirdly, the Indian Army has mapped out potential minefields along the LoC and knows how to skirt these. In spite of this, the only casualty occurred due to mines during exfiltration. Fourthly, as is the norm villages anywhere near the target area are avoided due to dogs and presence of farmers in the fields. In most areas there was no population so the villagers being interviewed by Pakistani media are indeed telling the truth -- they heard nothing, saw nothing.


The intelligence agencies and all security forces will have to get their act together, change tack from the street turbulence back to counter-terror operations. 
 
 

The question anyone should be asking is when will India release footage or any other evidence to confirm that the strikes took place. That is probably currently in a decision loop. Some kind of videography and other physical evidence would be there but would probably be immediately contradicted by Pakistan. Only third party technical evidence put out by a nation such as the United States or Russia would have credence. In many ways, therefore, release of any evidence with India may be construed as insufficient and India may make no effort to release it.


Is Pakistan in denial for a strategic advantage or simply for ego because its army chief’s about to end tenure? Denial gives it multiple options. A kind of moral ascendancy, and yet scope for planning more strikes. The Baramulla sneak action on 46 RR is a failed attempt to project how quickly it can get its act together and that the Deep State’s presence in the Valley is still very much sufficient to make a difference.

Denial is also a message to the street demonstrators and rabble rousers that India’s capability to respond does not exist. India does not have to prove anything to the Kashmiri people. It demonstrated its capability sufficiently in Kargil and memories of that still linger. Its current trans-LoC operations is a trailer projected to the Deep State that India can throw caution to the winds and calibrate its response.

The sneak attempt on 46 RR may trigger more such desperate actions to put the army on the back foot. The same was attempted in 1999 in the wake of Kargil and that phase lasted till almost 2004. The intelligence agencies and all security forces will have to get their act together, change tack from the street turbulence back to counter-terror operations. The army in turn has to ensure that infiltration attempts in the period leading up to the winter remain fully under control.


The hybridity of the nature of operations demands that there be no let up on any front. The diplomatic gains must be nailed and the efforts unrelentingly continue. The information operations being well played out must also continue receiving attention. It’s still a long battle ahead.


Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain (retired) commanded the Uri Brigade, the Baramulla Division and the Srinagar-based Chinar Corps. He is now associated with the Vivekanand International Foundation and Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.


REDIFF RECOMMENDS:



Lieutenant General Syed Ata Hasnain 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

DEADLY KILLER US Military M777 howitzer artillery system US Military M777 Howitzer Artillery System

SOURCE:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjK4zgs6RDY





                   DEADLY KILLER
US Military M777 Howitzer Artillery System  





          [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjK4zgs6RDY]



 
 
Published on Jul 15, 2015
 
A video of the M777 howitzer artillery system use by the US military and is considered a real deadly killer. The M777 howitzer is a towed 155 mm artillery piece, successor to the M198 howitzer in the United States Marine Corps and United States Army. The M777 is also used by the ground forces of Canada and Australia. It made its combat debut in the War in Afghanistan.
The M777 is manufactured by BAE Systems' Global Combat Systems division. Prime contract management is based in Barrow-in-Furness in the UK as well as manufacture and assembly of the titanium structures and associated recoil components. Final integration
and testing of the weapon is undertaken at BAE's facility in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.[3]
Design


The M777 began as the Ultralight-weight Field Howitzer (UFH), developed by VSEL's armaments division in Barrow-in-Furness, United Kingdom. This company was bought by BAE which ended up responsible for design, construction and assembly (through its US-based, BAE Systems Land and Armaments group). The M777 uses about 70% US-built parts including the gun barrel manufactured at the Watervliet Arsenal.

The M777 is smaller and 42% lighter, at under 4,100 kg (9,000 lb), than the M198 it replaces. Most of the weight reduction is due to the use of titanium. The lighter weight and smaller size allows the M777 to be transported by MV-22 Osprey, CH-47 helicopter or trucks with ease to provide increased mobility and more compact storage over the M198. The minimal gun crew required is five, compared to a previous nine.[4]

The M777 uses a digital fire-control system similar to that found on self-propelled howitzers such as the M109A6 Paladin to provide navigation, pointing and self-location, allowing it to be put into action quickly.[citation needed] The Canadian M777 in conjunction with the traditional "glass and iron sights/mounts" also uses a digital fire control system called the Digital Gun Management System (DGMS) produced by SELEX with components of the Indirect Fire Control Software Suite (IFCSS) built by the Firepower team in the Canadian Army Land Software Engineering Centre.[5] The SELEX portion of the system, known as LINAPS, had been proven previously through earlier fielding on the British Army Royal Artillery's L118 Light Gun.[6]

The M777 may be combined with the Excalibur GPS-guided munition, which allows accurate fire at a range of up to 25 miles (40 km). This almost doubles the area covered by a single battery to about 5,000 km2. Testing at the Yuma Proving Ground by the US Army placed 13 of 14 Excalibur rounds, fired from up to 24 kilometres (15 mi), within 10 meters of their target,[7] suggesting a circular error probable of about five meters.

Golf Battery, 2nd Battalion, 11th Marines, out of Camp Pendleton, Calif., dropped the 155 mm M982 Excalibur round on insurgents 36 kilometers away — more than 22 miles — in Helmand province, marking the longest operational shot in the history of the M777 howitzer. This record shot, made in June 2012, was also the first time the M777 had fired the Excalibur in combat.[8]

In 2014 the US military began fielding several upgrades to their M777 howitzers including new liquid crystal display units, software updates, improved power systems, and muzzle sensors for onboard ballistic computing. Future upgrades include a touchscreen Chief Section Display, a new Mission System Computer, and a digital radio.[9]



Variants[edit]

M777 – gun with optical fire control

M777A1 – digitisation upgrades with the addition of an on-board power source, satellite global positioning, inertial navigation, radio, Gun Display Unit (GDU) and Section Chief Assembly (SCA).

M777A2 – Block 1A software upgrade. Addition of an Enhanced Portable Inductive Artillery Fuze Setter (EPIAFS) to enable Excalibur and precision munition compatibility.[10][11]



United States[edit]

Army[edit]

18th Field Artillery Brigade (Airborne) at Fort Bragg, North Carolina was the initial Army test bed unit for the XM777 Lightweight 155mm Howitzer which included 1st and 3rd Battalions 321st Field Artillery Regiment. Gun Section 2, 2nd Platoon (5th Section) Bravo Battery, 2–11th Field Artillery (FA) was the first US Army unit to fire the M777A2 in combat at 08:23 (Baghdad Time) on 2 January 2008 in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. 2–11 FA deployed December 2007 with 2nd Brigade Combat Team (BCT), 25th Infantry Division out of Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. In June 2007, the M777 in its A2 configuration was assigned to the U.S. Army's 3rd Battalion, 321st Field Artillery Regiment. 3-321 FA deployed to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in December 2007 and has become mission capable since January 2008 making 3–321 FA the first U.S. Army unit to utilise the M777 in combat in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. In April 2008, the M777 was deployed for testing with the 2nd battalion,
 

1984 History Revisited: Lest We Forget: What Five Eminent Sikhs and a Former Prime Minister Witnessed During the 1984 Riots

SOURCE:
http://scroll.in/article/820242/lest-we-forget-what-five-eminent-sikhs-and-a-former-prime-minister-witnessed-during-the-1984-riots



                                                GENOCIDE  1984


                                                History Revisited


                            Lest We Forget:

What Five Eminent Sikhs and a Former Prime  Minister Witnessed During the 1984 Riots 

                                     By 
                           

              

As Sikhs were being massacred in Delhi after Indira Gandhi’s assassination, Zail Singh stood by helplessly, Home Minister Narasimha Rao played cool.










On November 1, 1992, The Pioneer newspaper, then edited by the legendary Vinod Mehta, published a story that Amit Prakash and this reporter had stitched together. Titled, 1984: The Price of Inaction Revisited, we based our story on the experiences of an eminent band of five Sikhs, the personal diary of IK Gujral, who was to later become India’s prime minister, accounts of police officers, and reports of inquiry commissions and civil rights groups.

The eminent band of Sikhs included two who are celebrated for their heroics in war – the country's only Marshal of the Indian Air Force, Arjan Singh, and Lt Gen Jagjit Singh Aurora, the hero of the 1971 Bangladesh war. The other three were the noted writer Patwant Singh, diplomat Gurbachan Singh and Brig (retd) Sukhjit Singh, a scion of the Kapurthala royal family.

Of them, we spoke at length to Patwant Singh, Lt Gen Aurora and Arjan Singh, who is still alive. Gujral read out his diary entries to us. The story below is an abridged version of 1984: The Price of Inaction Revisited, written in the spirit which novelist Milan Kundera described as:

                  “The struggle for power

                                   is

 the struggle of memory against forgetting.”


October 31, 9.18 am: Indira Gandhi is shot

 
At 10 am, author Patwant Singh heard Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had been shot at by her Sikh guards. Despite running a fever, he got onto his feet and asked his secretary to call Lt Gen Jagjit Singh Aurora, Air Marshal Arjan Singh, diplomat Gurbachan Singh, and Brig (retd) Sukhjit Singh, all of them prominent Sikh citizens of Delhi.

To Arjan Singh, Patwant Singh said, “We must make our positions clear: Assassinations can’t and should never be a solution to political problems.” Arjan Singh asked him to prepare a draft statement for the Press. The five decided to meet at Patwant Singh’s 11, Amrita Shergill Marg residence at 3.30 pm. Their alacrity suggested they had a foreboding of what lay ahead. Arjan Singh said he would try to reach out to IK Gujral and invite him to their meeting.

The Gujrals were not at home. Unknown to Arjan Singh, Gujral and his wife were wending their way to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, where Indira Gandhi had been taken after she was sprayed with bullets. Gujral was once a member of what was referred to as Gandhi’s “Kitchen Cabinet”, but had fallen out of favour after he decided to oppose Sanjay Gandhi’s attempt to censor the Press during the Emergency.


About his visit to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Gujral wrote in his diary:
“Reached AIIMS at 12.30 pm. We were taken to the eight floor where her body had been laid. [Godman] Dhirendra Brahmachari emerged from one of the rooms and whispered to Maneka [Gandhi], ‘She is dead’. Later, at the exit on the ground floor, [Union Minister P] Shiv Shankar confirmed the news.”


Her death was not made official, perhaps because her only surviving son, Rajiv Gandhi, was away in West Bengal. President Zail Singh, too, was abroad. There was, after all, the issue of succession to sort out.

At 3.30 pm, the eminent Sikhs began to discuss Patwant Singh’s draft of the statement. There was disagreement only on one count: Should a caveat be entered against the possibility of a backlash against the Sikh community? Aurora’s was the only contrarian voice – he felt there was no sign to fear attacks against Sikhs. He brought others around to his view. A call was made to The Indian Express editor George Varghese, requesting him to give their statement condemning the assassination of Indira Gandhi a prominent slot.

Perhaps Aurora would not have taken a contrarian position at 11, Amrita Shergill Marg had he known what was happening outside the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, where a crowd had gathered. One man's turban was snatched and burnt. A Sikh was dragged out of his car and beaten.


Before Rajiv Gandhi returned to Delhi at 4 pm, and Zail Singh an hour later, just about every person in Delhi knew that Indira Gandhi was dead. The rumour mill was India’s social media then.



October 31, dusk: Disturbances spread

When President Zail Singh visited the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, stones were pelted at his cavalcade. It was done, according to police sources, by supporters of a Congress metropolitan councilor who was subsequently assassinated. This set off a competition among local Congress leaders. Sikhs and Sikh-owned properties in INA Market, Sarojini Nagar Market and South Extension in South Delhi were attacked.


Those at 11, Amrita Shergill Marg were oblivious to what had started unfolding on Delhi’s streets. At 6.30 pm, Arjan Singh’s car backed out of Patwant Singh’s residence and turned left from where Amrita Shergill Marg loops to join Lodhi Road. At the T-junction, two men rushed to him. One of them warned, “Sardarji, don’t take this route. Danga [rioting] has started.”

Twenty-five minutes later, at 6.55 pm, President Zail Singh administered the oath of office to Rajiv Gandhi, who succeeded his mother as Prime Minister.

An hour or two after sunset, Deputy Commissioner (South Delhi) Chandra Prakash felt that the situation in Delhi was teetering out of control.

 He suggested to Additional Commissioner (New Delhi Range) Gautam Kaul that a curfew be imposed and the Army be called in. In a subsequent memorandum to the Union Home Ministry, Prakash wrote,

“Kaul turned down my recommendation stating that a meeting had already taken place sometime earlier in the Prime Minister’s house, where the Home Minister was also present, and a decision had been taken not to impose curfew and call out the Army at that stage.”

The Home Minister then was PV Narasimha Rao, who was to become Prime Minister seven years later. The Delhi Police reported to him. Chandra Prakash, ironically, was later indicted by inquiry commissions for failing to control the 1984 riots.

At night, the violence spread to North Delhi. A dry fruits shop was broken into and looted. However, the mob was dispersed and a police officer took the cash box into his custody. Later, a string of timber merchant shops in Pili Kothi area in Central Delhi were set ablaze. The police found local Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party leaders instigating the mob.

November 1, forenoon: Planned carnage

Between 9 am and 11 am, mobs began to raid Delhi’s residential colonies where Sikhs were concentrated. Killings and rapes occurred, as did looting and burning. The Delhi Police was paralysed. It seemed as if diabolical souls had kept awake the previous night scripting and choreographing the dance of death that Delhi watched helplessly – but also, at places, with cannibalistic ecstasy.

Hearing about the carnage, Gujral placed a call to Rashtrapati Bhavan. Zail Singh promptly came on the line. About their conversation, Gujral wrote in his diary:
“He sounded pathetic and pleaded helplessness. He requested me to visit different parts of Delhi and seek governmental assistance.”

Gujral called Delhi’s Lt Governor, PG Gavai, at 11 am. Gujral’s entry read:

“I suggested the Army should be called in. Gavai says it will cause panic. I replied, ‘You are talking of not causing panic, but the whole city is already burning.’”

However, another version claimed that Gavai had indeed asked for the Army to be summoned the previous evening but was overruled by the Home Ministry. It corroborates Chandra Prakash’s memorandum, belying the recent claims of those who allege it was the Prime Minister’s Office, not PV Narasimha Rao, who was overseeing the affairs of Delhi in those traumatic hours.


Meanwhile, diplomat Gurbachan Singh had managed to secure a 12.05 pm appointment with Zail Singh. It was decided they would assemble at 11, Amrita Shergill Marg. When Aurora sat in his car at his New Friends Colony residence, his driver cautioned him against venturing out. But the man who had brought Pakistan to its knees in 1971 was firm in his resolve, unmindful of a mob that had begun to surround a gurdwara there. They took another route out of New Friends Colony, counted among Delhi’s spiffy colonies, and then sped to their destination.


Just 15 km away, a mob had surrounded Gurdwara Sis Ganj in Old Delhi, where hundreds of Sikhs had taken refuge. The mob started to launch sallies from both the Chandni Chowk and Red Fort sides of the gurdwara. The jathedars (community leaders) in the gurdwara, too, got into position. Separating the assailants from defenders was a small contingent of policemen led by Deputy Commissioner Maxwell Pereira. He ordered his men to fire. The mob dispersed. One person died, hundreds of lives were saved.


By contrast, a strong 500-mob was allowed to go on the rampage in Trilokpuri Resettlement Colony in East Delhi, where the first Sikh victim was a scooterist who was burnt alive. A college lecturer sought the help of two police constables posted at a gurdwara in Block 36. They walked away. The gurdwara was attacked.

November 1, 12.05 pm: The President shrugs

The eminent group of five Sikhs trooped into Rashtrapati Bhavan for their appointment. They were agitated. They narrated to the President the horrific scenes unfolding on the streets of Delhi. Zail Singh heard them silently. Aurora suggested to the President that he should address the nation on radio and television. Patwant Singh complained that Doordarshan was allowing the provocative slogans being shouted at Teen Murti House – where the body of Indira Gandhi lay in state – to filter through. The President remained mum.


Aurora suggested, “Why don’t you call the Army?” The President said he did not have the powers to do so. A livid Patwant Singh remarked, “When the nation is burning the President has to intervene.” Arjan Singh coaxed Zail Singh to speak to Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. To their shock, he replied, “He is too busy. When I go to Teen Murti House I will try to talk to him.”


The President suggested that they should speak to Home Minister Rao. A presidential aide was asked to put in a call to him, but was told that Rao was in a meeting. The Cabinet Secretary was telephoned. An official came on the line. Aurora introduced himself. The official said, “General, it is too dangerous for a Sikh to venture out. I don’t know where the Cabinet Secretary is.”


Angry and disconsolate, they sat there with Zail Singh, wondering what to do next, when at 1.15 pm the President’s press secretary Tarlochan Singh rushed in with the news that the Home Ministry had decided to requisition the Army. But the mobs were on a killing spree. Residential blocks in Jahangirpuri in North Delhi had already been gutted, hundreds of Sikhs massacred. Posh South Delhi colonies were not spared either. In East Delhi, the mob had moved from Block 36 to Block 32 of Trilokpuri.


Back from Rashtrapati Bhavan, Patwant Singh and Aurora were joined by Gujral at 11, Amrita Shergill Marg. The trio decided to barge in at the 9, Motilal Nehru Marg residence of Home Minister Narasimha Rao.


November 1, afternoon: Rao Plays Cool

The trio was amazed at how relaxed Rao looked. He told them, “The Army will be here in the evening.”


Lt Gen Aurora asked, “How will it be deployed?” An unflappable Rao said, “The [Army] Area commander will meet the Lt Governor for this purpose.”

Aurora shot back angrily, “You have called the Army 30 hours too late.”

He then advised Rao: “Your first task should be to set up a Joint Control Room to coordinate between the police and the Army.” Unflustered, Rao said, “I will look into it.” The meeting ended. For a man who had been a minister for so long, it does, in hindsight, seem surprising that Rao would not have known the procedure that is followed when the Army is called to assist civilian authority.

Even as Rao played cool, five rows comprising 190 houses in Block 32 of Trilokpuri were reduced to ashes. Only five men survived. The estimated death toll: 450 dead. Women were raped and killed, a few abducted and taken to a nearby village.

In the evening, Army units began moving into Delhi. Unknown to Aurora, two soldiers were positioned at his residence in New Friends Colony by an Army officer who came to know that was where the hero of the Bangladesh war lived.

However, Aurora did not return home, persuaded as he had been by the Gujrals to spend the night at their place. Gujral recorded in his diary:

“Delhi is burning. There are reports of trains arriving with corpses. It is like 1947. Gen Aurora spent the night with us. The hero of 1971 could not sleep in his own house in Delhi.”

November 2, morning: The Army is in control

At the sight of the Army on Delhi's streets, the marauders did not venture out in South Delhi, though the killing continued in Trilokpuri, Mongolpuri and other trans-Yamuna colonies. Two Indian Express reporters went to Police Control Room to inform them about the massacres in Trilokpuri.
 They were laughed out of the room.

The relative calm elsewhere in Delhi prompted people to inquire about the well-being of their relatives and friends. Patwant Singh was surprised to find commentator Romesh Thapar and Swedish Charge d’ Affairs Rolf Gauffin at his door. Gauffin said, “Delhi isn’t safe. We have come to evacuate you to the Embassy.” He turned down the offer.

For the next few days, men, women and students began to work in relief camps. Civil rights groups began to document eyewitness accounts to prepare their reports, which eventually named the leaders who spearheaded or incited mobs to attack Sikhs. Thirty-two years later, most of the masterminds of the attacks remain unpunished.

Postscript

Ten days later, Aurora, Arjan Singh and Gujral requested Congress minister Rajesh Pilot to arrange a meeting with Rajiv Gandhi. After waiting at Pilot’s residence for two hours, they received a message: “If you want to condole with Rajiv Gandhi, the meeting can be held immediately.”

To the messenger, Aurora said, “Obviously, we want to condole. But we also want to tell him about the misery the Sikhs had to undergo and about the necessity of punishing the guilty.”
The meeting was cancelled. The powerful were not willing to listen to the woes of the people.

This was also true of the 1992-’93 Mumbai riots, and the 2002 riots in Gujarat.


Ajaz Ashraf is a journalist in Delhi. His novel, The Hour Before Dawn, has as its backdrop the demolition of the Babri Masjid.