Code: Select all
2 x Garud Squadrons
5 x Para (SF) Bn and maybe even Vikas Regiment
2 x MARCO group
1 x MC-130 Sqn
2 x An-32 Sqn
2 x Mi-17-V5 Sqn
1 x Mi-35 Sqn
1 x INS Jalashwa with Seaking
? x midget submarines
? x landing ships
Code: Select all
2 x Garud Squadrons
5 x Para (SF) Bn and maybe even Vikas Regiment
2 x MARCO group
1 x MC-130 Sqn
2 x An-32 Sqn
2 x Mi-17-V5 Sqn
1 x Mi-35 Sqn
1 x INS Jalashwa with Seaking
? x midget submarines
? x landing ships
Please note my words, I refer to an alleged whine not the real thing. How could I since I haven't read the report/letter/memo etc? So Gen.Lidder a former Para SF says that we must integrate, so must we? Adm.Nadkarni suggested that we wind up the LCA program do we? Every now and then some 3-star officers, retired, have advocated a certain course of action wrt to a host of issues - CIDS/aircraft carriers/armour etc., do we listen to everyone of them? In this case no one has yet read the report in question, so how do we miss the nuance and flat out conclude that we must integrate all our SF resources? In fact in brandishing Gen. Lidder's name to bolster our arguments, we are making light of the soldier's experience and learning. A serious paper cannot be selectively quoted even if the conclusions drawn by the author of that article happen to coincide with the General's....it comes from an ex. Lt General and a former PARA(SF) chap himself. So he does command more respect then a snide remark.
command structure and strategy are very valid points but SSG performance is very underwhelming. at least reported items.rohitvats wrote:3. As for the SSG, wether one likes it or not, PA does have a better Command Structure for its SF. And the argument that what has this command structure achieved for PA is a non sequitor. We talk only of 1965 para drop and Siachen (Qaid Post) as examples of SSGs failure in its entire operation history. Do we know of all their operations? Or for that matter of fact do we know of all IA SF operations? And let me ask you a question? What did IA Para(SF) achieve in 1965 and 1971? Why? Was it becasue they could not? Or was it because no one knew what to do with them? IIRC,9 Para(SF) was used a line infantry in Chamb sector in 1971.
Composition of Forces at Hill 3234
A look at the 9th Rota and the Forces it fought against
© Christopher Eger
Mar 14, 2007
At the Battle for Hill 3234 two very different groups fought each other through the night in 12 engagements. Here is what is known about them.
The Composition of the 9th Company (9Rota) of the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment (VDV) at the “Battle for Hill 3234” January 7-8, 1988. The company was made up of 39 men: 6 officers and 33 Sergeants and private soldiers. These men were of nine different nationalities including Russian, Ukrainian, Turkistani, Uzbeks and Lithuanian. Nine lost there lives and of the remaining 30, 28 were wounded. Two of the dead, Sergeant Aleksandrov and Private Melnikov are posthumously honored the Title of Hero of the Soviet Union. The Soviet paratroopers were armed with man portable weapons mainly consisting of AK-74 assault rifles and BG-30 Grenade launchers. They were re-supplied once during the battle with ammunition via helicopter.
Unit Roster, 9th Rota
1. Senior Lieutenant Tkachev, Sergey Borisovich - commander of company
2. Senior Lieutenant Gagarin, Victor yurivich
3. Senior Lieutenant Babenko, Ivan Pavlovich
4. Senior Lieutenant Rozhkov, Sergey Vladimirovich
5. Senior Lieutenant Matruk, Vitalius Vasilyevich - political officer
6. Ensign Kozlov, Vasiliy - Chief Petty Officer of company.
7. Sergeant Aleksandrov, Vyacheslav Alexandrovich - Hero of the Soviet Union (posthumous)
8. Sergeant Tsvetkov , Andrey Nikolayevich, killed
9. Sergeant Bobko, Sergey
10. Sergeant Rushinskas, Virginajus Leonardovich
11. Sergeant Borisov, Sergey
12. Sergeant Borisov, Vladimir
13. Sergeant Verigin, Vladimir
14. Sergeant Demin, Andrey
15. Sergeant Karimov
16. Sergeant Ofkopyrin,. Arkady
17. Sergeant Krishtopenko, Vladimir Olegovich, killed
18. Private Kuznetsov, Anatoliy yurivich, killed
19. Private Kuznetsov, Andrey
20. Private Korovin, Sergey
21. Private Lash, Sergey
22. Private Melnikov, Andrey Alexandrovich - Hero of the Soviet Union, (posthumous)
23. Private Menteshashvili, Zurab
24. Private Medvedev, Andrey
25. Private Leavingski, Sergey
26. Private Peredel'skiy Victor
27. Private Puzhayev, Sergey
28. Private Salamakha, Yuri
29. Private Safronov, Yuri
30. Private Sukhoguzov, Nikolai
31. Private Tikhonenko, Igor
32. Private Trutnev, Pavel
33. Private Fedotov, Andrey Alexandrovich, killed
34. Private Fedorenko, Andrey
35. Private Fadin, Nikolai
36. Private Yatsuk, Yevgeny
37. Private Zanegin, Igor Viktorovich, killed
38. Private Kudryashov, Alexander Nikolaevich, killed
39. Private Millers, Andrey Aleksandrovich, killed
The Soviet forces fought a group of Mujahideen that was believed to be of battalion sized. Soviet sources cite that as many as 500 afghan forces were involved and it was stated that they were composed of units of the “Black Storks”. The Black Storks were part of Pakistan Army Intelligence’s Special Services Group that dressed up as Afghan Mujahideen and fought during the Soviet-Afghan war. Soviet sources cite at least 90 of these fighters were killed in the battle. There is no known list of casualties in open circulation or even for sure who these fighters were. It is known that they were equipped with a mix of western and communist bloc weapons including RPG 2 and RPG 7 40mm grenade launchers, Enfield rifles and AK-47 assault weapons. The force withdrew over the Pakistani border at daylight, avoiding further combat.
Sources
"Oath of Thirty Nine", and “Exploit at Height 3234” by Colonel A. Oliynik published in "Red Star", June 14 and October 27,1988 respectively.
"Battle in height 3234" A. Meshchaninov, published in "Izvestiya", January 17, 1988
The Soviet-Afghan War: Breaking the Hammer & Sickle, published in VFW magazine
Hostage rescue is a police job (specially trained SWAT police), its not sub conventional warfare. To that extent, the role and doctrine of NSG is pretty good today, and as I mentioned before, it does not need to be integrated with an SF command, its current structure is quite robust. The problem with NSG is about its utilisation, and that pertains to the overall disaster/crisis management command structure in the govt - not so much to do with the NSG, and maybe a little bit to do with equipment.And how did the Mumbai Op show up the lack of integration as a problem? What is the evidence that the Op suffered because the Marcos and NSG are not integrated? If anything it made a case for a dispersed or expanded/replicated SF infrastructure across several centers.
If by hostage rescue you mean a Mumbai type Ops, from your fist comment itself, it looks like the discussions of the last few weeks re the inadequacy of SWAT for Special Ops have passed by you completely. You cannot be wronger than this.Hostage rescue is a police job (specially trained SWAT police), its not sub conventional warfare.
Mumbai type ops is classicl hostage rescue - requires a SWAT type response, NSG is the right forcce for it - the AFTERMATH of Mumbai, in terms of our response, would be Special Frces territory. About the Garuds, dnt think anyone is quite clear what their role is, including the IAF itself! In fact the IAF crated a world recxord of sorts when it asked for aplications to the Garud force through newspapers - has to be the first for any "special force"!!If by hostage rescue you mean a Mumbai type Ops, from your fist comment itself, it looks like the discussions of the last few weeks re the inadequacy of SWAT for Special Ops have passed by you completely. You cannot be wronger than this.
If you know what is the role of the IAF Garuds, please make a case for integrating them with the SG among others in a SF Command.If by hostage rescue you mean a Mumbai type Ops, from your fist comment itself, it looks like the discussions of the last few weeks re the inadequacy of SWAT for Special Ops have passed by you completely. You cannot be wronger than this.Hostage rescue is a police job (specially trained SWAT police), its not sub conventional warfare.
If you know what is the role of the IAF Garuds, please make a case for integrating them with the SG among others in a SF Command.
Any link to the PDF document please. Thankyou.Vikram_S wrote:rohitvats wrote: i have recently read PDF version of indo-pak special forces (osprey) and it has catalogue of SSG ops.
i
while you have valid point about strategic aspects and big picture you are also resorting to unsupported rhetoric statements, as supporting taliban against rag tag NA is not stunning successsomnath wrote:It would be quite naive to judge the effectiveness of a "special ops" unit on the basis of "published" info alone. Ditto with SSG - it is far better to analyse frm larger political developments. Take for example, the taliban takeover in Afghanistan. As a special ops, it was undoubtaedly a stunning success, afecting a "regime change" and putting one's own proxies in power, in the process defeating the defences of Ahmed Shah Masood. That was achieving the political objectives of the Paki state, and it can be inferred without too much doubt that the SSG would have been involved, along with intel and other units. This was a perfect example of a coherent national strategy and effective use of "special forcecs". Kargil on the other hand, was an example of an incoherent national strategy to use special forces, and it failed even though the performance of the "SF units" was by all account, exemplary. A perfect example of how war is too important to be left only to generals?!
are you referring to indian forces in kargil?Kargil on the other hand, was an example of an incoherent national strategy to use special forces, and it failed even though the performance of the "SF units" was by all account, exemplary.
while you have valid point about strategic aspects and big picture you are also resorting to unsupported rhetoric statements, as supporting taliban against rag tag NA is not stunning success
[/quote]are you referring to indian forces in kargil?
i do not agree.Rag tag is a relative term, not an absolute one - a rag tag militia in certain conditions would be more effective than a superbly equipped US Army! See how a similarly "rag tag" Taliban is running circles around the "hi tech" coalition forces in Afghanistan. Even our jungle warfare school has the motto of "fighting he guerilla like a guerilla" - its all theatre/situation specific. In any case, Paki political objectives during the times was to install a "friendly" govt in Kabul - they carried out a "special ops", which by all acounts was a success. They installed a freindly regime, one that in turn managed to run its fiat in most parts of Afghanistan (barring the Panjshir valley, where Masood held on). So one must, even grudglinly admist that it was a success! its a fact, no rhetoric here.
this was not special ops but classic warfare which teaches to infiltrate enemy lines in depth. in this case lead soldiers doing work were NLI not only SSG. this was not just a quick raid or objective but a detailed invasion with limited scope. and it fail not just because it was not strategic but because idiots did not make proper plan to account for indian response and logistics constraints.No, the Paki forces! As a special ops, it was fantastic. They identiefied the "weakness", ie, Indian forces vacating those peaks in winter, built up enough infrastructure to sustain a sizeable force INSIDE our territory, and then carried out an undetected intrusion, complete with choppers! Its another matter that the generals had no strategic sense at all, and hence had no idea of how it will pan out, and they got a bloody nose. Goes to show the importance of dovetailing special ops to national objectives, not as a glorious isolated "rambo" exercise.
Well, to start with a lot of accounts of Kargil say that the initial ops were largely led by the SSG. But that apart, this wasnt a "conventional" operation at all. Here was a state waging a (limited) war on another one, but at the same time straining to build a facade of "plausible deniability" of its responsibilioty - this is classic sub conventional war in my dictionary. The problem was that they couldnt realise (and that was the mistake of a strategic nature) that India would escalate this to "conventional" levels - using the air force, mobilising the Navy etc. And in a straight fight, a "sub conventional" force, equipped likewise, will never be a match for a larger conventional force unless it is reinforced itself by friendly conventional forces. Due to its "denial of involvement", Pakistan couldnt ratchet its own force levels up to match the levels India was bringing to bear - and after that the result could only be one. So as start, the "sub conventional" operation was "executed" brilliantly, but obviously with no thought process, it floundered later.this was not special ops but classic warfare which teaches to infiltrate enemy lines in depth. in this case lead soldiers doing work were NLI not only SSG. this was not just a quick raid or objective but a detailed invasion with limited scope. and it fail not just because it was not strategic but because idiots did not make proper plan to account for indian response and logistics constraints.
i think you are mixing up terms and issues. the SSG being part of Pak command structure did not create Kargil. SSG was just tool here. In 1971, 1965 even india did raids, attacks using SF as tool.
How different are they from each other? (NOTE: Genuine question, not rhetorical) From an organizational stand-point, they appear quite similar. Do you remember the debates about having one RC for two Gorkha Rifles Regiments? Why the regular commando forces were given over to the Parachute Regiment in the very first place, instead of the Guards Brigade? Revisit the rationale, you may find many issues still relevant. Under current designation, the "Special Forces" already outnumber regular Para battalions. Divide them up... and someone please explain how only 3 or 4 battalions are supposed to sustain an RC these days?Aditya G wrote:The need to have Para (SF) as separate regiment from Parachute Regiment is different from command issues. As of today these two are basically two different regiments under one name. A separate regiment for SF can ensure their interests are projected properly within the Army
Somnath,IMHO, using special forces for conventional ops is a "waste" of expensive resources. By defninition, each section of a special forcecs unit would be 4-5 times more expensive as compared to a normal light infntry unit. To use them in "conventional" roles will be a massive waste of resources. Officers can be deputed to other units, but to have entire spec forces units to operate as line infantry (a la 1971) can only arise out of not having a doctrine!
Sir, agree with you completely. My problem is that we dont have a proper strategic doctrine to exploit the speial forces altogether, in a strategic scenario which is rich in "sub conventional" opportunities! If we did that, utilisation would hardly be a challenge. Because we dont have a doctrine, we do things that range from the ridiculous (co-locating the para and special forces, newspaper advert for the Garud) to the criminal (no SF command, lack of suitable skills like language skills, inadequacy of basic equipment).The Parachute Regiment, the SF are strategic instruments. If they are lying idle, what is their use excepting earning their pay and consuming rations?
Soldiers, as a class, want to be where the action is. If they are treated as ''asset'' and touch me nots, then they will get rusted. They were utilised and they were acclimatised to the terrain and the mode of what the Pakistanis were up to in Kargil. Therefore, if there was the requirement to send them beyond, they would be in a perfect mental shape to take them on.
Let me explain it a bit more in a mundane manner. If I were to play golf without a warm up, I would be totally at sea, no matter what is my handicap. Thus, to prove one's mettle if one is 'warmed up', one delivers better.
I think resources lying idle is what is a waste and not utilising it, even in a manner that is not in their classical role, which may not appeal to many, may not be the answer.
Just the equipment and "manning" I would think. A special forces unit would need to be officer heavy, and at least should be carrying much better quality and more specialised gear than a light infantry unit.I have not understood as to how an SF unit is more expensive that infantry.
With due respect to RayC sir, the expense is to also accrue for the training on skills like demolitions, sniping, communication, ISTAR, etc. The wider Army do train for such expertise. But in small SF teams we would see greater concentration of such skills; not to forget double redundancy, like a team of 8 may have one sniper, but there are 2 people with sniping abilities; so on and so forth.somnath wrote:Just the equipment and "manning" I would think. A special forces unit would need to be officer heavy, and at least should be carrying much better quality and more specialised gear than a light infantry unit.RayC wrote:I have not understood as to how an SF unit is more expensive that infantry.
IMHO such a doctrine does not exist simply because there is now no requirement for 'doctrinal' use of SF. Other than ops inside the country and for 'unknown' ops few KMs from border/ LOC our political masters do not authorize any deep penetration ops.somnath wrote: Kargil would have actually been quite a "rich" special forces territory - I am sure there were special ops conducted that we wouldnt know of. But special forces should be there every day at the tip of our strategic spear, taking the battle into enemy territory all the time. But today there is simply no doctrine to utlise them likeise!
But, they dont get votes, Somnath-sir...Its only the visible slam-bang which enables the netas to brag about it.Singha wrote:I agree it would have been better to move quietly, kill the camps then make a show of bombarding them
for the benefit of NDTV after the debris had been carefully searched and bodies burnt.
Would be very happy to be corrected! From where I stand (read, observe) the Bhutan operation was followed by a serious "upscaling" of ULFA operations soon after, as a lot of the cadres moved over to either Assam or Bangladesh, and wanted to prove a point...But happy to be corrected, anytime!somnath
you could not be more wrong on Bhutan ops
but thats life
The type of training that is mentioned is also done by the Infantry. I am not aware of ISTAR training being imparted since it is a training input post my retirement. Language skills are also a part of the training curriculum since the Infantry are the boots on the ground and have to interact with locals. Redundancy is a phenomenon of all units in the Army, and a double trade is a minimum prerequisite.With due respect to RayC sir, the expense is to also accrue for the training on skills like demolitions, sniping, communication, ISTAR, etc. The wider Army do train for such expertise. But in small SF teams we would see greater concentration of such skills; not to forget double redundancy, like a team of 8 may have one sniper, but there are 2 people with sniping abilities; so on and so forth.
Also niche skills like languages, etc.
We may also need to factor the associated costs in the greater degree of training and comparatively more exercises to train for different terrains and scenarios.
Of course there may be something else that does not meet my eye in your statement.
Urdu, yes, and many languages where IA is in insurgency.RayC, thats interesting. So do the infantry units actually have people trained in foreign languages (at least the "relevant" one, like dari, pushto, urdu)? One of the main problems that Indian intel faces today is lack of language specialists..Would interesting to know if the Army has some intellectual property here!Language skills are also a part of the training curriculum since the Infantry are the boots on the ground and have to interact with locals.
Not really! its funny!Somnath,
You have removed your post?
My mistake.somnath wrote:Not really! its funny!Somnath,
You have removed your post?
There are also many who are trained in foreign languages beyond the ones mentioned by you.
I am not aware of IA intelligence being short of language translators.
RayC said:Quite interesting. Why doesnt RAW recruit language specialists from Army Intel then? Apparently there is a big shortage of language skills in the intel world, especially the "neighbouring" ones.
Does the Army have its own language school? AFAIK most people take up the "fancy" languages in their NDA course (French, Russian etc)
I have no knowledge of RAW and their language skills. Since you have, could you elucidate.
In the NDA, foreign languages are taught. My was Hindi!!
The AEC School teaches foreign languages and also we subscribe to the Foreign Languages School in Delhi.
There is a quota as to what languages one subscribes to and then selected. There is an aptitude test and one cannot just 'jump' into a language course. As a child one can learn many languages, but not so as an adult.