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Army to analyse Tribunal verdict on Kargil war officer

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1 - Number One Newspaper of Pakistan - Daily Jang- Jang Group


With the Armed Forces Tribunal indicting a top officer for falsifying Kargil war reports and showing bias towards a brigadier, the Army on Thursday said it will take action on the issue after analysing the verdict.

“We have not yet received the copy of Tribunal’s judgement. Once we get it, it will be analysed and appropriate action would be taken,” a senior Army officer told PTI here.

The Principal Bench of the Tribunal, in its verdict, has held that Lt Gen (retd) Kishan Pal, former 15 Corps General Officer Commanding (GOC) showed bias against Brigadier Devinder Singh, former 70 Infantry Brigade Commander and belittled his achievements in the war besides falsifying accounts of battles during the Kargil operations.

The Tribunal has directed that the affected officer be considered for a notional promotion to the rank of a major general


The Hindu : News / National : Army to analyse Tribunal verdict on Kargil war officer
 
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Guys! Many TV Channel (including GEO TV) were reporting this News thus I googled it out to share this news with you.. :pakistan:
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Posted on May 27, 2010 by The Editors

Major embarrassment for the Indian Army:
In an unprecedented order that is likely to fuel demands for a full investigation into the actions of the military leadership in the 1999 Kargil war, the Armed Forces Tribunal has upheld claims that top commanders falsified accounts of battles in the Batalik sector. The Hindu


Exactly 11 years after the Kargil limited war and controversies in its wake took the nation by storm, the Armed Forces Tribunal has held that a key Lieutenant General overseeing operations in that sector fudged reports of the conflict and showed bias towards a senior field commander. Tribune India

The history of the Kargil war should be rewritten because some generals distorted the records, the Armed Forces Tribunal has ordered in an unparalleled judgment. Telegraph India
Judges say 15 Corps Commander falsified accounts of battles in the Batalik sector
Brigadier Devinder Singh, who led the Batalik-based 70 Infantry Brigade during the war, petitioned the Delhi High Court in 2006, complaining of misrepresentation of his battle performance
The Tribunal also directed the Directorate of Military Operations to rewrite portions of an official history, Op. Vijay: Account of the War in Kargil.
Brigadier Singh was hailed as a hero in the weeks after the war. But he soon fell from grace, in large part because of a battle performance review prepared by Lieutenant-General Pal
Later that year, Lieutenant-General Pal — who infamously promised to end the war in 48 hours — told the Chief of the Army Staff that just 45 Pakistani irregulars were positioned in Batalik
Brigadier Singh’s case is the first of a string of Kargil war-related complaints pending before the Armed Forces Tribunal. Notable among them are those of 121 Brigade Commander Surinder Singh, and Major Manish Bhatnagar, who say they were made scapegoats for the failures of top Generals.

Judges say 15 Corps Commander falsified accounts of battles in the Batalik sector

In an unprecedented order that is likely to fuel demands for a full investigation into the actions of the military leadership in the 1999 Kargil war, the Armed Forces Tribunal has upheld claims that top commanders falsified accounts of battles in the Batalik sector.

Brigadier Devinder Singh, who led the Batalik-based 70 Infantry Brigade during the war, petitioned the Delhi High Court in 2006, complaining of misrepresentation of his battle performance — misrepresentation which cost him a war medal and led to his being passed over for promotion as Major-General.

In a judgment made public on Wednesday, Justice A.K. Mathur and Lieutenant-General Naidu — who heard the case after it was transferred from the Delhi High Court to the newly-formed Tribunal — have called on the Army to expunge Lieutenant-General Kishan Pal’s assessment of Brigadier Singh. They also directed the Army to delete sections of an after-action report prepared by 15 Corps, which claimed that Brigadier Singh only had partial command of the 70 Brigade.

The Tribunal also directed the Directorate of Military Operations to rewrite portions of an official history, Op. Vijay: Account of the War in Kargil. Volume III of the history asserts that while “Commander 70 Infantry Brigade controlled operations on the Western Flank (Jubbar Complex), Deputy GOC 3 Infantry Division controlled the Stangba-Khalubar Ridge operations.”

Justice Mathur and Lieutenant-General Naidu said they “cannot trust the report prepared by Lieutenant-General Pal.”

Brigadier Singh was hailed as a hero in the weeks after the war. In an official citation issued after the war, he was lauded for having “meticulously planned the application of all the resources at his disposal.” Despite sustaining battle injuries, the citation recorded, he continued to fight “unmindful of and with total disregard for personal safety.”

But he soon fell from grace, in large part because of a battle performance review prepared by Lieutenant-General Pal. In an assessment of the 70 Brigade’s conduct during the war, Lieutenant-General Pal asserted that Brigadier Singh had little to do with the success in Batalik. “Success in operations,” he instead claimed, “particularly in the last 10-12 days, came about by superimposing Brigadier Ashok Duggal, Deputy-General Officer Commanding 3 Infantry Division.”

Later, an after-action report prepared by Lieutenant-General Pal’s headquarters claimed that Brigadier Duggal had control of four battalions that led the assault along the eastern flank of the Batalik sector — the Ladakh Scouts, the 1st Battalion of the 11 Gurkha Rifles, the 12 Jammu Kashmir Light Infantry and the 22 Grenadiers Regiment.

The Tribunal order suggests that personal malice underpinned this rewriting of events. In April 1999, Lieutenant-General Pal dismissed warnings emerging from a war game, which suggested that a Kargil-like intrusion could take place. Brigadier Singh played a key role in the war game; his appraisal was proved correct.

Later that year, Lieutenant-General Pal — who infamously promised to end the war in 48 hours — told the Chief of the Army Staff that just 45 Pakistani irregulars were positioned in Batalik, instead of the 600-odd regular soldiers Brigadier Singh said he was confronting. The Brigadier’s assessment was again proved correct by the questioning of captured prisoners of war.

In order to protect himself and some superiors from the consequences of these gross errors of judgment, Lieutenant-General Pal evidently fabricated records underplaying the role of his most successful subordinate.

Brigadier Singh filed a complaint with the Army in 2000, charging Lieutenant-General Pal with bias. Two years later, the Army rejected his complaint. In 2004, the Ministry of Defence struck down Lieutenant-General Pal’s assessment of Brigadier Singh’s battle performance. However, the Ministry refused to strike down key sections of Brigadier Singh’s annual confidential report, a document Lieutenant-General Pal was responsible for reviewing.

Full justice may, however, still lie years down the road. Brigadier Singh — who has retired from service — will now have to petition the Ministry of Defence to reappraise his case after the Tribunal’s orders are effected. The Ministry will then decide whether to grant him a promotion.

Brigadier Singh’s case is the first of a string of Kargil war-related complaints pending before the Armed Forces Tribunal. Notable among them are those of 121 Brigade Commander Surinder Singh, and Major Manish Bhatnagar, who say they were made scapegoats for the failures of top Generals. The Hindu



:pakistan::cheers::pakistan:
 
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Hope you read the news item fully. There are other threads running around here. Apart from that, the main point which you failed to notice is that the issue is basically about a Army Lt.General, who dint credit the Brigadier with his hard earned success. This has nothing to do with how the course of the war went! So there is no point/need for having a high Flying Pakistan Flag for this news piece.
 
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So how does this make "Delhi's failed war"? And is the smiley for the AJK regulars killed in that strategy game of Musharraf and his coterie of generals?
 
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Hope you read the news item fully. There are other threads running around here. Apart from that, the main point which you failed to notice is that the issue is basically about a Army Lt.General, who dint credit the Brigadier with his hard earned success. This has nothing to do with how the course of the war went! So there is no point/need for having a high Flying Pakistan Flag for this news piece.

Dude! you have yourself not read the news item fully and jumped on to reply..
 
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^^
Still! the point is more about denial of achievement, rather than the numbers... It still doesn't necessite a PAkistan Flag. :sigh: :Facepalm:

ok guys! Continue then!!
 
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hahaha, sign of desperation. Dude understand the news article before posting.


Indian Army Got Busted on False Stories.
Read again. It says Brigadier Singh was facing 600 infiltrators and only 45 were reported. That means we busted 555 more <self edit>.

Later, Lieutenant General Pal told the Chief of Army Staff that just 45 Pakistani irregulars were positioned in Batalik. But Brigadier Singh reported that it was actually 600-odd regular soldiers and his assessment was again proved correct when captured prisoners of war were questioned.
 
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Read again. It says Brigadier Singh was facing 600 infiltrators and only 45 were reported. That means we busted 555 more scumbags.

You are closing your eyes like a pigeon.

read it carefully
In order to protect himself and some superiors from the consequences of these gross errors of judgment, Lieutenant-General Pal evidently fabricated records underplaying the role of his most successful subordinate.
 
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One thing is surely proved that your Army Men are good story writers....
Well internal politics is way better than outright coup and army playing national politics, if you are getting the drift.
 
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You are closing your eyes like a pigeon.

read it carefully

yeah and same to you. General Pal underplayed role of Brigadier Singh. Singh was fighting 600 infiltrators and he recorded only 45.
 
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One thing is surely proved that your Army Men are good story writers....

No this shows our power even though intelligence agencies failed to calculate the enemy troops, we able to capture that




Btw our climax of story is still batalik sector is with our control . . And also reality is the same . :toast_sign:
 
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Firstly, Post this in the Military History section Mods.

Secondly, calm down my Indian friends, I am sure we can discuss this in a very friendly tone, no need to be so aggressive. So if we all cooperate and discuss, it would create a friendly environment like the "Pakistan India alliance thread"? Same goes to my Pakistani friends

We cool?
 
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Desperation, Desperation, Desperation...................explains all

Ok i ve not read the article.

But since ur posting like u ve read it all..

Can u please tel me as to wat u read that implies this is a "Failed War" or for Pakistan to rejoice abt..??

The ultimate thing in the war that we care abt is this :

k03-01.jpg
 
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Firstly the heading of the thread is completely misleading and to those thinking that it shows a failure on part of IA you are over reacting..

I was watching this story since noon and was lucky to watch interviews of brigadier Singh and then IA chief General Malik, so I would try to explain the story in short and what the case really is,

Brigadier Singh was handling operation in Batalik sector during kargil war and had differences of opinion over the number(600 versus 45) and type of insurgents(mujahiden or regular PA) in the area and the number IA jawans required to tackle them.
eventually bri. Singh's voice was heard and was given the required jawans and command to handle the task which he completed with exemplary skills by winning batalik sector (also the first sector to be completed cleared in kargil war) and during the process was injured himself while leading from the front.

Lt.general Pal took it personally and diluted this exemplary courage by not giving due credit to brigadier Singh in War Records which eventually resulted him not receiving a war medal and subsequent promotion. So mr. Singh went to the court and won the case.

then army chief malik accepts the discrepancies and courts verdict clearly vindicating brigadier Singh's stand and rejecting lt.genral Pal.

The only part where its shameful for the Indian army is that personal differences between officers at higher ranks had taken place after the war(even though there were differences during the war common sense prevailed at that time and no fighting capabilities of IA got affected i.e PA didnt get any benefit due to infighting) and resulted in injustice to one of the bravest officers. The good thing is that brigadier Singh has been rightly vindicated albeit after nearly 11 years.

Now where did the IA lose the war??
 
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