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Mujahideen at captured strategic Indian peaks during Kargil Conflict

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No one abandoned anyone. After Nawaz went to US and withdrawal agreement was signed, Pak Army and Mujahideen started withdrawing from Indian-held territory and Indian Army reclaimed the peaks. SIMPLE ..
 
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musharaf was in power for 9 years after ouster of nawaz but he not again did such adventure if he was so much concerned about kashmir he would have tried it again but he was afraid that if he fails there was no civil govt to blame then which shows that it was done to defame civil govt to pave way for martial law
 
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2 years after Musharraf came to power, global war on terror started and the whole scenario changed.. Pakistan was caught in another war..
 
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Rest in peace all.

Pakistan lost almost all goodwill due to this misadventure.

No one abandoned anyone. After Nawaz went to US and withdrawal agreement was signed, Pak Army and Mujahideen started withdrawing from Indian-held territory and Indian Army reclaimed the peaks. SIMPLE ..
Thanks was much later.

Our soldiers collected and buried hundreds of dead. Both mujaheedin and regular Pakistan soldiers.
 
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musharaf was in power for 9 years after ouster of nawaz but he not again did such adventure if he was so much concerned about kashmir he would have tried it again but he was afraid that if he fails there was no civil govt to blame then which shows that it was done to defame civil govt to pave way for martial law
Agreed...

Title: Kargil Conflict and Pakistan Air Force

Author: Air Commodore (rtd) Kaiser Tufail.

Some Excerpts from the Article


"Perhaps it was the incredulousness of the whole thing that led Air Cdre Abid Rao to famously quip, “After this operation, it’s going to be either a Court Martial or Martial Law!” as we walked out of the briefing room."

Kargil, I suspect, like the ‘65 and ‘71 Wars, was a case of not having enough dissenters (‘devil’s advocates’, if you will) during planning, because everyone wanted to agree with the boss. That single reason, I think, was the root cause of most of the failures that were apparent right from the beginning. If this point is understood well, remedial measures towards tolerance and liberalism can follow as a matter of course. Such an organisational milieu, based on honest appraisal and fearless appeal, would be conducive to sound and sensible planning. It would also go a long way in precluding Kargil-like disasters.

Tailpiece

Come change-over time of the Chief of Air Staff in 2001, President Musharraf struck at PAF’s top leadership in what can only be described as implacable action: he passed over all five Air Marshals and appointed the sixth-in-line who was practically an Air Vice Marshal till a few weeks before. While disregarding of seniority in the appointment of service chiefs has historically been endemic in the country, the practice has been seen as breeding nepotism and partiality, besides leaving a trail of conjecture and gossip in the ranks. Given Air Chief Marshal Mehdi’s rather straight-faced and forthright dealings with General Musharraf, particularly during Kargil conflict, there is good reason to believe that the latter decided to appoint a not-very-senior Air Chief whom he could order around like one of his Corps Commanders. (As it turned out, Air Chief Marshal Mus’haf was as solid as his predecessor and gave no quarter when it came to PAF’s interests.) Whatever the reason of bypassing seniority, it was unfortunate that PAF’s precious corporate experience was thrown out so crassly and several careers destroyed. Lives and honour lost in Kargil is another matter.

© M KAISER TUFAIL

This article was published in Air Forces Monthly (UK) - June 2009 issue, under the title 'Himalayan Showdown'. The article was also published in Defence Journal (Pak), May 2009 issue.

http://kaiser-aeronaut.blogspot.com/2009/01/kargil-conflict-and-pakistan-air-force.html
 
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No one abandoned anyone. After Nawaz went to US and withdrawal agreement was signed, Pak Army and Mujahideen started withdrawing from Indian-held territory and Indian Army reclaimed the peaks. SIMPLE ..
Indian army threw mustard gas on retreating Pakistani forces, hundreds died.
I mean if we took decision to take Kashmir, and we knew it will end up on war, why we took that step that ruined actions taken by hundreds of our brave soldiers. If it was war, so be it.
 
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There are thousands of such unfortunate soldiers who are buried on those heights. All because a "commando" wanted to satisfy his ego.
Why not make that 10,000 with majority of them being Indians.
Here let me enlighten you.





kargil-indiantvtransmitter1jun1999.jpg

Smoke rises from Indian Doordarshan television relay center in Kargil after getting hit by Pakistani artillery shelling. 1 June 1999

kargilwar-vishwanathan18grenadiers.jpg

Indian soldiers carry the body of Lt Col R Vishwanathan of 18 Grenadiers who was killed in an attack on Point 4590 on 2 June 1999.


kargilwar-shellingkaksar2jun99.jpg

Pak artillery shells strike Kaksar region near Kargil. June 1999



kargilwar-indiantankerburnsfrompakarty-6jul99.jpg

Between a deployment of Indian artillery guns, an Indian civil petrol tanker burns after getting hit by Pak artillery fire. 6 July 1999


kargilwar-artyshelling6jul99.jpg

Pak artillery shell strikes Indian supply route as Indian Army trucks pass through. 6 July 1999


kargilwar-shellingindianbarracks4jun99.jpg

Pak artillery strikes Indian Army barracks. June 1999

kargil15.jpg

Captured and abandoned weapons of Indian Army at display.
 
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Why not make that 10,000 with majority of them being Indians.
Here let me enlighten you.





kargil-indiantvtransmitter1jun1999.jpg

Smoke rises from Indian Doordarshan television relay center in Kargil after getting hit by Pakistani artillery shelling. 1 June 1999

kargilwar-vishwanathan18grenadiers.jpg

Indian soldiers carry the body of Lt Col R Vishwanathan of 18 Grenadiers who was killed in an attack on Point 4590 on 2 June 1999.


kargilwar-shellingkaksar2jun99.jpg

Pak artillery shells strike Kaksar region near Kargil. June 1999



kargilwar-indiantankerburnsfrompakarty-6jul99.jpg

Between a deployment of Indian artillery guns, an Indian civil petrol tanker burns after getting hit by Pak artillery fire. 6 July 1999


kargilwar-artyshelling6jul99.jpg

Pak artillery shell strikes Indian supply route as Indian Army trucks pass through. 6 July 1999


kargilwar-shellingindianbarracks4jun99.jpg

Pak artillery strikes Indian Army barracks. June 1999

kargil15.jpg

Captured and abandoned weapons of Indian Army at display.

They will never talk about the humiliation they suffered in this conflict. Had our leadership be little more fastidious, Kashmir would have been freed.
 
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There are thousands of such unfortunate soldiers who are buried on those heights. All because a "commando" wanted to satisfy his ego.
despite repeated calls indian didn't handed the bodies of the mujahideens and used them for propaganda purposes.
 
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