35TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE IPKF INTERVENTION IN SRI LANKA / OP PAWAN
LT COL MANOJ K CHANNAN,VETERAN
India has been celebrating it’s victory on the creation of
Bangladesh and the capture of 93000, Pakistan Army prisoners of war; OP VIJAY
has taken precedence over the 1971 war being more recent and since 1999, has
been celebrated each year.
In OPERATION VIJAY the
casualties suffered were 527 as available in the public domain. To commemorate
this victory, bicycle, motorcycle rallies and many public events are held at
various locations, which culminate at the Drass War Memorial.
Conversely OPERATION PAWAN was launched on 30th of
July 1987 on the signing of the Indo Sri Lanka Peace Accord between Late Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi and Sri Lanka President Junius Richard Jayewardene.
Thirty-Five years later with 1300 killed in action and
approximately 3500 grievously injured have been kept away from public memory on
the sacrifice of the Indian Servicemen in a foreign country.
This was the first overseas tri service peace keeping
operation launched to bring relief to the Tamils of Sri Lanka who were under
duress, the local laws had been amended by an act of parliament to bring the
stature of the Sri Lankan Tamil to a status of a second grade citizen.
The Tamil youth took to the gun and this movement was
supported by the Sri Lankan Tamils overseas who launched a campaign for an Elam
(freedom) from the shackles of the Sinhala regime.
The political parties of Tamil Nadu provided safe haven in
Tamil Nadu and gave their whole hearted support to their country cousins in Sri
Lanka. The Central Government at the centre was under an inexperienced Prime
Minister who was keen to see India as a regional power. In 1984 the Prime
Minister on the assassination of his mother got elected on a popular sympathy
vote. Egged on by his close coterie of friends, he wanted to take rapid strides
by engaging with Pakistan and China.
China wanting to test the waters, attempted an expansionist
movement in the Sumdrong Chu area; this was negated by Exercise Chequerboard; to
blunt the Chinese land grab.
Indian Army simultaneously undertook Brass Tacks series of
exercises, culminating in Exercise Brass Tacks IV, which involved the mobilisation
of India's offensive corps in the deserts of Rajasthan along with the Indian
Air Force and the Indian Navy.
The Tamil rebel groups were engaged in a guerrilla war with
the Sri Lankan Army. Sri Lankan government launched an offensive in Jaffna in
end May 1987. The local population was denied food and medicines, which resulted
in India launching humanitarian aid through Tamil Nadu fishermen on 19 fragile 32-foot-long, 96 horse power fishing boats, bearing Red
Cross flags. Each boat carried two tonnes of cargo; pulses, kerosene, bread,
matchsticks, tamarind, vegetables, milk powder and salt. But the main article
was rice, 27 tonnes in all. This was contested by the Sri Lankan Navy as these
boats attempted to enter the Sri Lankan waters.
As a contingency plan
in anticipation of a blockade at sea, five AN 32 transport aircraft of the IAF took
off from Bengaluru heading for Jaffna, 450 km away. There was excitement among
the seven journalists on board the lead aircraft; flying at 12000 feet. They
were escorted by four Mirage 2000 aircraft, for protection / intervention by
the Sri Lanka air force.
During this period
R&AW and selected regimental centres of the Indian Army were training LTTE
cadres to take on the Sri Lankan Army. The LTTE cadres would proudly wear the
uniforms; several LTTE leaders also accorded themselves self -styled ranks of
the Indian Army.
The Indian Government
had initially considered launching an offensive operation and was banking on
the support of the LTTE; akin to the Mukti Bahini during 1971 operations in
Bangladesh. The wily Sri Lankan president offered the olive branch of a peace
accord, which made the PM of India and the Sri Lankan President look like
statesmen. The only factor the two leaders did not take consider the defiant
mood of the LTTE supremo Prabhakaran.
All attempts to
getting Prabhakaran on board were failing. In a last resort attempt,
Prabhakaran was flown by his R&AW handlers from Chennai to New Delhi to
meet with the PM. Prabhakaran refused to change his stance, to consent to the
peace accord. The LTTE supremo was left to himself to manage his way back to Jaffna. This insult
was not forgotten and the revenge was taken on 21 May 1991 at Sri Perumbudur,
in which a suicide bomber targeted Rajiv Gandhi. Recently the co-accused were
released from jail having completed their prison terms.
Post the signing of
the Indo Sri Lanka peace accord on 29th July 1987 at Colombo, the
first troops of the Indian Peace Keeping Force landed at Jaffna on 30th
July 1987. The Indian Army was accorded a heros welcome at Jaffna.
The quick changing
operational orders had the military leadership was at its wits end to know when
would the amendment to the orders passed would come in. The load tables were in
disarray, some operational loads went by ship to Trincomalee and the troops
flown into Palali airfield of Jaffna.
The Indian Peace
Keeping Force, was kept away from going into Jaffna town. The mood was was
relaxed, there was a bonhomie that developed between the local population, LTTE
cadres and the IPKF.
The LTTE was to
surrender its arms and ammunition and the Sri Lankan government was
pressurising the IPKF to carry out its mandate to disarm the rebel groups.
The Sri Lankan Navy
apprehended 17 LTTE cadres on the high seas and brought them to Jaffna airfield
to be taken to Colombo. This deportation was prevented by surrounding the Sri
Lanka Air Force aircraft. The apprehended cadres went on hunger strike; LTTE leadership
requested that food packets be allowed to be sent in, which allowed the
smuggling of cyanide capsules resulting in the death of the cadres. This blew
the lid off the peace accord as LTTE reneged on all promises made and an armed
confrontation commenced on 10 October 1987. Units were without intelligence,
maps and had no clue of the terrain.
Infantry units were surprised
as the battalion support weapons and the ammunition were stored in a peace environment
and “friends of yesterday were enemies of the day”.
Armour and Mechanised
Infantry had been held back on main land, as offensive equipment had no role in
peace keeping operations.
An Army trained to
fight in a conventional operation overnight was engaged in fighting a
fleeting and a nimble enemy in built up areas and jungles; who operated in half
a dozen numbers and were agile to target the troops from coconut tree tops and
change positions frequently thus creating a decision dilemma in the commanders
at all levels on the actual strength engaging the IA.
The LTTE had in
anticipation blackened out all the road signs in English, reading Tamil was a
challenge. The smart use of Improvised Explosive Devices to knock out tanks,
infantry combat vehicles and soft skinned vehicles took a heavy toll. The improvised
claymore mines based on the US design but more devastating took its toll on the
troops moving on foot.
Its kudos to the
Indian Army’s junior military leadership and its troops to quickly learn on the
job to innovate their battle drills and procedures as well as minor tactics to more
than match the LTTE. The men rallied behind their officers who led from the
front, the ethos of Naam, Namak aur Nishaan was at play.
Many a heroic
engagement was fought, some good some bad. Unlike 1999, there was no direct
broadcast of the battles being fought, the era of cell phones was far away.
Logistics was at its poorest in Jaffna.
The Military planning,
the performance of all ranks was at its lowest ebb. Brig Manjit Singh,
commander of 41 Infantry Brigade took the bull by the horns and led his troops
from the front.
My regimental tanks
were flown in piecemeal on IL 76 Gajraj and on landing were ordered to move
towards Jaffna, without a map or clear orders. The Infantry units would use the
tanks to lead their advance.
In the first 72 hours
of operations there was ‘fog of war’.
Casualties suffered
and inflicted were many. Own battle casualties were flown by IAF aircraft to
Madras; LTTE battle casualties too were reportedly being treated at Madras in
the best of private hospitals.
The Indian Army was
engaged in full-fledged operations and simultaneously R&AW was engaged in
supplying the LTTE with all warlike stores, reflects on the conflict in the
Indian Political Leadership ably assisted by its intelligence agencies in a
stark difference on order being passed to the troops on ground.
What is the success of
a military campaign?
The success of a military campaign is evaluated based on the
degree of achievement of planned goals and objectives through combat and
noncombat operations. This is determined when one of the belligerent military
forces defeats the opposing military force within the constraints of the
planned resource, time and cost allocations.
To amplify each action fought would be impossible to narrate
in a short article, the list of Honours and Awards starting from a Param Vir
Chakra to Sena Medal Gallantry and Mention in Dispatches is adequate to state
that the Government of the day awarded the bravery and sacrifice of the men in
uniform.
The gallantry displayed and sacrifices made in OPERATION
PAWAN were no lesser than that displayed during OPeration VIJAY.
To my mind OP PAWAN was a success; keeping in mind the tasks
allocated to the GOC IPKF.
· The LTTE was inflicted
heavy casualties and it had to flee from Jaffna to the jungles of Vavuniya.
· Their supply lines were disrupted,
however due to support from Tamil Nadu main land and cross purposes of the
intelligence agencies this was not completely choked off.
· Peaceful elections were
conducted in the Northern and the Eastern provinces.
· Rehabilitation and aid
to civil authorities restored most of the civic agencies to start functioning.
· The Sri Lanka Armed
Forces and police was restricted to their camps and safe from annihilation by
the LTTE.
· The Sri Lankan army was
able to concentrate and fight against the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) in the Southern States
of Sri Lanka.
The political leadership had changed and
President Premadasa, sent his Army Chief to tell the GOC IPKF that he should de-induct
the IPKF from the island. GOC IPKF politely told the Sri Lankan Army Chief that
he didn’t take his orders from the Sri Lanka Government. The missive in a
letter from the President of Sri Lanka was carried back undelivered.
This emboldened the LTTE and Sri Lanka
Army once foes to join hands. LTTE commenced launching operations from Sri
Lanka Army bases in close vicinity of IPKF deployments.
GOC IPKF tasked his Combat Group
commanders to be prepared to launch assaults on Sri Lanka Armed Forces camps
and move towards Colombo with the first objective on the IPKF boundary line
with the central provinces.
The change in the Indian Political
leadership at the centre and the pull out of IPKF was ordered, which commenced
in end 1989 and was completed by April end 1990.
The heros of 1987 in Tamil Nadu were not
given a ceremonial welcome, the military leadership of the day distanced it
self since that day to date. The Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, the Army day Parade
commemoration of all battles fought have given this Operation a miss by a barge
pole length. Leadership across the board relegated the killed in action to an
anonymous funeral pyre on the island and the mainland.
The memories of the bloodshed and the
valour are only in the minds of the Veterans of OPERATION PAWAN, who are
determined that before fading away in history; they have made a strong resolve
to bring this legacy to the knowledge of the future generations and regain
their rightful place in the annals of military history.
The failures of the political leadership,
the arrogance of the Indian High Commissioner, the duplicity of the
intelligence agencies, the connivance of the Tamil Nadu police force, the
animosity of the Tamil Nadu local population, in hindsight seems that India as
a Nation was prepared to Fight its own Army and defeat it on a foreign land.
To acknowledge the collective defeat of
all the agencies against the tenacity and valour of the Indian Army perhaps
shames all of them collectively, who have failed India as agencies later during
OP VIJAY and in recent times OP SNOW LEAPORD.
The Indian Armed Forces can deal with an
external enemy, the enemy inside is more dangerous. Is it worth fighting for an
ungrateful lot, is a question that probably comes to the mind often, the
Chetwood Oath remains supreme as the commitment given is for life and not a
moment, even as one has hung his spurs and become frail in body but not in mind?
Lastly, when will we learn to respect the
sacrifice of those who were killed in OPERATION PAWAN, a war memorial in Sri
Lanka is an acknowledgement of the valour of our Bravehearts, sadly the country
implodes, for which once the Indian Defence Forces fought to keep it united and
peaceful.
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