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Yes, these we retained after Kargil.r they still with us?
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Yes, these we retained after Kargil.r they still with us?
The difference is that they succeeded in Siachen, Musharraf failed miserably in Kargil and then covered himself through lies and more shameful acts.
Very true, and I’d look forward to your analysis of it. From my reading however, Kargil ended in failure. I’ve heard various strategic aims and objectives of the conflict, and on the basis of those aims too, I think it can be judged a failure.From a military point of view, that depends no how we define victory in these different scenarios.
Very true, and I’d look forward to your analysis of it. From my reading however, Kargil ended in failure. I’ve heard various strategic aims and objectives of the conflict, and on the basis of those aims too, I think it can be judged a failure.
And what little territory was captured IMO was not worth all the trouble, not worth squandering a peace process and good will, not worth the economic or diplomatic cost, not worth the lives. Conversely, I think we failed to exact such a cost on India for Siachen.
I agree with your assessment of the worth of the territory, but could we have realistically retained those territories at all I wonder? Escalation ladder was in Indian control, and they seemed to dictate how far they’d be willing to go to dislodge us.The territory which we had captured, troops were already taking the full benefit out of it but interdicting Indian movement on their important lateral, the erstwhile Highway 1A. That was a very serious problem for Indian Army....our troops looking right on them, their most important line of communication.
That territory was of worth to be captured, however, it would have benefited us if we would have retrained it. It would have had the same effect, reverse though,, in Tangdhar sector of indian army, where they look on our main road.
not only tangdhar but keran too is like a chicken neck in enemy hands.The territory which we had captured, troops were already taking the full benefit out of it but interdicting Indian movement on their important lateral, the erstwhile Highway 1A. That was a very serious problem for Indian Army....our troops looking right on them, their most important line of communication.
That territory was of worth to be captured, however, it would have benefited us if we would have retrained it. It would have had the same effect, reverse though,, in Tangdhar sector of indian army, where they look on our main road.
Presenting you one of the greatest and brave COAS in the history of Pakistan and EX President General Pervez Musharraf.
When asked by an Indian Journalist: Do you have regret about Kargil?
Musharraf: Do you have regret about dividing Pakistan and Siachin?
No matter what he has done with the rest of the things He has always took India, Indian media and their leadership very strongly.
Long Live Musharaf! He has gifted India Kashmir for eternity with his Kargil misadventure.
The only people Musharaff was brave against was the unarmed Pashtuns that he dropped bombs on and sold Pakistan to America for cheap dollars.
No harm in over throwing a criminal run civil government.He is the biggest traitor this country has ever seen. Not only did he overthrow a civilian government to sell Pakistan for upcoming war on terror for America, he then unleashed every criminal that had done corruption by giving NRO.
Add his mishandling of Baluchistan issue to the list as well.Cringe, he caused immense damage to Pakistan by taking part in the WOT. What he should have done is not helped the US invade Afghanistan full stop.
There were no limits to that alliance. No negotiations, just prostrating infront of each and every demand thrown at us without any quid pro quo. Result was a disaster of epic proportions.siding with US in WOT was the best decision Pakistan could make for its survival
Its not army's job. Do we want to live in a banana republic where military is not answerable and doesnot care about norms and laws ? Only makes matters worse.No harm in over throwing a criminal run civil government.
He saved Pakistan from another waziristan type situation and now baluchistan is much better except for terrorists being pickup and then indian twitter army complaining about missing person bs.Add his mishandling of Baluchistan issue to the list as well.
US wanted to have their boots on the ground with bases for warplanes which he prevented. what other negotiation were you looking for?He brought Pakistan to the brink of internal collapse.
There were no limits to that alliance. No negotiations, just prostrating infront of each and every demand thrown at us without any quid pro quo. Result was a disaster of epic proportions.
bugti is now rotting in hell and most of bla dismantled other then few idiots who casually show up from across the border and then go missing the next night.Myopic policies and mishandling of Bugti and Laal Masjid are additional feathers in his cap which turned Pakistanis against each other. Army men couldn't go out in public in uniforms during that time, thats how bad it was.
only civilians can rule is only a new modern concept.Its not army's job. Do we want to live in a banana republic where military is not answerable and doesnot care about norms and laws ? Only makes matters worse.
I agree with your assessment of the worth of the territory, but could we have realistically retained those territories at all I wonder? Escalation ladder was in Indian control, and they seemed to dictate how far they’d be willing to go to dislodge us.
I’ve said in the past that I think Kargil planning and timing were both off. We had a few months of reserves in Q1-2 1998, our Air Force by their own estimation was at a disadvantage against the Indians, and initially denying that these were our troops could only work as a strategy up to a point. Beyond which circumstances would force us to own the conflict openly, or leave us unable to respond to escalation. At which point the former would force the brunt of the blame and diplomatic pressure directly on our shoulders for starting a conflict. We were snubbed by everyone during Kargil, even our allies in China refused to back us, the US was not interested in walking the Indians back from anything better than unconditional withdrawal.
I think the biggest issue with the Kargil plan was that it failed to account for broader consequences of starting even a limited conflict. The recent aerial spat showed us the importance of international and internal credibility when engaging in a conflict. And also, Musharraf and his close aides chose not to consult other arms of the military and the civilian government, the trade off for secrecy might have been that scenarios that involved significant escalation and diplomatic pressure mixed in were not wargamed.
I think that in the right conditions, with the necessary credibility, or at least a well thought out plan for managing escalation, another kind of Kargil conflict could have been a major success.
only civilians can rule is only a new modern concept.
During Muslim's prime rule 400-1600s usually rulers came from military background and led their men from the front. prime example Prophet mohammed PBUH...
Cringe, he caused immense damage to Pakistan by taking part in the WOT. What he should have done is not helped the US invade Afghanistan full stop.
He can take his strong talk to his grave. He ruined the country for his own survival and laid down flat on a single call from US. So don't tell me of his ability to be a leader. Tell me the mental state of you folk who have this kind of clowns as your ideals of life.