Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Henderson Brooks report not being declassifi­ed to save political skin: Capt

- Yojana Yadav

CHANDIGARH: Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh was a fauji first at the Military Literature Festival here on Friday when he minced no words, saying that the Henderson Brooks report on the Sino-indian War of 1962 was not being declassifi­ed “only to save political skin”.

“The Henderson Brooksprem Bhagat report should have been made public long back. It is an open secret. It has not been declassifi­ed only to save political skin,” Capt Singh said.

“After the government order, the defence minister (Krishna Menon) was literally shifting platoons. There was a compliant corps commander who didn’t give brigade commander Hoshiar Singh a chance to fight. It was not the army fighting, it was a faulty government policy at work,” said Capt Singh, who was wearing his medals. He was commission­ed in 2 Sikh Regiment in 1963.

He was interactin­g with veteran journalist Vir Sanghvi and military historians Thomas Fraser, Alan Jefferys, Lt Gen TS Shergill (retd) and Ed Haynes at a panel discussion.

Asked about India’s provocativ­e foreign policy in 1962 despite no preparedne­ss, Lt Gen Shergill said, “It was the lack of understand­ing by the government on what it takes besides the lack of spine of certain officers to admit what can’t be done.”

There was unanimity among the panellists that then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru “died a disappoint­ed man”. Then defence minister Krishna Menon and he clearly misread the situation despite intelligen­ce inputs

PUNJAB CM ADMITS ARMED FORCES NOT CAREER OF CHOICE FOR TODAY’S YOUTH, SAYS NEED TO INTROSPECT

as far back as 1959 that China was planning an offensive.

WINNER OR LOSER?

Lt Gen Shergill said that military history has taught that only a force that endures can win. “The perception is that military history is written by the winner but who is the winner in a counterins­urgency situation? There is no clear winner or loser. The lexicon of conflict is changing and caution should be exercised in usage of terms,” he said.

Asked who had won the 1965 India-pakistan war, Capt Amarinder Singh said, “It was more or less a draw. We had no ammo left and if it continued any longer, we’d be fighting each other with stones. It was a pathetic situation. India may have gained territoria­lly but it

was a negligible gain.”

‘NO POLITICS IN FORCES’ The CM denied any politicisa­tion in the armed forces but declined comment on political interferen­ce. “The forces are discipline­d and will always be,” he said.

Like most participan­ts at the session, Capt Singh agreed that unlike the past, today’s youth were not drawn to a career in the armed forces. “It is a concern that many don’t want to join the forces and we need to find out why,” he said.

 ?? ANIL DAYAL/HT ?? (From left) Lt Gen A Mukherjee (retd), Brig MS Gill (retd), Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh, The Tribune editorinch­ief Harish Khare, Brig IS Gakhal (retd) and Maj Gen Shivdev Singh (retd) at the Military Literature Festival 2017 at Lake...
ANIL DAYAL/HT (From left) Lt Gen A Mukherjee (retd), Brig MS Gill (retd), Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh, The Tribune editorinch­ief Harish Khare, Brig IS Gakhal (retd) and Maj Gen Shivdev Singh (retd) at the Military Literature Festival 2017 at Lake...

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