Regarding humanity, I hope you have not forgotten the bodies of Lt. Kalia and his troops and in what condition they were sent back! We have not.
Professionalism and humanity, your style!
I have read that the extremely brutal, uncivilized and inhuman treatment meted out to Lt. Kalia and his mates at the hand of Pakistani army caused a great deal of anger in the Indian soldiers.
That was known to all from day-1 in India, the pathetic denials notwithstanding.
This alone should clear any doubts about the issue of "Professionalism and humanity" once and for all!
Vinod, I always knew you were little more than a loud mouth enthusiast with little concern for objectivity. But you continue to astound me with your ignorance, and what is even worse is the pathetically primitive mentality that dictates your opinions.
You’ve all but publicly confessed your inclination to believe whatever you see on ‘your TV’, but have you ever concerned yourself with reading a simple book? Or an impartial article even? I mean sure you come here and rant about things as if nothing has ever escaped your knowledge. But your attitude and words seem to indicate otherwise. However worry not, for I shall endeavor to illuminate you and rid you of your character defining arrogance.
Now Brian Cloughley is a widely acknowledged commentator on South Asian affairs and he is appropriately qualified as he has served as the deputy head of the UN mission in Kashmir among other things. He has close contacts in the Pakistani as well as the Indian militaries and his impartiality is beyond dispute. His particular work that I refer to, in the hopes that you might sum up the courage to read this widely distributed book yourself, is described as having
“the special advantage of being written by an observant military author who is both candid and objective” by the Indian Director General of Military Operations himself. So therefore, you cannot hope to dispute and discredit its ‘candid and objective’ nature without looking like complete fools yourself. It is irrefutable, and I as a Pakistani won’t get my hands on any evidence more ‘irrefutable’ than that having Indian DGMO’s own shining endorsement.
Furthermore in the hopes of comforting any lingering insecurities here, I would point out that while Cloughley did appreciate the professional competence and inherit valor with which the Pakistanis carried out the Kargil endeavor, he does hold Pakistanis responsible for breaking the terms of the Simla Accords by launching Kargil (just like he accuses the Indians of doing the same in Siachen and skillfully refutes their ‘excuses’
. The following extract contains ridiculing of Pakistani as well as Indian claims:
‘The temperature in the mountains is zero and below but has risen markedly in New Delhi and Islamabad, in part because Pakistan reported that Indian has used chemical weapons, and largely because of Indian allegations of torture of prisoners of war. The former claim is nonsense, for many technical reasons, but the accusation of torture in more serious, if only because it has inflamed public opinion in India. There is not an Indian who disbelieves that the half-dozen soldiers whose bodies were delivered to the Indian Army (across the Line from the Pakistani side, to the significance of which little publicity has been given) were tortured and put to death after capture. There is no point in attempting to question the Indian version- although any soldier who has seen the result on a human body of concentrated firing from an ambush will know that the victims resemble pulped and messy colanders of meat, with eyes and teeth shattered and bits of flesh torn away by the lacerating impact of point-blank bullets. It was the fact that eyes had been destroyed – “gouged out” – that particularly upset Indian public opinion.
It has been acknowledged in some quarters in India that the claims were exaggerated, but the damage has been done and it would be a brave Indian commentator who would deny that torture took place.
…and it was easy to believe what was being retailed in the media as a result of statements by government spokesmen. There may have been hesitancy, later, about the truth of the stories, especially as the matter was not taken up by the international media (which would have been more than happy to expand on such a juicy story had they considered it credible), but tales of atrocities are easier to spread than to deny, even if the originator sincerely wishes to do that.
There is terrible irony in the gleeful description in India Today of the body of what might have been a soldier of the NLI.’
Now I knew of this for a long time, through other international sources and articles as well, as did AM obviously and by the looks of it some adequately educated Indians here do too. But you Vinod are obviously part of the crowd that passionately believes in whatever BS the Indian government fed the masses to distract the nation from continuing defeats. But why Vinod, do you feel so drastically obliged to demonize Pakistan? What compels you to convince yourself of fake-righteousness and ignore the real human right abuses and sub-human conduct? Though in all fairness to you, I do applaud what no doubt would have required you to summon monstrous will-power in saying you do not 'condone’ the hanging of dead bodies upside down with ropes. Bravo Vinod.
But unfortunately for you, in an effort to justify your own human right abuses you not only exposed your own ignorance and mentality, but you were also forced to acknowledge (despite trying to deny it first) the inhumane nature of your own troops. If the Pakistanis thought the Indians were using chemical weapons, we didn’t consider deploying nerve gas ourselves and descending to the same level did we? So there were international law breaches in Kargil, and we all know who did it. If we Pakistanis possessed even a fraction of arrogance, vanity, hate and shameless ambition you and large portions of your nation represent, then we would have pursued this further. But we didn’t. Consider this an appropriate answer to some of your unseemly insults to our soldiers, our nation and our honor. For the rest… I don’t want to stoop to your level. But be advised, what you’re doing here (and given the level of your own credibility) can easily be described as trolling. If you can’t talk in the domain of facts and credibility, then don’t throw crap at our faces.
P.S. The figure of 600+ Indian killed, 1800 wounded is accurate.
www.subcontinent.com/sapra/military/kargil11.html quoting the Times of India on 6 and 9 July 1999.
As is the Pakistani figure (perhaps as high as 400).
If 'showing a dead body' was necessary for 'proving PA involvement' then images of the bodies in the morgue or on the ground would have sufficed.
Even that is something only the IA indulges in AM. Dancing around dead bodies and picturing them as trophes. Every soldier knows that picturing the dead is indecent. Pakistan Army never does it. Weapons ought to suffice.