SarthakGanguly
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Matter and anti matter. Exceptions notwithstanding.What 're we coming to?
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Matter and anti matter. Exceptions notwithstanding.What 're we coming to?
So, @HAIDER @KingMamba @Thorough Pro @fahadmahmood20 @Rajput Warrior @Green Arrow @levina @SarthakGanguly @Soumitra @Lord Aizen @third eye
He was supposed to give his name and rank interrogated by Uniformed personals , He could only put up a charade in front of civilians.Assuming that it is even wise to do so, since rangers would have driven hime to nearest military base anyway.
This has nothing to do with knowing or not knowing Kalma.
Chest thimping ? Me ? Where ?Pretty stupid chestthumping from Pakistanis.
According to Article 5 of Geneva convention 1929, a officer is bound to declare , if he is interrogated on the subject, his true name and rank, or his regimental number.
https://www.icrc.org/applic/ihl/ihl...63da005fdb1b/eb1571b00daec90ec125641e00402aa6
So, @HAIDER @KingMamba @Thorough Pro @fahadmahmood20 @Rajput Warrior @Green Arrow @levina @SarthakGanguly @Soumitra @Lord Aizen @third eye
He was supposed to give his name and rank interrogated by Uniformed personals , He could only put up a charade in front of civilians.Assuming that it is even wise to do so, since rangers would have driven hime to nearest military base anyway.
This has nothing to do with knowing or not knowing Kalma. You Pakistanis have a bad record of scholarship in contemporary History as you people are suckers for propaganda.
Sir is that why you are bringing in deceased children to reply to that poster? Poor attitude.
Sqn Ldr Cariappa Jr was shot down over Pakistan and he had bailed out. When the troops reached to get him,his first sentence was, "Mujhe Uncle Ayub ka pa's le chalo" / take me to Uncle Ayub. Ayub had known the Cariappas during his service days. Begum Ayub would later visit Cariappa Jr at RWP CMH. Interestingly IAF POWs were the first to be released after the War.
Well that is the old Army Generals for u. But can u tell us or share with us some funny moments from the war regarding their soldiers?Sqn Ldr Cariappa Jr was shot down over Pakistan and he had bailed out. When the troops reached to get him,his first sentence was, "Mujhe Uncle Ayub ka pa's le chalo" / take me to Uncle Ayub. Ayub had known the Cariappas during his service days. Begum Ayub would later visit Cariappa Jr at RWP CMH. Interestingly IAF POWs were the first to be released after the War.
Its not me , its times of india.Titles 're given to catch eyeballs!!!
And this thread would get many.
Lol well I hope PA has better method to determine an enemy soldier today, I think most Indians troops would be equipped with some basic knowledge such as the kalma by now. Heck even the japs during ww2 were told to recite the kalma if they are caught in India as it may warrant them better treatment at the very least since they cannot blend in.
easiest interrogation method...lolzz or judging the enemy....Hi,
It should tell you how ignorant we are----our final litmus test is based on the recitation of 'kalma'.
I know a story of Indian Navy officers who spoke Russian to confuse the Pakistanis during 1971 attack on Karachi Harbour
On entering the village, he was surrounded by a large number of residents. Among them was a school headmaster who was apparently not convinced that Bhargava was a PAF pilot. He started posing questions on Bhargava's native place in Pakistan. "When I said that I was from Rawalpindi, he asked me where did I stay? When I told him that I resided on Mall Road, he said I was in an Indian village. When I requested them to let me go back to Pakistan, he assured me that he was only testing me."
"They did not believe me when I reiterated that I was Mansur Ali of PAF. Around 9pm, one of them, Awaj Ali, asked me to read the Kalma. He even recited it and asked me to repeat it, but I could not. He then threatened me to tell the truth or they would extract it some other way. I told them that I was Flt Lt Jawahar Lal Bhargava of the IAF and they could do whatever they wanted to with me, even kill me," said the veteran.
No. I am sure the commodore knew it. He did not WANT to recite it - is all. He preferred death to reciting the Kal'ma.
Yes one can switch to a different language but its not easy to hide the accent, especially for Indians as they have a very unique way of delivery that is easily identified from miles away.
CHANDIGARH: Forty-three years ago, when young Flight Lieutenant (who retired as Air Commodore) Jawahar Lal Bhargava ejected from his aircraft in Pakistan territory after being shot down, he had almost made it to India by posing as Flt Lt Mansur Ali of Pakistan Air Force. However, as luck would have it, his ignorance about the "Kalma" (testimony of Islamic faith) made him a prisoner of war ( PoW).
Talking to TOI, the 73-year-old veteran, Air Commodore Bhargava, who had to spent almost a year in Pakistan during 1971 Indo-Pak war after his HF-24 9 aircraft — popularly known as "Marut" — was shot down, recalled how an IAF pilot deals with the situation after landing in enemy territory.
Bhargava, who recently shifted to Panchkula from Gurgaon, said he took off from Air Force station Barmer (Rajasthan) on the morning of December 5, 1971, on his first sortie to launch an attack in the enemy territory.
Around 9am, his aircraft was hit by ground fire and he decided to eject. His parachute had barely opened when he touched down and the "Marut" had crashed into a sand dune.
He immediately took out some items from the survival pack, buried his G-suit under the bushes, set his watch on Pakistan standard time and started marching away from the aircraft.
While he was struggling to find some way to escape to Indian territory, he ran into three people from an adjacent village. Bhargava introduced himself as pilot Mansoor Ali of Pakistan Air Force (PAF), whose plane was shot down by Indian forces. He even showed them Pakistan currency. They took him to the village, where his real test began.
On entering the village, he was surrounded by a large number of residents. Among them was a school headmaster who was apparently not convinced that Bhargava was a PAF pilot. He started posing questions on Bhargava's native place in Pakistan. "When I said that I was from Rawalpindi, he asked me where did I stay? When I told him that I resided on Mall Road, he said I was in an Indian village. When I requested them to let me go back to Pakistan, he assured me that he was only testing me."
Bhargava planned to escape from the village at 8pm on the pretext of going to relieve himself, but to his surprise, four Pakistani rangers arrived there — apparently called by the headmaster — and began grilling him.
"They did not believe me when I reiterated that I was Mansur Ali of PAF. Around 9pm, one of them, Awaj Ali, asked me to read the Kalma. He even recited it and asked me to repeat it, but I could not. He then threatened me to tell the truth or they would extract it some other way. I told them that I was Flt Lt Jawahar Lal Bhargava of the IAF and they could do whatever they wanted to with me, even kill me," said the veteran.
Thereafter, he was blindfolded, handcuffed and handed over to the Pakistani army on December 8, 1971.
Bhargava said if he had been able to repeat the Kalma that day, he would have escaped from Pakistan that very night.
No. I am sure the commodore knew it. He did not WANT to recite it - is all. He preferred death to reciting the Kal'ma.
Heck even the japs during ww2 were told to recite the kalma if they are caught in India as it may warrant them better treatment at the very least since they cannot blend in.