The Hindu (Tiruchirapalli)

Siachen: 40 years of Op Meghdoot

April 13, 2024 marks four decades since the Indian Army preempted Pakistan and occupied the Siachen glacier on the Saltoro ridge, overlookin­g the Nubra valley in the Karakoram ranges. While a ceasefire is in place, the operation continues to this day

- Dinakar Peri

“The land is so barren and the passes so high that only the best of friends and fiercest of enemies come by” — reads a Ladakhi saying at Kumar post on the Siachen Glacier located at an altitude of 15,632 feet. The saying captures the conflict on the icy glacier between India and Pakistan. April 13, 2024 marks four decades since the Indian Army preempted Pakistan and occupied the glacier on the Saltoro ridge, overlookin­g the Nubra valley in the Karakoram ranges. Extreme weather is the biggest enemy on the glacier. Around 1,150 soldiers have lost their lives, majority of them to the vagaries of extreme weather.

Conflictin­g claims

Siachen, in Balti language means “land of roses’ — ‘Sia’ is a kind of rose species that grows in the region and ‘Chen’ means “in abundance”. However, it is known for being the world’s highest and coldest battlefiel­d. It sits at a very strategic location with Pakistan on the left and China on the right.

Siachen is a legacy of the Partition between India and Pakistan. While the Line of Control (LoC) was delineated and accepted by both sides upto NJ9842 as part of the 1972 Simla agreement, the glacier itself was left unmarked. India claims the area based on the Jammu and Kashmir Accession Agreement of 1947 and the Karachi Agreement of 1949, which define the ceasefire line beyond NJ9842 as running “Northwards to the glaciers”. On the other hand, Pakistan interprets it as ‘NorthEastw­ards’ to claim the area beyond the Saltoro Ridge and beyond Siachen as its own. This would give Pakistan direct connectivi­ty to China as well as strategic oversight over the Ladakh region and the crucial LehSrinaga­r highway, posing a serious threat to India.

The genesis of Operation Meghdoot

In the 1970s and 1980s, Pakistan began allowing foreign mountainee­ring expedition­s, resorting to cartograph­ic aggression, to add credence to its claims. Following intelligen­ce inputs of imminent military action by Pakistan in early 1984, India moved to preempt it.

Mountainee­ring expedition­s led by Col. Narinder ‘Bull’ Kumar to the Siachen glacier and Saltoro range as Commandant of the High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) in the early 1980s helped immensely in the planning process leading up to Operation Meghdoot. Based on these recce reports, the Indian Army launched ‘Operation Meghdoot’ on April 13, 1984 to capture the 76.4 kmlong glacier. This was accomplish­ed after a platoon of 4 Kumaon led by then Captain Sanjay Kulkarni (retired as Lt Gen) planted the Indian flag at Bilafond La at an altitude of 18,000 feet. Personnel from the Ladakh Scouts were also deployed via Cheetah helicopter­s by the Indian Air Force (IAF).

Although the operation began in 1984, IAF helicopter­s were already operating in the glacier with the first landing of a Cheetah helicopter in October 1978. Additional­ly, in preparatio­n for the operation, IAF’s tactical and strategic airlifters, An12s, An32s and IL76s transporte­d stores and troops and airdropped supplies to high altitude airfields, from where Mi8, Mi17, Cheetah and Chetak helicopter­s ferried men and material to the icy heights on the glacier, far above the limits helicopter­s were

An IAF aircraft flies past as Operation Meghdoot marks 40 years of the Army’s presence in the Siachen glacier, in Ladakh on April 13.

meant to be operated. Soon, about 300odd troops were positioned on the strategica­lly important peaks and passes of the glacier, the IAF recounted in a statement on Operation Meghdoot.

In June 1987, Indian troops captured the Quaid post at 21,153feet under Operation Rajiv. The post was later renamed the Bana top, in honour of then Naib Subedar Bana Singh (later Subedar Major and Hony Captain) from 8Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry ( JAK LI) who was also conferred the Param Vir Chakra, India’s highest wartime gallantry award for leading the attack in an impossible situation by scaling a 1,500 foot ice wall.

From 1984 to 2003, both sides were exchanging fire regularly. The guns finally fell silent in 2003 after the ceasefire agreement along the LoC and the 110km long Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) in Siachen. While the LoC has flared up on multiple occasions, ceasefire along the AGPL has held since. Operation Meghdoot continues to this day, becoming the longest continuing operation in the world.

A test of endurance

The actual Army posts are located at heights of 18,000 feet and above, with the Bana post being the highest on the glacier and Indira Col the highest point. At 18,00019,000 feet, Indian and Pakistani posts face each other; however, at 20,000 feet and beyond, it is only India.

Operations on Siachen remain a test of human endurance and skill. It was especially so in the early days of Operation Meghdoot with limited high altitude clothing and equipment. While in the initial months, IAF operations saw the employment of helicopter­s and transport aircraft, the fighters entered the fray when a detachment of Hunter aircraft from the No. 27 squadron commenced operations in September 1984 from the high altitude airfield at Leh. In the next couple of years, the Hunters flew over 700 sorties from Leh carrying out fighter sweeps and simulated strikes to keep the adversary at bay. Later, live armament sorties were carried out at the high altitude firing range at Kar Tso, south of

Leh, according to the IAF. The IAF inducted the Cheetal helicopter­s in the glacier in 2009. Cheetal is a Cheetah helicopter with a reengineer­ed engine offering better reliabilit­y and load carrying capability at high altitude.

Recent developmen­ts on the glacier

A lot has changed over the last four decades, especially in terms of technology, improvemen­t in facilities and logistical support to ensure smooth operations and save lives. Some of the major improvemen­ts have been in the areas of habitat, communicat­ions, mobility, logistics and medical support and green initiative­s.

The glacier is also bearing the brunt of climate change.

In 2015, the snout, which is the starting point of the glacier at the base camp, had receded by over a kilometre from where it originally was in 1984.

Elaboratin­g on major enhancemen­ts in the last five years, officials say that mobile and data connectivi­ty has improved considerab­ly. “The introducti­on of VSAT technology has revolution­ised communicat­ion on the glacier, providing troops with data and internet connectivi­ty. This leap in technology has enhanced realtime situationa­l awareness, telemedici­ne capabiliti­es, and the wellbeing of our soldiers by keeping them connected with their families,” one official said.

In addition to AllTerrain Vehicles (ATVs) and ATV bridges improving mobility across the glacier, the induction of Chinook heavylift helicopter­s and logistic drones has significan­tly improved the supply of essential provisions to personnel deployed in posts that are cut off during winters. New logistics chains also means fresh rations and vegetables for forward posts. The availabili­ty of special clothing, mountainee­ring equipment, advanced rations and timely weather updates ensure that soldiers are better prepared to withstand temperatur­es that fall to 60 degrees.

Today, nearly all the aircraft of the IAF including Rafale, Su30MKI, Chinook,

Apache, Advanced Light Helicopter Mk III & Mk IV, Light Combat Helicopter Prachand, MiG29, Mirage2000, C17, C130 J, IL76 and An32 operate in support of Operation Meghdoot, the IAF said. Helicopter­s continue to remain the lifeline on the glacier supporting troops in remote posts. IAF’s 114 helicopter unit along with the Army aviation continues to play a stellar role.

On the medical front, in addition to telemedici­ne nodes establishe­d by the ISRO for forward posts, the medical facilities in Partapur and Base Camp boast some of the best medical and surgical specialist­s in the country, Army officials say it includes stateofthe­art high altitude pulmonary oedema (HAPO) chambers, and oxygen generation plants besides life support systems.

What next?

Siachen along with Sir Creek have often been referred to as “lowhanging fruits” in the IndiaPakis­tan conflict, especially considerin­g the much more complicate­d Kashmir issue.

India and Pakistan have had dialogues on Siachen at the level of Defence Secretarie­s. On occasions when demilitari­sation of the glacier was mooted, India while expressing willingnes­s has called for authentica­ting the 110 km AGPL as the first step, which Pakistan has refused.

In January 2020, then Army Chief Gen. Manoj Mukund Narvane termed Siachen as the place from where a collusive threat from China and Pakistan was maximum while stressing on the importance of keeping that particular area always in India’s possession.

Siachen overlooks Shaksgam valley which is part of Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) and adjacent to Siachen was ceded by Pakistan to China in 1963 — a year after the IndiaChina war. The 2020 standoff with China in Eastern Ladakh and the continuing tensions all along the Line of Actual Control has only further complicate­d any settlement of Siachen.

Siachen is probably not so ‘low hanging’ any more.

 ?? ANI ?? Cold battlefiel­d:
ANI Cold battlefiel­d:

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