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Indian Army's surgical strikes against Pakistan across LOC: How it happened
NEW DELHI: Commandos of the Indian Army with shoulder-fired flamethrowers and plastic explosives crossed the Line of Control in the early hours on Thursday and raided at least five "terrorist launch pads" in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, officials and sources here said.
The brief and the execution:
The three-point brief given to the Indian Army
Objective: Cause maximum casualties to terrorists and their handlers
Result: India says “significant casualties” to terrorists and their supporters
Objective: Surprise and shock must for insertion, execution and extrication with no or minimum damage to own forces; no Indian soldier to be left behind
Result: Indian sources say Pakistani troops were “caught napping”. Pakistan says 2 soldiers died and nine wounded. India said in the evening one soldier was caught by the Pakistani Army after he “inadvertently” crossed over
Objective: Special Forces detachments must execute plan in co-ordination with the infantry battalions manning the LoC
Result: Accomplished, say Indian sources
- The "surgical strikes" inflicted "significant casualties to terrorists and those trying to support them", the Indian Army said. The terrorists were aiming to carry out "strikes in Jammu and Kashmir and in various metros".
- In the evening, it was disclosed that an Indian soldier was taken into custody in the Mendhar sub-sector by the Pakistani Army. Indian Army sources said he had "inadvertently" crossed over and was not part of the cross-border action.
- Such "inadvertent" crossings are not infrequent, the sources said. Pakistan newspaperDawn claimed 14 Indian soldiers were killed in two sectors. The daily had earlier reported that an Indian soldier named Chandu Babulal Chohan had been taken into custody by the Pakistani forces. India denied its soldiers had been killed and said it had requested the return of the soldier.
- Thursday's "surgical strikes" were in reprisal for the September 18 killings of Indian soldiers in Uri. It effectively marks a return to a situation described as "no war, no peace". But neither India nor Pakistan has formally called off the ceasefire on the LoC that was agreed in 2003.
- The Indian military expects that there will be a retaliation from forces in Pakistan. The White House urged India and Pakistan to avoid escalation.
- This is not the first time that Indian forces have carried out a raid like this. It is the first time, however, that the Indian government has formally claimed to have hit "terrorist launch pads" across the LoC with "surgical strikes".
- The insertion of the troops began shortly after midnight. The action peaked across four areas identified as Tatapani or Hotspring, across the Indian sector of Mendhar, Lipa Valley, across the Indian sector of Nowgam, Bimbhar, across the Indian subsector of Bimbhar Gali, and Kel, across the Indian sector Machhil, between 3am and 4.30am.
- Some of the teams were helilifted from their bases to army camps within the Indian side of the LoC. No helicopter flew over the LoC with troops. The teams then used nullahs (narrow valleys) to sneak to the suspected terror launch pads.
- Sources in the Indian Army and veterans said such cross-LoC strikes had been conducted many times in the past. But they were localised, "tactical" moves that were not publicised. For instance, in 2013, after two Indian soldiers were mutilated, the then army chief, Gen. Bikram Singh, had said a tactical response was given.
- Both the Indian and Pakistani armies are well aware of each other's posts nearly all along the LoC and are often literally eyeball to eyeball. Each side has mapped the other in great detail and has fine-tuned those maps through the 65-year stand-off on what used to be the ceasefire line that is called the LoC.
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Nayanima Basu
Opinion