According to
sources it was a joint operation of RAW and Army. Technical resources of ARC,
BARC and DRDO were also used. The idea was thrown up by one of the R&AW Senior
field officer when he saw DRDO (LASTEC) guys helping BRO (Border Road Org)
clearing snow from the upper ridges of Jawahar tunnel, connecting Kashmir
valley to the rest of India. He saw a DRDO's TATRA vehicle having a cabin on
its back and a large artillery "gun" like device. The "gun"
was connected to the cabin through numerous cables. A heavy electric generator
set was pumping power to the cabin and the gun which has a clear marking on it
saying "KALI". On enquiring he was told that the gun he was seeing actually a laser gun and they were targeting snow catchment areas to trigger
small but controlled avalanches from hill above so as to prevent larger and
deadly avalanches. Another team of SASE (Snow & Avalanche Study
establishment, Chandigarh) was directing the laser to the already marked areas.
He sighed and smiled like a sniper who has finally spotted his counterpart with
clear visibility for kill.
He decided
to use this technology for military use in Siachen Glacier. Siachen Glacier is
a 70 km long glacier situated between Soltoro Ridges on west and Karakoram
ranges on east. It is world's longest glacier outside the Polar Regions and
this area was also termed as third pole. It starts from Indira Col on China
border at 6000 mts and terminates at 3000 mts at a place known as Siachen base
camp in Indian Army. This base camp is life line of Indian troops defending
Siachen glacier as this point in whole glacier is connected to the world by road. Indian Army by
the virtue of successful Operation Meghdoot pre empted evil Pakistani designs and occupied
heights of Soltoro ridges thus cutting off Pakistan from China. The
crest of the Soltoro Ridge's altitudes range from 5,450 to 7,720 m. The major
passes on this ridge are, from north to south, Sia La at 5,589 m,
Bilafond
La at 5,450 m, and Gyong La at 5,689 m. Pakistanis did try
very hard to dislodge Indians from there but never succeeded. It is a well know fact that weather have
killed more men there then the actual war. India did think of demilitarizing
this area but Pakistani misadventure of 1999 in Kargil evaporated any such hope
for at least few decades. In 2004 India and Pakistan agreed to cease fire all
across LOC and AGPL which is still holding largely. But it doesn't mean both have
scaled down any of their deployments in these areas. In fact overt operations
have given way to covert ones and both armies always on look out for opportunities
to gain militarily advantageous part of geography. On these very lines Pakistan
was strengthening its positions in Ghyari sector in west of Gyong la which is
30 kms from base of Siachen glacier. Pakistani
intentions were very clear. They wanted to have a position of strength in here
so as to cut off India's access to upper part of glacier by capturing the base
camp or at least have advantageous higher position in Gyong La overlooking the
base camp. Indians have noticed this move and were huddling to get solution to
this new threat.
This
R&AW man was also part of the huddled group.
He came to
Delhi and popped up the idea in weekly security meetings to use controlled avalanche
to achieve enemy kill. Initially he was
snubbed but his elaborate and detailed plan presentation convinced the Director
to take it up with PM and NSA. PM though have little interests in technical
details but wanted to know any political and diplomatic repercussions. It was a
cease-fire scenario all along LoC and AGPL for many reasons and he didn't want
to India being blamed for violation. Also he was not sure about such an
ambitious plan using technology and that too from DRDO but he gave that to NSA
to ponder and reply. Director RAW and NSA were old time pals and NSA was taken
into confidence by RAW much before that meeting at RCR. Director RAW also
convinced the NSA to persuade PM for this op being highly classified and not to
be shared with anyone except whom RAW thinks appropriate. PM gave in after
NSA's assurance even though he couldn't find any scope of political mileage out
of it. But NSA was smart enough to show the PM much larger picture. Permission
granted and a task team was constituted. NSA was made to head the team with
direct reporting to PM. Director RAW handpicked people from RAW, DRDO (LASTEC
and SASE), Army and Air force for the operation. Op was christened "White
Wash". He even managed to pass it
through always cunning finance controllers without any suspicion.
DRDO head was
also itching to show the power of KALI (Kilo Ampere Linear Injector) as a weapon as he was Director
LASTEC before taking over as Scientific advisor to Defence Minister who also
heads DRDO. DRDO was fast becoming a butt of many jokes for not delivering
anything substantial for nation security forces and India was still depending
on imports for its military hardware and technology. People have in fact
started comparing DRDO with DODO, an extinct bird and all this was very
uncomfortable for DRDO Chief. NSA and Director RAW took advantage of that
inferiority complex DRDO Chief was suffering from and ensure that willingness of
DRDO head works in favor of the operation. He was also made to keep that secret
with Defence Minister to whom he directly reports. He was assured of very good recognition and
good post retirement benefits. DG RAW and NSA also played on such human issues
with other stakeholders who ensured a good team and no departmental and human
egos clashing to hinder success of the operation.
KALI also
known as an avatar of Hindu Goddess Durga. KALI Ma (Mother KALI) is ruthless
destroyer of the enemies. She is shown as four handed lady wearing garlands
made of heads of enemies she has killed. One right hand holds a sword and other
right hand holds a trident. Upper left hand holds an amputated and bleeding head
of one enemy and lower left hand holds a bowl where blood from enemy head is
collected. So the name suggests actual intentions and idea of DRDO behind this.
6 NLI BN HQ was marked as "kill"
area and a team of RAW and SASE visited "S"
post of Indian Army at 21,000 feet in Siachen glacier from where battalion HQ
of 6 NLI was visible. This BN HQ was also acting as base camp for all Pakistani Army supplies to Ghyari sector and till top of Chumik Glacier. There was a landing strip for medium lift transport aircraft and big helicopter station for quick supplies, deployments and reinforcements. Also this base camp was connected with big garrison town Skardu through a Chinese made all weather metaled road which could carry heavy transport traffic. Pakistanis were feeding and strengthening their units in Ghyari because of this entire infrastructure. Destruction of this base camp along with supply lines to upper parts from this base camp will severely hamper Pakistani military capability in this sector.
SASE team mapped the area and identified possible trigger points to bury the "kill" area under tons of snow. Now the task force was facing a huge challenge of taking up the heavy laser gun, the gen set and other support equipments up there at 21,000 feet. Also heavy noise and vibrations of the equipment could also trigger an avalanche on our own troops. So, it was decided to use air platform for KALI. Two IL- 76s were deputed to ARC (Aviation Research Centre) from Indian Air force. ARC is aviation arm of RAW. Immediately those were flown by ARC pilots to Charbatia Airbase near Cuttack in Odisha. These IL-76s were refitted with KALI-50000W on board. It is much more powerful version than what RAW officer saw at Jawahar tunnel. Technically it is a pulsed accelerator of ~30 MeV electron energy, 50-100 ns pulse time, 90kA Current and 200 GW Power level. After refitting these IL76s were flown to Sarsawa AF station and parked. No one was allowed to go near those and was guarded by fierce looking Garud commandos of IAF.
SASE team mapped the area and identified possible trigger points to bury the "kill" area under tons of snow. Now the task force was facing a huge challenge of taking up the heavy laser gun, the gen set and other support equipments up there at 21,000 feet. Also heavy noise and vibrations of the equipment could also trigger an avalanche on our own troops. So, it was decided to use air platform for KALI. Two IL- 76s were deputed to ARC (Aviation Research Centre) from Indian Air force. ARC is aviation arm of RAW. Immediately those were flown by ARC pilots to Charbatia Airbase near Cuttack in Odisha. These IL-76s were refitted with KALI-50000W on board. It is much more powerful version than what RAW officer saw at Jawahar tunnel. Technically it is a pulsed accelerator of ~30 MeV electron energy, 50-100 ns pulse time, 90kA Current and 200 GW Power level. After refitting these IL76s were flown to Sarsawa AF station and parked. No one was allowed to go near those and was guarded by fierce looking Garud commandos of IAF.
H hour or the time of action was decided as
1200 hrs. It was suppose to take 2 hours to soften up the trigger points and
then start the avalanche around 2 PM. Most avalanches occur around late noon,
so was that planned timing. An observation party was though deployed at Indian
Army's "S" post to monitor, feed and give directions if any to master
control room aboard one of the IL 76s. Most of the DRDO scientists working with
KALI and other communication engineering projects were South Indians and had
never seen altitudes over 1000 feet. They were most uncomfortable when some of
them were told to hold at 21,000 feet for 1 month. SASE guys were not as
uncomfortable as they always are in snow and studying snow but still 21,000
feet is an altitude which can freeze the shit in you. But Project leader was
lucky to find some brave and lunatics to accept that challenge. They were given
high altitude training and proper acclimatization along with new inducting army
units for deployments in north and central glaciers. Army instructors and jawans had seen many
civilians at Siachen base camp earlier but never ever they saw some civilians
training as hard as them.
The only
problem with air platform was the very long shot for "laser fire" and
thus problems in polarization (keeping laser intensity focused at target). And
this operation required high precision "shooting". IL 76's were
supposed to fly at 30000 feet and well away from Siachen. So BARC (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre),
Mumbai was roped in for help regarding polarization. After studying the
requirements it was suggested to shift the H-hour either in early morning or
late evening to avoid any refraction. Though both the times were highly unusual
for natural occurrence of avalanches but it was decided to start "firing"
around 4 in the morning, a day before Mr Zardari would be visiting Delhi.
On the d-day
IL-76 flew from Sarsawa and soon positioned them at the required altitude and
pre designated coordinates. 1 AWACS and
1 IL-78 mid air refuler took off from Agra and were given co-ordinates and call
signs to help 2 classified flying objects over Uttrakhand skies. RAW ops are
always strictly needed to know basis. AWACS staff was little puzzled seeing few
plain cloth men on board overseeing them but nobody questioned. AWACS were also
tasked to vector in 6 Mirages from Gwalior and 4 SU 30s from Lohegaon (Pune) in
support of those 2 classified flying objects. Mirages and SU 30s were airborne
since 2 in the morning and taking turns to scan the area around 2 unknown
birds. At 4 in the morning the shooting
started and as expected early morning rare environment helped a lot in
precision. SASE team had earmarked the
points after detailed analysis of images at satellite data reception centre and 3-D Terrain
Visualization Center.
DRDO's team
KALI was shooting at right places with laser gun being fed with precise
coordinates. By 5:40 AM massive snow started hurtling towards plains where 6
NLI BN HQ was situated. It was a dry snow avalanche and very soon massive slabs
of snow attained speed of around 300km/hour. Outposts of 6 NLI troops and other
Pakistani troops must have seen the mass of snow coming down and might have
tried to alert the HQ. But that massive avalanche not only had snapped the
communication lines but also blasted away some outposts. And 300km/hr is a
speed coupled with thousand tones of cruising mass which can beat any wit or
training. Even Indian observation party at "S" post was horrified to
see such large avalanche. Within 10-15 minutes everything was covered with
80-100 feet of snow. Indian soldiers
looking that were horrified too and it was a the real "tandav" of
KALI who as per Hindu mythology has defeated "Shiva" the greatest and
official destroyer of the Universe
2 brand new MI
17V5s helicopters flew from Thoise airbase to "A" post at 8 AM. 6
Cheetah Helicopters were also ready at Siachen Base camp 1 hour before 2 Mi-17s
i.e at 7 AM. 6 Cheetahs flew after gap of 5 minutes with each other and
destination was "S" post. Task was to pick the group of
"civilians" and their equipments that were dropped a month ago on
postal-stamp size helipad of post "S". Cheetahs were supposed to
bring those civilians to post "A" at 16,000 feet from where they'll
board Mi17s to climb down to Thoise. KALI carrying IL76s were back at their
base Charbatia and so were their escorts.
Brigade
Commander 323 Pakistani brigade was jolted out of his sleep by his staff with
the news. He was immediately out for
rescue and relief work after informing Maj. Gen. Muzammil Hussain, Commander
FCNA who in turn informed Lt Gen Khalid Nawaz Khan, GoC, X corps at Rawalpindi.
Soon Pakistani news channels started reporting the tragedy which has struck
PA. The first rescue team led by Brigade
Commander himself couldn't believe what they saw. There was just snow all
around at the same place where 6 NLI was having its BN HQ few hours back. There
was no communication signal either. FCNA Signal unit detachment, which was
summoned to take part in relief ops were trying to get in touch with border
outposts of the unit. Some of them perished in the avalanche and most of them
were "out" of signal due to large scale destruction of communication
lines. Brigade intelligence officer gave record of last evening roll call
details as mentioned in sit-rep (situational report) of the BN HQ as sent by 2
in Command Maj Zaka UL Haq. There were 124 army personnel's including BN
commander Lt Col Tanvir Ul Hassan, Cap (Doc) Haleem Ullah and Major Zaka. There
were 11 civilians also including tailor, barber, porters etc. In total 135 men
were under snow. Initial estimate showed a layer of 80 ft snow which is beyond
reach of any sniffer dog or digging machines.
It was a crippling blow to Pakistan's tactical
position in Siachen. With Pakistan Army occupying only downhill features in
Siachen and Soltoro ranges India can take out all those positions without
firing a bullet and no collateral damage. IL 76 mounted KALI avatar is very
expansive as of now and not viable against small border outposts. DRDO is
confident of developing a handheld or compact version soon for usage of KALI
against such targets. KALI is also very useful and effective in
"frying" up electronic circuits from considerable distance and with
no human-eye visible rays. That can have wide range of application form missile
defense system to satellite killer or snapping out communication of a moving
armored column or making an AWACS a sitting duck.
With uncontrollable
ethnic unrest in Gilgit-Baltistan and reports of hunger strikes and desertions in NLI units of Pakistan Army this
news has stung any whichever moral left in NLI units. Pakistan elite and top
brass is well known for having use-and-throw policy when it comes to deal with
people of Northen Areas (Balochs also) and its soldiers. In "99 Kargil war
PA had refused to accept bodies of their KIA soldiers from India. Even
otherwise soldiers of NLI are not treated at par with Punjabis or others.
In Indian
military and security circles this feat is being equated to Bana Singh's
heroics when he routed the Quaid post in 1987 to conquer most dominating
feature of entire Glacier.
Captivating story...wonderfully written!
ReplyDeleteHeart touching impressive story great writing Amit ji
ReplyDelete👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
ReplyDeleteWow! Intense. And very detailed.
ReplyDeleteIt's a very well knitted, detailed and beautifully crafted story.👌👌 Will wait for another one frome you. 👍
ReplyDelete