'MUD MUD KE DEKH'
Friday 15 Oct 62, fifty six
years ago.
While on his way to
Colombo, Nehru made an off the cuff highly irresponsible statement to the
journalists hounding him at Palam airport. ‘I have told the army to evict
Chinese from Indian soil’. In reality he had done no such thing, had neither
met, spoken or written to the Chief of Army Staff (CoAS) Gen PN Thaper. He was
in fact procrastinating over an offer made by his friend
Chou En-lai, ‘Premier’ of the ‘People's Republic of China’. Chow had
conveyed to him, ‘Give us Aksai Chin and take NEFA’, a seemingly fair offer.
Nehru was procrastinating because of a no confidence motion that was being
precipitated against him led by Firoz Gandhi, husband of
Indira Gandhi. Agreeing to Chow’s goodwill offer would have been a
political suicide for Nehru.
‘It is a declaration of Sino
Indian war’, trumpeted an equally irresponsible and ignorant press. Spooked by
the headlines, and vitriolic opinions espoused by Delhi left right backwards
march think-tank paladins, the Chinese envoy in Chanakyapuri immediately
conveyed the declaration of war to Peking. Mao was back in
power and PLA HQ was quick to react. They pushed forward their amassed army
into Ladhak (Galwan / Chushul) and into NEFA (Thagla ridge and Rima in Walong
valley). An eye ball to eye ball confrontation ensued. Troops from both sides
began sniping at each other. A humiliating defeat of the Indian army
would begin within five days, lasting till the benevolent declaration of ceased
fire by Peking on 21 Nov 62. India would lose 210,000 sq km of territory, 6000
odd soldiers killed, and a similar number severely injured and maimed, besides
the indelible political and military humiliation.
This day that
year, the army chief (CoAS Gen Thaper) had no clue of the herculean tragedy
that faced India. He had neither been to the battle front at Ladhak nor to
NEFA, comprehended the terrain, fighting ability and morale of the army
deployed there, or received any direct written order from GoI to go to war with
China. He was abroad, sipping wine on ‘venue des
Champs-Élysées’ in Paris with his family.
Like many
preceding days, coded, ‘Top Secret’ messages from formations deployed along the
4056 km of Sino Indian border, began to pile up at the Signals Enclave in
Delhi, faster than they could decipher
the messages and bring it to the notice of those who had the power to stop the
war. Almost all messages were more or less identical in tone and tenor, they
were SoS of some kind. So they lay unattended either in Signals Enclave or in
South Block basement.
In Nehru’s absence, the next
king in waiting, defence minister VK Krishna Menon sat in a high back chair in
his spacious office in South block with large French windows, chain-smoking
Player’s Navy Cut cigarettes and sipping black tea. As Caesar, he held India by
the juggler. Outside his office, Delhi went about innocently observing ‘Nav
Ratra’ and preparing to annihilate evil during ‘Dussahera’. There were high
cirrus clouds, a precursor of the seasonal pitter-patter rain, while high up in
the Himalayas where the Indian soldiers sat huddled in cotton clothing and
canvass shoes, hugging outdated WW-II weapons, it was freezing cold and snow
fell on them mercilessly.
Waiting in the corridor of
South Block on Raisiana hill, to meet and brief the Caesar, were four
intelligent, but conceited and ambitious men. BM Mullick (Dir IB), HC
Sarin (JS MoD), Maj Gen Palit (Dir Gen Military Operations) and Air Cmde HC
Dewan (Dir Operations Air HQ). Menon had a habit of pitting one against the
other and hence, as a routine, he rarely met them together, though the reason
for meeting them was common; execution of his foolhardy posturing, called
‘forward policy’; forward patrolling and establishing 48 army posts, at platoon
or weak company strength, all along the Johnson’s line (Ladhak) and Mc Mahon
line (rest of the border, including one at Bara Hoti in Char Dham area all the
way to NEFA). He usually had Sareen besides him, but no notes or minutes were
to be taken down by Sareen. Menon despised all such bureaucratic British
procedures of record keeping. All his orders were usually verbal, or
communicated to his ‘infamous four’ subalterns on telephone by Sareen, a system
designed to belittle the stature of military Hqs and inculcate subservience of
Chiefs of army, navy and air force, after the earlier CoAS Thimayya had
threatened to quit (thereby topple the Govt), on the same issue, differences in
politico-military appreciation and methodology of defending the Sino Indian
border, post war gaming in ex Lal Quila conducted at Lucknow.
Due to steadfast opposition
of Menon’s forward policy by all military protagonists in the evolving
Sino-Indian drama, (Theatre Commanders Maj Gen Grewal, GoC 3 Div in Leh, in
control of Ladhak; Lt Gen LP Sen, Army Cdr East and his predecessor
Thorat, Area Commander Lt Gen Umrao Singh GoC 33 Corps, Maj Gen Niranjan Prasad
GoC 4 Div at Zementhang and Brig Dalvi Cdr 7 Brigade at Namkachu), Menon chose
to not only ignore military wisdom but also to belittle and usurp the chain of
command, by creating a new phantom 4 Corps, under Lt Gen BM Kaul at Tezpur,
reporting directly to him, to do as per his bidding. Kaul was asked to debouch
the PLA from the 16,000 feet high Thagla massif, presumed to be the Mc Mahon
line in an operation named ‘Leghorn’.
For the first time, on 9 Oct,
50 year old Kaul hitched a ride with Sqn Ldr Williams in a Bell 47 helicopter
from Tezpur to Tsangdhar (14,500’), went charging 4500 feet downhill to the
verdant Namka Chu river basin, 7 Bde HQ, with all intent to ‘Summary
Courtmarshal’ Brig Dalvi on the spot. It took Kaul only a few minutes to do a
tactical appreciation when he stood at Namka chu and looked up
the vertical face of the Thagla ridge 10,000 odd feet above him, and saw for
himself the Division strength PLA deployments on the slopes waiting to
come down. Now he realised the folly of it all, about which Dalvi and others
had been crying hoarse. Kaul was in a dilemma. He had no senior army officers
including army chief to appeal to, and would need to convince Menon in person.
Therefore, without much ado, he asked Dalvi and Niranjan Prasad to hold
position till he has a chance to appeal to Menon. If he were a stronger man
with courage of conviction, he had the power to permit Dalvi to withdraw 7 Bde
to the west to east Hathungla-Serkhim-Drokung Samba line, 10 km south of Namka
Chu, as Dalvi wanted to do.
While climbing back to
Tsangdhar helipad, Kaul was assailed by a mild heart attack and high altitude
sickness (pulmonary oedema, formation of water in the lungs) and had to be
carried up the slope by relay teams of young soldiers. On arrival back at
Tezpur by helicopter, he was immediately taken to field hospital. Kaul sent
word to Air Cmde Jaswant Singh in Guhati to requisition a Dakota and flew to
Delhi from Tezpur with two doctors attending to him during the long flight in
an unpressurised aircraft, without Oxygen pressure breathing, aggravating his
medical condition. On arrival in Delhi, he was rushed into the ICU of MH Delhi,
where surgeons inserted long needles into his lung to extract fluids. The bed
ridden, but restless and agitated Kaul asked for a field telephone in the ICU
to make contact with Menon, to seek his permission to allow orderly withdrawal
of 7 Bde from Namka Chu. Menon was fighting off the political assault by
opposition in parliament and could not be reached.
Meanwhile a very frustrated Dalvi and his ill-fated 7
Bde stood eye ball to eye ball with the PLA division, awaiting someone to order
withdrawal. In retrospect, if Dalvi (or his immediate superior on site, Maj Gen
Niranjan Prasad, GoC 4 Div) had disobeyed Kaul’s orders to stay put and had
withdrawn as they wanted to, it may have avoided the Sino Indian conflict (not
deemed a war since no one actually declared a war other than Indian press !!).
Dalvi / Prasad may have at worse been removed from command, or court
marshalled. But the infamy of such a disciplinary action may have been far less
than the humiliation of defeat that they faced afterwards. It is doubtful
whether any disciplinary action would have ensued, because in the first place
there was no written order from any quarter to justify the deployment of 7 Bde
in Namka Chu. Dalvi was taken PoW during the war and Prasad removed from
command, to be later given another command, where his poor leadership qualities
were to create problems and near defeat in 65 war too.
Till a laboriously detailed
aerial survey was done around 1971 using Canberra
photo reconnaissance aircraft, in conjunction with AF Int and Survey of India,
none had noticed that the representative of Dalai Lama who signed the 1914
Indo-Tibetan trade and border treaty at Shimla had done a bit of mischief and
had deviated from the principle of watershed (Mc Mahon Line) at the India,
Bhutan, Tibet tri-junction and that the border was actually not Thagla ridge,
but near the Hathungla-Serkhim-Drokung Samba west to east line, that Dalvi
wanted to withdraw to. The man who made the blunder, and created the casus
belli for Sino Indian imbroglio was Maj Gen Palit, predecessor of Dalvi in 7
Bde, who made a wrong hand drawn sketch of the border as Thagla ridge. This
hand drawn sketch, enlarged and mass produced in Delhi in his own press,
using ammonia print technology, was freely distributed to all and sundry
including Menon, Kaul, Prasad and Dalvi, as also every man fighting the war in
NEFA. It became the instrument of war in Namka Chu. After 62 war, Palit got
away clean because he sat down to write history, to defame everyone else other
than the ‘infamous four’, which when repeated and quoted again and again ad nauseam, became reason
to make a Rufus out of the wrong men.
In Ladhak too, unchartered
territory, with no border demarcation, the ground reality was no different.
Indian forces, J&K militia with quickly beefed up infantry units like 13
Kumaon were concentrated mostly in rear areas of DBO, Galwan and Chushul. The
rest of the area east was already in PLA control. 3 Div was to put up a stout
defence when attacked on 20 Oct 62. But the trigger for the 62 imbroglio
was the unwritten order to Kaul to run up the impossible Thagla ridge, since
Palit pointed that out to Menon as the border. The LAC as in Sep 62 and later
on 23 Nov 62 after cease fire are depicted by dotted line, viz the 1865 Johnson
Line, that was agreed as a trade boundary by a treaty between the British and
temporal head at Lhasa.
(to be continued in parts, the events of next few days that year, till the war started on 20 Oct
62. After that it is a balls up story of defeat, one part with incredible
valour across the rank and file, and the other part of fear psychosis and
untold mess up by those who had no ability to command, or lead from the front).
Wow! Look forward to Part - 2.
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