Remembering the Kargil firestorm: Homage to a great victory

The Artillery Journal | Aug 4, 2004

The Indian artillery fired over 2,50,000 shells, bombs and rockets during the Kargil conflict. Three valiant officers and 34 brave soldiers of the Regiment of Artillery laid down their lives during the Kargil conflict in the true spirit of "Izzat O Iqbal" The COAS honoured three units of the Regiment of Artillery with the special award of COAS Unit Citation.

“An early military victory in the conflict thrust upon us by Pakistan in the Kargil Sector would not have been possible but for the overwhelming destruction caused by our artillery and the heavy casualties that our artillery firepower inflicted on the enemy… The Gunners fought shoulder-to-shoulder with the infantry… The entire artillery campaign, from planning at the Inception stage, rapid induction and deployment, evolution of the 100-gun concept in the application of fire, meticulously co-ordinated fire plans, skilful ammunition management and sustained effort over a period of two months, was efficiently conducted…

The Gunners have a glorious tradition of the pursuit of professional excellence and immense dedication. In Kargil they have added further to their traditionally exacting standards. With systematic and methodical planning and superb innovation, the Gunners overcame all hazards and challenges. Their heroic courage, their indomitable resolve to deliver and the supreme sacrifice made by many gallant martyrs in the highest traditions of the Indian Army are indeed laudable. The contribution of the artillery to the victory in Kargil will always be remembered”.

General V P Malik, PVSM, AVSM
Chief of the Army Staff
November 1999

 

In the first week of July 1999, the Indian Tricolour was hoisted on Tiger Hill and soon fluttered atop many other peaks in the high Himalayas of Kargil district. By mid-July 1999, Pakistan’s perfidious intrusions into territory on the Indian side of the Line of Control (LC) in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) had been undone. This Indian Army victory against daunting odds was underpinned by the overwhelming superiority of the firepower unleashed by the guns, mortars and rocket launchers of the Regiment of Artillery

Over a period of one and a halt months, concentrated artillery firepower had systematically destroyed the Pakistanis’ defences and, ultimately, as it says in the manuals, the artillery “broke the enemy’s will to fight”. It was acknowledged by no less than the Chief of Army Staff himself that artillery had paved the way for victory during the Kargil conflict. On the fifth anniversary of that famous victory, the Regiment remembers its martyrs, gallantry award winners, those who were wounded and maimed and all those who simply did their duty — courageously, tirelessly, uncomplainingly — with gratitude. This article 1s dedicated to the Gunner heroes of Kargil.

One Hundred Guns in Concert

Operation (Op) Vijay was a joint Infantry-Artillery endeavour to evict regular Pakistani soldiers of the Northern light Infantry (NLI) who had intruded across the LC into Indian territory and had occupied unheld high-altitude mountain peaks and ridgelines. When the initial attempt to beat them back were thwarted, it soon became clear that only massive and sustained firepower could destroy the intruders’ sangars and systematically break their will to fight through a process of attrition. It was realised that only a massive campaign of sustained degradation would enable the gallant infantrymen to close in with and evict the intruders. Thus began a unique saga in the history of the employment of artillery firepower in battle.

From mid-May to almost mid-June both time and effort were devoted to building up the guns and ammunition major logistics challenge. The first important ridgelinc to fall was Tololing in the Drass Sub-Sector on 13 June 1999. Tololing was captured after several weeks of bitter fighting. The attacks were preceded by sustained fire assaults from over one hundred artillery guns, mortars and rocket launchers firing in concert. Thousands of shells, bombs and rocket warheads wreaked havoc on the targets and prevented the enemy from interfering with the assault. The 155 mm Bofors and 105 mm IFG firing in the direct firing role from gun positions on the national highway under the nose of the enemy destroyed all visible sangars and forced the enemy to abandon several positions. The arcs of fire trailing behind the Bofors shells and Grad rockets provided an awesome sight and instilled the fear of Allah into the minds of Pakistan’s soldiers.

The capture of Tololing and the adjoining features paved the way for successive assaults to be launched on the Tiger Hill complex from several directions. In India’s first televised battle, after a series of multi-directional assaults, preceded by accurate and sustained preparatory bombardment by the artillery, Tiger Hill was re-captured on 05 July 1999, in some of the most bloody fighting ever in the annals of military history. Artillery FOOs led from the front, fought shoulder-to-shoulder with their infantry company commanders and brought down unbelievably accurate fire on the objectives. At Tiger Hill, the leading platoon closed in within 40 to 50 metres of the shelling before the company commander asked for artillery covering fire to be lifted.

Once again, more than one hundred guns delivered murderous fire assaults. Over 1,200 rounds of high explosive rained down on Tiger Hill in the space of five minutes and caused large-scale death and devastation. The Gunners of the Indian artillery fired their guns audaciously in the direct firing role under the very nose of Pakistani artillery observation posts (OPs), without regard for personal safety. Even 122 mm Grad Multi-Barreled Rocket Launchers (MBRLs) were employed in the direct firing role. Hundreds of shells and rocket warheads impacted on the pinnacle of Tiger Hill in full view of the TV cameras and the nation watched 1n rapt attention as the might as the Regiment of Artillery burst forth in magnificent glory.

Soon after the fall of Tiger Hill, Point 4875, another dominating feature to the west of Tiger Hill and jutting into the Mashkon Valley, was re-captured on 07 July 1999. Once again, the thunder of the guns rippled across the mountains and the valleys, the redgelines and the spurs emanating from them, the nullahs and the deep ravines between them. God must have looked down from the heavens and approved of this celestial orchestra for victory lay at the feet of the infantry when the guns shifted their menacing fire to other hapless targets. Point 4875 has since been re-named “Gun Hill” in honour of the stupendous performance of the Gunners in the Drass and Mashkoh Sub-Sectors.

A Firepower Triumph

While the nation’s attention was riveted on the fighting in the Drass Sector, steady progress was being made in the Batalik sector despite heavy casualties. In this sector, the terrain was much tougher and the enemy was far more strongly entrenched. The containment battle itself took almost a month. Artillery OPs were established on dominating heights and sustained artillery fire was brought down on the enemy continuously by day and night, thus allowing him no rest and steadily chipping away at his morale.

“It was for the first time that I realised the destructive power of concentrated artillery fire… An awesome sight greeted us when our troops reached the objective. The enemy’s sangars had been smashed to bits. The charred remains and mangled bodies of NLI soldiers were strewn all over. Weapons had been twisted out of shape. Ammunition boxes and kerosene drums had exploded and rations were still smouldering. There was not a boulder in sight, no matter what its size, that had not been cracked through by the artillery.”
Col O P Yadav CO 1 BIHAR

Point 5203 was re-captured on 21 June 1999 and Khalubar was re-captured on 06 July 1999. During the next few days, further attacks were pressed home against the remaining Pakistani posts 1n the Batalik Sub-Sector and these fell quickly after being pulverised by artillery fire. Once again, artillery firepower had played an important part in softening the defences and destroying the enemy’s battalion headquarters and logistics infrastructure.

The Indian artillery fired over 2,50,000 shells, bombs and rockets during the Kargil conflict. Approximately 5,000 artillery shells, mortar bombs and rockets were fired daily from 300 guns, mortars and MBRLs. Over 9,000 shells were fired the day Tiger Hill was regained. Such high rates of fire over long periods had not been witnessed anywhere in the world since the Second World War. Even during the Second World War, such sustained artillery firing on a single target was not common at all. The men at the guns had blisters on their hands from carrying and loading heavy shells and cartridges and were often themselves under enemy artillery fire. Yet they carried on relentlessly. No soldiers better than these exist anywhere in the world. The credit for bringing glory to the Regiment of artillery goes equally to the BC and OP parties for their steadfastness and courage under relentless enemy automatic weapons and artillery fire and to the valiant gun crews for their untiring efforts in providing continuous artillery fire over long duration despite adverse high altitude conditions.

In the end, the nation owed the victory in the Kargil conflict to the blood and guts of its valiant infantrymen and to the stupendous firepower of the Gunners. Three valiant officers and 34 brave soldiers of the Regiment of Artillery laid down their lives during the Kargil conflict in the true spirit of “Izzat O Iqbal” The COAS honoured three units of the Regiment of Artillery (141 Field Regiment, 197 Field Regiment and 108 Medium regiment) with the special award of COAS Unit Citation. The officers, JCQs and jawans who served the guns in Kargil not only lived up to the glorious traditions of the Regiment of Artillery, but have also pushed the envelope of the Regiment’s perpetual pursuit of professional excellence so much outwards that theirs will be a hard act to emulate for the succeeding generations of Gunners.

Vision for the Future

The Regiment of Artillery has a glorious record of past achievements and it can look forward to the future with pride and confidence – confidence in the capabilities of its guns and missiles. confidence in the ability of the men behind the guns to fire them with traditional courage and professional competence. Indeed, the future holds no terror for the Gunners. The Gunners have a knack of rising to the occasion to overcome each new challenge by dint of sheer hard work and dedicated training. Be it the acquisition of new equipment, changes in tactical doctrine or being assigned new roles in counterinsurgency operations, the Gunners renowned flexibility of mind and plans can take everything in Its stride.

From a supporting arm with the limited role of neutralising large areas of the ground with its inherent dispersion of fire, artillery has graduated to an arm of decision on the modern battlefield. [his is something the Indian artillery has earned by virtue of its performance during Op Vijay in the Kargil district of J&K in 1999. Its role 1s now that of the purveyor of destruction in defensive as well as offensive ops. It is now well recognised that without large-scale degradation of the enemy’s defence potential over prolonged periods, no offensive op is likely to succeed.

The Indian artillery will continue to play a leading role in the successful execution of integrated land-air op on the modern battlefield. The emerging philosophy of employment of artillery firepower visualises the synergised orchestration of all firepower resources across the length and breadth of the battlefield to cause destruction, systematically degrade the enemy’s fighting potential and suppress specific combat echelons of the enemy from operating effectively for limited durations. The concentrated application of massed artillery fire and the use of precision guided munitions will disrupt the enemy’s cohesion and ultimately break his will to fight.

From the blizzard-swept snows of Siachen, through the sharp escarpments of the Himalayan massif, the shimmering sands of the Thar desert, to the steaming hot and humid jungles of the northeast, the gallant men of the Indian artillery have maintained an untiring vigil over the nation’s frontiers for over fifty long years. In each one of independent India’s wars, the artillery has excelled in its role of being the purveyor of destruction and the facilitator of victory. The Kargil conflict of 1999 was only the latest manifestation of the artillery’s battle-winning capabilities. Should the need arise again, it can be said with supreme confidence that the guns will not be found wanting in the service of the nation.