FROM THE NORTH EAST
TO J&K AND BACK
LT COL NOEL ELLIS
12/VIII/2024
I was reading an article on the
military ‘readjustment’ and ‘redeployment’ due to the sudden spate of militant
activity in J&K. Like a Mountain Division was moved from Nagaland to
Srinagar ages ago to counter militancy. The thought which comes to mind was, Oh
no! not again.
Plans must be existing to move
troops from dormant sectors for the regular forces. What caught my attention
was the move of a few Assam Rifles Battalions from Manipur to where ever they
shall be deployed to fight militancy in J&K due to the recent spate of
attacks on the security forces. From Manipur of all the places!!!!!! Now!!!!
Most of all, WHY?
Are we short of troops? One area
which was burning a few days ago, has it suddenly gone dormant? Has the
‘threat’ died that troops can be denuded at the snap of a finger and without consultation
with the affected commanders? Has the problem been resolved ‘politically’. The
answer is NO. The Polity has no clue how to resolve it either. So, start fire
fighting without getting to the ‘root cause’.
Let me share a few of my personal
experiences as I can proudly say that I served with the Assam Rifles that too
with the 3 Naga Hills Battalion. One of the finest body of troops on the other
side of Brahmaputra. God Bless my Paltan always.
It was time to serve the
motherland in the North East.
Many official letters and signals
were exchanged between me, the new battalion, and the MS branch at the AHQ. I
would post letters at 99 APO and they would get diverted to 56 APO. I was not
sure where I was supposed to go. The NRS (Nearest Railway Station) given in the
MS branch signal was Dimapur, Nagaland. The battalion wanted me to report at
Transit Camp Jammu. I was totally confused. Or, was it an April Fool trick.
I tried contacting the unit rear
in Manipur, a place called ‘Rum-Pee-Ke-Mar’ (Maram) but to no avail. Finally,
the CO made it clear that one was to report to Jammu and reach Srinagar Transit
Camp at the earliest.
Imagine the number of questions churning
in my mind. Assam Rifles in J&K??? We had heard of the Rashtriya Rifles in
J&K. Anyway, with a holdall, a black steel box, an attaché, and an airbag,
I moved on.
The Commanding Officer did not
want to waste time in indoctrinating me to the nuances of the Valley. Had I
gone to the ‘rear’, it would have taken me a month to return. If one had to go
through an orientation course which the Assam Rifles conducted, it would have
been another month to see the real action. It is a different matter that the
CDAO put my claim on hold because what the official MS branch signal said and
where I reported was ambiguous as per CDAO. That story later.
Be that as it may. I was a Mech
Officer who had served in the desert, High Altitude, been an instructor and had
no clue of what and how things happen in the valley. I was as a novice and into
the fire fight straight away.
I met the famous clerk at
Srinagar Transit camp, who gave me the who’s who of the battalion. Who is on TD…who
went on posting/chutti… who reported before me and I felt at home. At least I
knew the names of a few officers and the CO.
An open Assam Rifles Jeep picked
me up. An LMG was mounted on top. It was cold and rainy, but that was my new
life. Next morning, I was away to finally get to my new battalion about forty
or fifty kilometres from Srinagar TC. I was the only one without a weapon or
Bullet proof jacket (Not issued as yet). But then they gave me an AK with a
double magazine which was loaded. My peace time apprehension, what about the ‘Khali
Khokas’, if we fired. Heart was thumping like a train on a track.
This was a QRT jeep. Quite a
shock for a Mech Officer who was used to Jongas and Gypsies ‘DUCO’ painted and
purring like a cat. This jeep was farting like a donkey as the silencer was
perforated with over use. Well, that was music for my ears as we drove to our
destination.
I met the Adjutant in a barrack.
One corner hosted the officers quarters, the rest of the space was for the
company jawans and a corner appeared to be some kind of an office as
typewriters were spewing the Rat-a-tat-tat like bullets in automatic mode.
Kuldip informed the CO
immediately about my arrival. Adjt’s office was a folding table with a camp
stool. Files were piled up all over. This made me feel a little uncomfortable. I
too had been an adjutant of a Mech battalion. The difference was, there was a
radio operator with real radio sets standing next to you, communicating with
troops who were out on an operation.
The operator was a Malyali and
gave me those looks that one more country cousin has joined. I gave him a wink
and called him a Pora…. Chemistry was set.
Sir, I am company commander of
Bravo and Headquarter company. Aap shayad ‘Foxtrot’ jaoge, Kuldip told me.
Well, we had heard company names till Delta, Recce and Support never went
beyond Charlie. Now, I was about to trot like a desert fox.
An hour of chit chat, a good cup
of langar chai while the Adjutant prepared to take his QRT, which meant a
minimum of three vehicles and a Platoon strength of troops with three LMGs and
an RL. They were supposed to go to a place where fire had been exchanged with
one of the patrols. I thought that an Adjutant was a static kind of person but
here the scene was different.
Sir, aap ka CO interview na hota
to aap QRT le kar ‘Anderwan’ jate. That is the place where the encounter was
going on. An NCO escorted me to the COs office. It was more of a sand bag
filled fortified bunker. I was about to take my chair when I heard a huge
blast. Window panes rattled and there was an alert. Whistles were being blown
like during an air raid alert. I got up. CO signalled to me to sit down.
Welcome to the valley, he said.
It was a Rocket Launcher fire
from the out skirts of the apple orchard beyond our boundary aimed at one of
the barracks. It fell short and blasted. The QRT which was all set to go, took
off on foot in the direction from where the fire came from. I was shaken if not
stirred to receive such a welcome. I was also impressed by the coolness and
calm shown by all people of the battalion. This was the new normal henceforth.
Life was going to be fun.
During the interview, I was told
that we are one of the AR battalions deployed under a RR Sector. Operationally,
we were under them but for logistics and discipline we were under Assam Rifles.
All this confused me. Rations came from the army but we could buy our own
petrol/diesel if required. I was learning.
Now imagine, this battalion had
served in Kohima for more than 150 years. They had fought the second world war
against the Japanese and taken part in the famous ‘Battle of the Tennis Court’,
where the present WW II cemetery exists. This Battalion had been to moved to
Manipur-Nagaland border. It suffered a lot of causalities initially. Those
stories later.
Imagine, you up stick a well
settled battalion called the ‘Friends of the Hill People’ to a new place and
state. Your Int network goes kaput. Establishing it all over again takes time.
By the time they settled at the new place, they were moved to the valley of
which they had no clue.
Moves like this create a vacuum
in your Int network. Your base gets destroyed. Your sources get compromised or do
not provide information at all once you thin our. The domination and links you
had established go for a six. But fauj ka Hukum is Hukum.
The surprising part was that our
Area of responsibility in Manipur was given to a RR battalion. RR in the North
East was also a surprise to me. Over all it was a hotch-potch kind of
situation.
Imagine this AR battalion now had
to start afresh in the valley. The area was new, the language and terrain was
unknown, the tactics and execution of operations was different from the NE.
Fresh Int network had to be established in an area teeming with militants.
One of our pay convoys had just
been blown up with an IED in the heart of Mr Farrokh Abdulla’s constituency
called Ganderbal. We had lost eight people when their 2 ½ ton was thrown on the
roof of a house in the narrow lanes of the village by an IED planted in a
scooter. It was a village road from where every convoy going to Leh passes
through.
I was not used to the Assam Rifle
culture. I was new to the troops, so a double whammy. First, to establish yourself
with the troops and simultaneously get familiar with the AOR, which used to
change at the drop of a hat.
We used to vigorously patrol day
and night for area domination and to seek engagement. Speculative fire was so
common. In the silence of the night one would hear bursts being fired. It was
luck, if we were fired back on. We would give a high five if some militant
group reciprocated. ‘Fas gaya sala’ and a Cordon and Search operation would
start. We were in the thick of it.
The worst was the ‘IKHWANI’ given
to each company. These ‘surrendered militants’ were no good to man or beast.
The idiom, ‘kaam ke na kaaj ke, dhai ser anaj ke’ suited them perfectly. Their
security was more an issue for the company where they were placed. Their
information was stale and outdated. This sheltered safe place was to live in
peace and eat off the Army both in terms of funds and rations. Let me leave it
at that.
Assam Rifles troops were not used
to the third grade Army rations those days. They refused to eat the insect infested
atta and pebble ridden dal. In the North East, the contractor brought the best of
supplies to each post. One rejection meant market purchase. The system was very
smooth there.
Half the pigeons in our area went
missing. Each scout carried a catapult. Besides telling us ‘Fire kahan se aya’,
they would cater for ‘kabootar kahan gaya’.
Now there was a vacuum in our
Manipur sector. Insurgency still continued there. The goodwill and friendship
established by the battalion slowly die down due to lack of contact with the
village folk. Exactly like the vacuum which was created by move of a complete
RR sector from Jammu region and sent to confront the Chinese. When they return,
if they return, the whole area would have changed. The locals would be
alienated and return to supporting and guiding terrorists from across the
border for lack of our own troops support who had won their hearts and minds.
The tenure of my battalion
finished in the valley. By now most of the officers had been turned over. Those
who had joined in the North East had got posted out. We were only a handful who
were taking the battalion back to Maram, Manipur. We would now have to quickly
re-establish ourselves. For the troops, the area was like the back of the hand
but for the officers they were clueless.
The only saving grace was the
ethos of this 150+ year old battalion. The troops were just too good. They knew
their job and were thorough professionals. Their administration was first
class. Officers and families were looked after so well that all those who have
served with them would vouch for it. They were more than your own kith and kin.
Shifting of troops like this is
unproductive and uncalled for, unless there is a strategy behind it. Voids
created by such moves has always led to chaos. Militants and insurgents exploit
these situations. Fatal casualties are borne by our troops for no fault of
theirs.
Hope the government and the
bureaucrats apply their brains. Also, the senior military leaders should put
their foot down and not be just be ‘yes men’ to any such dictates. This will
take guts and some defiance.
May 3 AR, the ‘Cachar Levy’
Battalion grow from strength to strength is my prayer. May the Naga Hills
family bond like hither to fore. May they stay blessed always and excel in all
field.
Does this article make sense? I
wonder!!!!!
JAI HIND
© ® NOEL ELLIS
To me any decision for any armed forces should be work of armed forces personnels not any bureaucracy or any political person , armed forces should be able to say them f**k off if they interfere, Jai Hind
ReplyDeleteThank you so much
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