Showing posts with label War Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War Stories. Show all posts

Friday, 9 September 2016

Remembering Captain Vikram Batra, The Smiling Hero Of Kargil

Remembering Captain Vikram Batra, PVC : The Smiling Hero Of Kargil War.

Captain Batra 
Are some people born to be heroes? Are there men, who are destined for greatness? Men who in spite of having all the qualities that would ensure them success in the world, sacrifice it all for others? Every once in while, there have been such men and women in this country's history, men and women who were born to do something extraordinary. Capt. Vikram Batra was clearly one such man - one in a billion!

As a school kid, when a young girl had fallen from his school bus, he had jumped off from the moving bus without any hesitation. Hurt, he had then taken the injured girl to a nearby hospital. He was daring, helpful, he would go out at midnight if anyone asked for his help.  

Capt. Vikram was a brilliant student, always scoring very high grades in school and college. He happened to be an exceptional sportsman, excelling in most sports, with table tennis and skating being one of his favourites. He even played nationals in Table Tennis during his school days. 

Pic from Capt. Batra’s Family Album. 

As if these qualities were not enough in one man alone, he happened to possess a magnetic personality, an aura of positivity that everyone fell in love with. His face always glowed, he was always smiling, and he had a very infectious laughter. A no holds bar laughter. Everyone in the this small town loved him.

The infectious smile of this extraordinary man was soon witnessed and felt by a nation in crises, and the nation too, fell in love. 

Capt. Vikram Batra in Kashmir.

During the Kargil invasion of 1999 by Pakistan, (at the time) Lt. Batra, 13 JAK Rifles, and his Delta Company were ordered to recapture peak 5140 on June 19, five weeks after the war began. Nicknamed Sher Sha of Kargil, Lt. Batra showed exceptional courage and intellect to capture the peak. He single-handedly killed three enemy fighters in dangerous close-range combat. Regardless of his injuries, Captain Batra regrouped his men to pave the way for Indian soldiers to advance further in the Kargil war.

One of the famous quote of Vikram Batra, PVC 

'Yeh Dil Maange More' is our company's success signal, he said to the camera with a smile. It was the confident smiling visage of this hero that calmed the nation, which made its one billion people believe that everything will be okay.  

The capture of Point 5140 set in motion a string of successes for the Indian army. A few days later Lt. Batra was assigned to an urgent mission to recapture peak 4875. With an 80-degree slope to the peak where the Pakistani army sat with a clear view of the climb, this was nothing less than a death trap. In the early morning hours of 7 July 1999, he commanded a mission to rescue an injured officer. During the rescue attempt, he pushed aside his Subedar, saying "Tu baal-bacchedar hai, hat ja peeche."(You have children, step aside) and was killed in action while clearing enemy positions. His last words were, "Jai Mata Di".

It was seventeen years ago that he lost his life fighting for our country, but heroes never die, and PVC Capt. Vikram Batra lives on. His bravery, his sacrifice, his intelligence, his charm, and that infectious smile, they all live on in our hearts. 

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Wednesday, 7 September 2016

HARD FACTS OF INDO-PAK 1965 WAR

SOME HARD FACTS OF 1965 INDO-PAK WAR

-- By Danvir Singh, Ex Cornel, Indian Army.
Captured Pakistani Patton Tanks

History Distorted: September 06 Celebrated as Defence Day in Pakistan each year to commemorate victory in 1965 war.

Some Facts and Truth:


The 1965 Indo-Pak war saw the deadliest tank battles between the Armoured formations of these two waring nations post WWII. 

Result - Both sides claimed victory.

At the end of the war, this is what the tally looked like:
  • India won 1,920 sqkm of territory; Pakistan won 540 sqkm.
  • 2,862 Indian soldiers were killed; Pakistan lost 5,800 soldiers.
  • India lost 97 tanks; 450 Pakistani tanks were destroyed or captured.

Battle of Haji Pir Pass, 1965 


Haji Pir Pass Under The Indian Tricolour. 
India captured the key Haji Pir Pass - "A Major ingress route for Pakistanis" - and made some big gains in Sialkot and reached the doors of Lahore in Punjab.. 

The Pakistani army managed to repulse a takeover of Lahore, made advances in the deserts of Rajasthan and came perilously close to taking over Akhnoor in the Jammu region..

Tashkent Declaration, 1966


Ayub Khan and Lal Bahadur Shastri at Tashkent in USSR.
India and Pakistan met at Tashkent in January 1966 where they agreed to withdraw to their pre-war positions.

In my opinion India won the war on the battle field but lost it on the table. Giving away Haji Pir was the gravest mistake. 

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