| Lessons from Kargil: Relearn the Art of Patrolling |
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In
a candid interview to a defence correspondent, GOC 15 Corps has
admitted that patrols sent out by the Army failed to detect
Pakistani intrusions because these had been launched along nullahs
rather than ridgelines. The focus was to look for infiltrators. This
controverts the very doctrine of patrolling. Lest this become a
guide, there is a need to explain the concept of patrolling. Patrolling
is not a police gasht, as generally perceived. The underlying concept of
military patrolling is presence, either for observation
(reconnaissance) or fire (protection). It is a common military knowledge
that neither observation nor fire can be achieved along nullahs. They
require heights. Even if one were looking for militants the patrols should
have dominated the heights. Further, it is unimaginable that
we were oblivious to the need for protection of the Kargil - Leh road
and precluded its targeting by the militants. Any movement on the
road can be seen from the dominating features and interfered with by
pot-shots, howsoever random. Further, patrolling along the ridgeline
would have provided us meaningful surveillance over vulnerable
stretches of the road from acts of sabotage. Let us re-read Sun Zu,
"All armies prefer high ground to low and sunny places to
dark." All this is not to suggest that militants moving along
the nallahs were not to be intercepted, or the larger Pak designs
not gauged from what was happening across the LOC. Patrolling
should not be fettered by paucity of numbers, firepower or
administrative support. Their frequency and composition are
determined by mission and terrain. A classical example is the Chindits,
which was a long range, divisional strength force, with its
integrated air element, which had penetrated behind the Japanese lines.
The mission of a patrol could be terrain familiarisation,
acclimatisation, showing the flag, or conduct surveillance, bring down
observed fire and gather tactical signal intelligence. The last
mentioned requires line of sight (LOS) observation and can only be
conducted from heights. Patrolling is an all arms activity. In
terrain like Kargil, gunners, engineers and signaller must send out
patrols, exclusive or mixed, to conduct missions specific to them. During
war, real or proxy, patrols are sent to lay ambushes, reconnoiter
obstacles, draw fire to know enemy dispositions, protect flanks and
vulnerable assets. Sun Zu said, "Rouse him (the enemy), and
learn the principle of his activity or inactivity. Force him to
reveal himself, so as to find out his vulnerable spots." Normally,
patrolling is planned, co-ordinated and controlled at brigade level.
The brigade major is designated as the patrol master. Having held
this appointment at Dharchula on the UP-Tibet Border and later
during active operations in the Sialkot Sector in 1965, my experience was
that patrolling, at its worst, is a drudgery; at its best, a
romance, a challenge and the acme of soldering. Its pith is good
leadership. A good patrol master leads a challenging force to get the
"feel" of the "front". It is my conviction that
patrolling cannot be entrusted to the ageing. Youngsters fresh from
the academy can teach a trick or two. Patrolling
and reconnaissance has always been coveted and held up as an enterprise of
pride and self-realisation. The United Services Institute has
instituted an award, called MacGregor Medal for the Armed Forces
personnel for any valuable reconnaissance undertaken. The accounts
of past recipients of the medal are a saga of motivation and
risk-taking. While
the country celebrates, the leaders prepare for the battle at the hustings;
the speculators make a kill at the stock exchange, and the
enemy uses the operational pause to regroup. Let there be no doubt
that we have to sweat more to maintain vigilance. There is no
substitute for patrolling – offensive, audacious and novel. Let us
get down to it with the gadgetry made available, or without it if old
practices continue. Sun Zu said, " If fighting is sure to result in
victory, then you must fight, even though the ruler forbid it; if
fighting will not result in victory, then you must not fight even at
the ruler's bidding. The general who advances without coveting fame
and retreats without fearing disgrace, whose only thought is to
protect his country and do good service for his sovereign, is the
jewel of the kingdom." |