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isn't the device held in the image below luks alittle like the india's 35$ tablet ...hehe luks like kapil sibal is using some military spinoff tech!!!!

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That is hardly the case.

All tablets look about the same. , its a pad with a screen

Military gear is far more advanced and complicated, for one thing more durable , more battery , better network adapter real time date transfers. Some sort of encryption and decryption system.

point being , the same motherboard cannot be used in both , thus different machines.
 
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That is hardly the case.

All tablets look about the same. , its a pad with a screen

Military gear is far more advanced and complicated, for one thing more durable , more battery , better network adapter real time date transfers. Some sort of encryption and decryption system.

point being , the same motherboard cannot be used in both , thus different machines.


OHO.... aap to serious hi ho gaye.... main to bas majak kar raha tha paaji !!!!!

JUST JOKING !!!!



i still feel that they might be similiar ...hehe :D :D ;) ;)
 
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India Chooses U.S.-Built Javelin Anti-Tank Missile​


NEW DELHI - The Indian Army has decided to buy the Javelin anti-tank guided missile (ATGM), Defence Ministry sources here said.

The decision comes within a month of media reports that Pakistan had included the Javelin on its wish list of U.S. weapons it wants to purchase. Senior Indian Defence Ministry officials had favored buying Israeli-made Spike ATGMs until those reports.

India's Javelin-purchase decision is final, ministry sources said. The missile's sale to India was approved in the U.S. last week, but the amount and cost are not yet known.

The fire-and-forget Javelin weapon system is produced by a joint venture of U.S. companies Raytheon and Lockheed Martin. The anti-armor weapon also has a direct-attack mode for use against buildings or fortifications.

The Indian Army began considering acquiring the Javelin after it rejected the Spike during trials in 2008.

The Army's tests of the Javelin in land exercises last year were satisfactory, a service official said.

The Javelin purchase would be in addition to the Indian Nag ATGM, which already has been ordered. The Army's current ATGM arsenal includes old Milan and Konkours missiles.
 
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Guys,
I wanted to know where do the Snipers of IA get training.Where is the course held?How many soldiers get trained in an year and in an infantry battalion how many snipers are there.Thanks in advance!

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Indian Army rescues a man from flash flood in Rajouri


The Indian Army rescued a man who had been trapped for 30 hours in a flash flood in the river Aans in the border district of Rajouri, Jammu and Kashmir, on Thursday.

The Army and local police, first took up the rescue operation using ropes and tubes, but failed, as the flow of river water was too high.

Later, officials of the Air Force were contacted and a helicopter was despatched for the rescue operation.

"At night he was here when he shouted it was known that he is trapped in the flood. I got to know about in the morning between 8 to 9 am. Then immediately we contacted Air Force through Divisional Commissioner. He assured us that a helicopter would try and when weather was favorable, we started the rescue operation," said Ghulam Ahmad Khwaja, Deputy Commissioner, Rajouri.

The man, named Abdul Hamid, remained stranded on the rock the entire night in the middle of the flooding river shouting for help.

"I was stuck in the river flood. I am really thankful to the Army men who rescued," said Hamid.

Hamid had taken his cattle for grazing when he was trapped in the floodwaters caused by rainfall over the past two days. By Abdul Jabbar (ANI)



Indian Army rescues a man from flash flood in Rajouri



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Thats a good observation sir...but i found this pic..here you can clearly see the multi caliber weapon poster in the background.

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Whoa

How is it no one took a picture of that board.

Look behind the Gun guys , you can clearly see the F-INSAS systems , including the gun. Which appears to have
*bullpup design
*Under Barrel grenade launcher
*Standard Scope sights
*laser range finder


kudos to Prateek for spotting it. :cheers:

it also clearly shows that the gun is being developed by

*Armament Research & Development Establishment (ARDE)

a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). Located in Pune, it is the main DRDO lab involved in the development of Conventional Armaments.

*High Energy Materials Research Laboratory (HEMRL)

a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). Located in Pune, its main function is the research and development of technologies and products in the area of High Energy Materials and Explosive materials. HEMRL is organized under the Armaments Directorate of DRDO. The present director of HEMRL is Dr. A. Subhananda Rao.

HEMRL has a core strength of 1200 personnel, comprising chemists, physicists, mathematicians, chemical, mechanical and electronic engineers. It is recognised as a postgraduate centre for basic and applied research and is an ISO-9001:2000 certified laboratory.

*Defence Metallurgical Research Laboratory (DMRL)

a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). Located in Defence Research Complex, Kanchanbagh, Hyderabad, it is responsible for the development and manufacture of complex metals and materials required for modern warfare and weapon systems.
 
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Army is green


When Major-General Thomas Hardwicke took the steamer back to England in 1835, he had with him a treasure — the largest collection of drawings of Indian animals ever formed by an individual. Hardwicke, who arrived in India in 1778 as a cadet in the Bengal artillery, was the first to pursue a “scientific investigation of India’s natural history”.

An aspect that is quite unsung, unfortunately, is the kind of engagement the Indian Army has had with natural history and conservation. A comprehensive pictorial, glossy, coffee table book titled Natural History and the Indian Army, published jointly by the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) and the Oxford University Press, addresses this shortcoming. And it does it well.

The book brings together articles written by army officers who were naturalists, photographers and sportsmen, that were published in the issues of the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society (JBNHS) from 1886, when the first issue of the Journal was brought out, 3 years after the BNHS was formed.

This treasure trove has been edited by J C Daniel, a keen naturalist, author and former honorary secretary of the BNHS, and Lt Gen Baljit Singh (Retd.), who played a role in promoting an interest in wildlife and conservation in the army. Singh was also a trustee of the WWF-India. One wonders whether this publication really falls in the coffee-table category, for the text is thorough and at the same time, exceptionally engaging.

The book opens with a detailed account of the Indian Army’s contribution over the two and one quarter centuries, from 1778 to 2002, penned by Lt Gen Baljit Singh. He chronicles the work of these illustrious army officer-naturalists in India.

The list of army men who followed Hardwicke is illustrious: Capt Sykes, Col RW Burton and his brother Brig Gen RG Burton, Col Fenton, Lt Col ASG Jayakar, Surgeon Major TC Jerdon, whose work on birds and mammals is stupendous, Lt Col AH Mosse, Col Kirtikar, Lt Col SR Tickell, Col Swinhoe, Brig Evans, Col Bingham, Col Sir RN Chopra, who was the only Indian in the army to have been knighted for his work in natural history, Col RSP Bates and Lt Col KG Gharpurey, besides others.

It contains excellent pictures that include paintings taken from T C Jerdon’s 1846 book, “Illustrations of Indian Ornithology”, illustrations such as that from “Indian Serpents”, an 1801 published book by Patrick Russell, and photographs, both black and white and in colour, including those taken by present day naturalists/wildlife photographers.

The first article featured in this collection is by Lt Col K R Kirtikar on the Strychnine tree. A highly poisonous tree, it has its supposed uses as a purgative, and as a curative in fever and even snake bites.

Lt Col L L Fenton, a keen sportsman (shikari), writes on all aspects of the

Kathiawar lion. Even in 1909, when this article was penned, the lion’s home was limited to the Gir forest. The article describes how the home of the species dwindled due to human-related factors and others, like famine.

A quarter of the 24 articles contained in the book are by Lt Col Richard. W Burton. A fearless sportsman, he wrote over 200 articles on various aspects of natural history. “A History of Shikar in India” traces the sport right from the pre Mughal period to contemporary times, both species-wise and area-wise. Here, in this book are also featured his article on the wild dog and another on his experiences fishing for the mahseer.

Of great significance is his article “Wild Life Preservation: India’s Vanishing Asset” (1948). He was “the first naturalist to campaign for the preservation of Indian wildlife”, and this article here was actually a pamphlet prepared by the army on “the dire need for the conservation of the wildlife of the country” and was sent to the Indian government.

An insightful and comprehensive article authored by Brig WH Evans is on the butterflies of India. In this 1922 article he writes about collecting butterflies, an activity that has, of course, since been prohibited by the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.

Lt Col AHE Mosse’s article on the leopard, the panther, is on the methods of sighting it. He also gives graphic descriptions of his personal experiences. The ‘sitting up’ method refers to ‘sitting up’ for the animal over either a kill or a live bait. “The most usual site for a machan is a leafy tree, though a sheltered rock or a thick bush with a bank behind will sometimes afford an excellent position,” he points out.

Bird photographer Lt Col RSP Bates (1942) made quite a pioneering contribution to bird photography in India.

He gives an account of the birds he encounters in the Kazinag Range in Kashmir in June of 1942. Slaty-headed paroquets, yellow-billed magpies, Kashmir rollers, Indian red-breasted flycatchers, and Jerdon’s hedge-sparrows are only some of those birds.

“To Col Frank Wall we are indebted more than to any other man for our knowledge of the Indian snakes,” write the book’s editors. The colonel’s articles on the cobra (1913) from his book, “A Popular Treatise on the Common Indian Snakes” and the golden-tree snake (1908) are exhaustive, to say the least.

Now for that one article that made for very captivating reading, even sweet at times. It was, for this reviewer, “The Asian Elephant” by Lt Col J H Williams, (Elephant Bill, also the eponymous title of the book he authored).

And just to let you into what the article is about, without telling you too much, the author draws the similarity between the elephant and man. I fell in love with this story!

It is an engrossing and inspiring book. When I turned the last page, I wanted to see and converse with the writers. And hear of their passion, the thrill, direct, first hand. I highly recommended this book.



Army is green | | | Indian Express




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INDIAN ARMY SHOULD INDUCT MULTI PURPOSE ASSAULT RIFLE LIKE THE ONE BELOW

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Children of the tehreek


When columns of the Indian Army drove through Srinagar on 7 July, rifles pointed out at the city, it was meant as a show of force; to tell its ‘mutinous’ population – and those watching elsewhere – just who was really in charge. Disconcertingly for the Indian government, it has had the opposite effect. Alarm bells have been sounding off: the situation in Kashmir is again explosive; the lid looks ready to blow off.

Although the army has for years virtually controlled rural Kashmir, images of grim-faced soldiers on a ‘flag-march’ in Srinagar carried a different symbolism. For Srinagar has been the exception – the showpiece of ‘normalcy’, of a possible return to the bosom of India’s accommodating heart. Typically, the well-publicised entry of the soldiers was followed by a flurry of obtuse clarifications: the army was not taking over Srinagar; this was not a flag-march, only a ‘movement of a convoy’; yes, it was a flag-march, but only in the city’s ‘periphery’. The contradictions seemed to stem from a reluctance to deal with the elephant in the room: after more than 15 years, the army had once again been called out to stem civil unrest in Srinagar.

When the Indian Army was deployed in Kashmir during the 1990s, the rebellion seemed to be fast spinning out of India’s control. Twenty years later, what has changed? There is now a massive investment in a ‘security grid’, built with more than 500,000 security personnel and shored up by a formidable intelligence network, said to involve some 100,000 people. The armed militancy, too, has officially been contained. Meanwhile, the exercise of ‘free and fair’ elections has been carried out to persuade the world that democracy has indeed returned to Kashmir. (Elections certainly delivered the young and telegenic Omar Abdullah as Chief Minister; but about democracy, Kashmiris will be less sanguine. They will recognise it the day the military columns and camps are gone from the valley.)

Yet July was haunted by echoes of the early years of the tehreek, the movement for self-determination. As a brutally imposed lockdown curfew entered its fourth day, there was no safe passage past the paramilitary checkpoints – not for ambulances, not for journalists. For those four days, Srinagar’s newspapers were not published; local cable channels were restricted to just 10 minutes a day, and still had to make time for official views. SMS services remained blocked the entire month; in some troubled towns, cell-phone services were completely discontinued. But Srinagar still reverberated with slogans every night, amplified from neighbourhood mosques: ‘Hum kya chahte? Azadi!’ (What do we want? Freedom!) and ‘Go back, India! Go back!’

War of perception
The real barometer of the panic in the Indian establishment, though, was not the army’s flag march. It was the frantic speed (and dismal quality) of the attempts to obscure the crisis. In place of politics, it was once again left to disinformation to staunch the haemorrhage. At first, the Home Ministry began with the improbable charge that the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Toiba was organising and funding stone-throwing on the streets of Srinagar. This was a rather tame accusation for a militant group whose real signature is the ferocity of its attacks, as displayed clearly in the Mumbai strikes of November 2008. The only people who appeared to swallow this line were the loyal television anchors on the ‘national’ media; but with no real evidence to go on, even they let the mess quietly slide off the table.

Evidence arrived soon enough, when the Home Ministry made available a taped phone conversation between two men described as ‘hardliner’ separatists. As the audio crackled and hissed, television channels provided translations: ‘There must be some more deaths’; ‘10-15 people must be martyred’; ‘You are getting money but not doing enough’. Despite the comic-book directness, it sounded like serious business. In the context of such ‘evidence’, mainstream television channels began parachuting their star power into Srinagar, and the empty, silent city became the backdrop against which they could stage their own spectacle.

The CNN-IBN correspondent, happily embedded inside an army truck as it made its way through Srinagar, was extolling the impact of the flag march (even as an official was busy denying that there had been any such thing). NDTV provided its usual high-wire balancing act, with Barkha Dutt dredging up the ‘pain on both sides’. The grief of the mourning father of 17-year-old Tufail Mattoo, killed when his skull was taken apart by a teargas shell, was weighed against a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) commandant ruing the damage to his truck’s bulletproof windscreen. But such expedient journalism paled before far more damaging hubris. While these ‘national’ reporters had the run of curfew-bound Srinagar, they omitted to mention that their Srinagar-based colleagues – local, national and even international journalists – had been locked in their homes and offices for three days.

While the spin generated by New Delhi probably has an impact on the middle-class viewer of the mainstream Indian media, it has little effect on people in Kashmir. On the ground, they continue to make sense of their own reality. The inability, or refusal, to comprehend this has become endemic to all arms of the Indian state. An exaggerated, even fluid, notion of reality takes its place, in which perception is everything. This was underlined forcefully in June when the chiefs of the army, navy and air force announced the new ‘Doctrine on Military Psychological Operations’, a policy document that aims to create a ‘conducive environment’ for the armed forces operating in ‘sub-conventional’ operations such as Kashmir and the Northeast. The doctrine reportedly provides guidelines for ‘activities related to perception management’. Manipulating the output of a few dozen newspapers and television channels is certainly hard work, but nothing compared with the much harder task of understanding – perhaps even accommodating – the aspirations of Kashmiris.

Out of touch
The intensity of the crisis did help in one way, though: it forced some candour out of the familiar faces of Kashmiri politics. (These are the visible ones, called up in times of crisis to represent Kashmir on television. The invisible ones were, as usual, already in detention.) Mehbooba Mufti of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) admitted on television that mainstream (or pro-India) political parties have lost all credibility, and now have no role to play in stemming the anger in the streets. When asked why politicians were not taking out ‘peace marches’, former separatist and now ‘mainstream’ leader Sajjad Lone bluntly said that all of them ran the risk of being lynched by the people. Meanwhile, all the oxygen was taken up by discussion of the survival of Omar Abdullah’s government, something that mattered little to protestors.

Amidst the baying chorus of TV panellists outraged by the gall of ‘stone-pelters’, many have forgotten that in 1991 it was precisely such public demonstrations – and civilian casualties at the hands of the CRPF – that finally triggered a full-fledged armed militancy. In recent weeks, Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s language has shown how out of touch he is, joining the talk of ‘miscreants’ with his comments about ‘frayed tempers’ and waiting for ‘tempers to cool down’. Across the board, this disconnect with the structures of electoral politics helped to put the elections of two years ago in some perspective.

In 2007, I finished a documentary film on Kashmir, which had tried to pull back from the quagmire of everyday events to understand the inchoate ‘sentiment’ for azadi. Quite by coincidence, the film arrived at the very moment that the constructed ‘normalcy’ of Kashmir was about ready to be shown off: tourists were flowing in, more than 400,000 people had taken part in the pilgrimage to the Amarnath shrine, and elections were being discussed. Screenings of the documentary in India were often met with raised eyebrows, with people incredulous that such sentiments could survive the weight of the cast-iron security grid – and, of course, the passage of 20 years. Yet things can change in a day, and so they did.

In early summer 2008, isolated protests broke out over the acquisition of land for the Amarnath Shrine Board. This eventually turned into the most formidable upsurge of the past decade, with peaceful demonstrations of up to 20,000 people at a time. The cascading protests carried on for several months before being curbed, but not before more than 60 people lost their lives to the bullets of the security forces. In the summer of 2009, Shopian district was shaken by the rape and murder of two young women; once again, mostly peaceful protests paralysed the valley, and Shopian town was shut down for an unprecedented 47 days. The cycle of street violence in 2010 too began several months ago, with the uncovering of the Machil killings, where soldiers of the Indian Army (including a colonel and a major) were charged with the murder of three civilians, presenting them as militants for the reward money (see accompanying story by Dilnaz Boga). Protests led to the killing of protesters, which has led to more protests, and more killings.

New front
What do Kashmiris want? Most of all, even before azadi, they want justice. As they watched the Indian Army columns moving through Srinagar last month, Kashmiris would have been reminded that the protests this summer started with the Army in the killing fields of Machil. But like the Shopian incident, Machil too has begun to be edged off the burner, and forgotten, as have the hundreds of such killings that civil-society groups have painstakingly tried to resurrect. So, just as elections cannot be confused with democracy in Kashmir, an elected government is no substitute for a working justice system. Meanwhile, the prolonged use of the Public Safety Act, and the dangerous license of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, is slowly wearing thin for the young. This July, as the numbing news of young Kashmiris being shot in street protests started pouring in, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, the chairman of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, told the press that ‘the baton of the freedom struggle has now been passed on to the next generation’. He could have added that, over twenty years, the baton might also have moved from the armed militancy and the ‘separatists’, straight onto the street.

As the taped phone conversation provided by the Home Ministry was being celebrated on TV, in only a few hours a more accurate translation of what was actually an innocuous conversation was burning through the Internet. This phone ‘evidence’ evaporated under the heat of scrutiny, its effects felt even in Delhi newsrooms. Such a speedy deconstruction of a suspect claim is only the latest in the deeply political use of the Internet by young Kashmiris. These are children of the tehreek, born and brought up in the turmoil of the last two decades. They have not, and probably will not, become armed mujahideen. But thousands are out on the streets, throwing stones, occasionally drawing blood, often taking hits, but in any case successfully paralysing the increasingly bewildered security forces. What armed militant could achieve more?

So will the Internet be the next threat for the Home Ministry? Will they accuse the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen of supporting the Facebook chatter about the ‘intifada’ in Kashmir? And after that? Already, young Kashmiris on social-networking sites are reporting phone calls from belligerent police officers, threatening them with serious charges including ‘waging war against the state’. Reports said that Qazi Rashid, the young mirwaiz of south Kashmir, has been accused of ‘instigating violence and justifying stone-pelting’ – through Facebook.




Himal Southasian/Children of the tehreek




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Indian Army Chief’s confession



Kashmir is the core issue of conflict between Pakistan and India and has lead to war between them on more than one occasion. After the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, there had been a long period with relatively few direct armed conflicts involving the military forces of the two neighbors - notwithstanding the efforts of both nations to control the Siachen Glacier by establishing military outposts on the surrounding mountains ridges and the resulting military skirmishes in the 1980s and also fought a Kargil conflict in 1998. In an attempt to defuse the situation, many times both countries agreed for dialogues for Kashmir issue but there was no implementation of these agreements but till now this tension remains the same between Pakistan and India.

But now there is some ambiguity about the status of Kashmir as Indian Army Chief General VK Singh has confessed of failures of the Indian Army in occupied Kashmir. In the first such narration over the years, he said the ‘basic reason’ behind the flare-up in the Kashmir valley was the failure to build on the gains that had been made by the Indian security forces in the occupied state, this statement is given on 13 July, 2010. On one hand this statement shows that India accepted her wrong head ness over Kashmir but on the other hand this statement degrade the Indian image at international level because India for many decades are trying to annex Kashmir with itself but now all of the sudden India concedes its mistakes regarding Kashmir issue. This change shows that there must be some rationale or strategy of India behind this statement by their army chief. Now its time to analyze that why India is doing so and what will be the implication of this Indian army chief’s statement for Pakistan.

Pakistan and India both have their interests in Kashmir e.g. flow of water from Kashmir which comes in India and Pakistan as well, that’s why both countries want to annex Kashmir with themselves. But now India talks about the Kashmir as an independent state perhaps for few reasons. Firstly India is emerging as a regional power but there is some negative image in the world about India due to its wrong head ness over Kashmir, so now perhaps India wants to improve its image in the world by talking about the independency of Kashmir. Secondly India by separating Kashmir will be capable to counter the cross border terrorism and will get rid off from unwanted activities by the infiltrators and freedom fighters in India. Thirdly India also has some interest in Kashmir but at some extent because water flow form Kashmir to India is a major interest for India but India already made dams and stored water for future use, similarly Indian influence will be remained the same on Kashmir even Kashmir becomes independent state so India can afford to loose Kashmir. Fourthly India is emerging power and now its focus on the prosperity and wants to become hegemonic rather than engage in territorial disputes with Kashmir. Similarly the statement of Indian army chief has some implications for Pakistan as well. Firstly Pakistan has more interests in Kashmir as compare to India and secondly Pakistan will never be agree with the independent status of Kashmir because if Pakistan accepts the Kashmir as an independent state then Pakistan will also have to loose its northern part which will be annexed with Kashmir and after loosing the Northern part Pakistan will deprive of trade root because northern part is the major trade root of Pakistan. Secondly Pakistan for water depends on Kashmir because water flows from Kashmir to Pakistan. Thirdly, due to these interests Pakistan will wish to annex Kashmir with herself, in this way India will be free from blame that India don’t want to separate Kashmir but all blames will come on Pakistan in the world and its a Indian strategy to put Pakistan at the front because India always try to destabilize Pakistan by some how. Fourthly if Kashmir will become independent then there is a chance that Kashmir would like to make its strong alliances with India as compare to Pakistan because India is a emerging and strong power while Pakistan is a weaker state so threat perceptions for Pakistan is more as compare to India if Kashmir become independent. It’s an Indian strategy to destabilize and demoralize Pakistan while talking about the independent status of Kashmir.

About Kashmir issue there is also some role of extra regional powers. US have good alliances with India and in case of Pakistan US are just using Pakistan as a front line for war on terror. USA and India security cooperation is flourishing. US wants India as a hegemonic power over the Muslim world so US support India in every aspects, even US gave India an assistance in the development of nuclear power industry even though India has refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Similarly US promised to provide security umbrella to India. It is also said that due to US, UN did not resolve Kashmir dispute. So US while preserving its own national interests using India as a tool. In Kashmir issue US yet did not play a positive role but now US wants Kashmir as independent state just to put Pakistan under more pressure and for this purpose US is using India as a tool and assured to preserve India’s interests while providing security umbrella to India. So it can be said that the statement by Indian army chief is a strategy which includes the Indo-US interests to destabilize Pakistan further.

It is concluded that the statement by Indian army chief and his acceptance of mistakes regarding Kashmir issue shows that India has some new strategy against Pakistan while keeping her own interests remains the same. Similarly US also has its role in the formulation of this strategy at some extent perhaps because of the same interests of Indo-US that is to put Pakistan in more problems and to destabilize Pakistan by making Pakistan vulnerable regarding Kashmir dispute. Although Kashmir problem can be resolved through by diplomatic channels and US and UN both can resolve Kashmir dispute or Kashmir issue can be presented in International Court of Justice. But behind every crisis US factor always present. US don’t want Pakistan to come out from crises and using India as a tool especially in Kashmir dispute. So it can be said that the statement by Indian army chief is a new strategy by Indo-US against Pakistan.



Indian Army Chief’s confession




:sniper: :mod:
 
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Guys,
I wanted to know where do the Snipers of IA get training.Where is the course held?How many soldiers get trained in an year and in an infantry battalion how many snipers are there.Thanks in advance!

Many thanks for that poster of MCW,

For your query -

1) IA Snipers get training,course at Belgaum - Infantry School

2) In an infantry Battalion we have roughly about 20 Snipers ( See this is rough estimate bcoz no of ghatak associated with a IB is about 20-25 . Each of them having Sniper course .)
i think there is no dedicated Sniper force in IA like Israel/Germany as such , all these ghatak commando are trained for Sniper training separately . Any time one can shift to dedi Sniper's role.
3) We have about 8000-10000 Ghatak commandos , so yeah for 390 IB it comes roughly as 20-25.
4) Not sure how many Soldiers et trained there , ask Indian-Army Sir or Flaming Arrow
 
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