THE GARUD STRIKES (12 page)

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Authors: MUKUL DEVA

BOOK: THE GARUD STRIKES
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‘I was in the process of preparing Defensive Fire (DF) task tables when I suddenly saw a train with three bogies pulling out from Akhaura railway station. It was heading for Brahmanbaria,’ Captain Mahipal Singh, who was the artillery OP with Desraj’s platoon, said.

 

Comfortably attired in a white cotton shirt, the now retired Major General Mahipal Singh was looking cool and relaxed in his Chandigarh home. ‘My first impression was that the Pakistanis at Akhaura were still not aware of our presence, or the fact that we had taken over the smaller bridge already.’

That illusion was soon shattered as the train came to a halt right in the middle of Desraj’s platoon, neatly separating the two elements of the platoon. Now they began to rain down automatic fire from all three bogies on the guardsmen caught on either side of the embankment.

Caught out in the open, the platoon began to take casualties. In the very first few minutes, Iqbal, the radio operator with Mahipal Singh, lost his life. Enemy fire also took out both the radio sets with Singh.

‘Even otherwise, I could not have engaged the train with artillery, since our men were on either side of it. We were too close together,’ Singh looked grim. ‘Desraj extricated the section on the western side through a culvert in the embankment, and that made things a little better. But the loss of both my radio sets was a big blow and seriously handicapped my ability to provide fire support.’

Paunchy, with the rest of the Company, was about half a kilometre away when he heard the firing. Seeing his platoon in trouble, he stopped immediately and began to provide whatever fire support he could.

‘But there wasn’t much we could do; the enemy and my boys were so closely intermingled that it would have been impossible not to hit some of my own guys,’ said Paunchy, with a regretful tone. ‘But we did manage to fire the RL (Rocket Launcher) at the railway wagons.’

That convinced the Pakistanis in the train to pull back into the railway station. With that crisis momentarily resolved, Paunchy resumed advance on the bigger bridge.

‘That’s when we realized that the Intelligence guys had messed up, since the bigger bridge was actually held by a Company of Pakistani regulars.’ Paunchy gave an exasperated headshake. ‘We had been told it was only a handful of Razakars.’

Aware that it was beyond their capability to take this bridge on their own, Paunchy decided to pull back and build up on Desraj’s platoon, which by now had deployed on the smaller bridge and was consolidating its position. They were still some distance away when Pakistani artillery began blasting Desraj’s platoon. The Company halted again, unable to proceed till the artillery fire had abated a bit. However, there was to be no respite. Following hard in the wake of an intense bombardment, the Pakistanis counter attacked the third platoon with an infantry company and a troop of PT 76 tanks.

Unwilling to give the Indians time to consolidate their position on the bridge, the General Staff Officer Grade 1 (GSO-1) of the 14th Pakistani Infantry Division, an armoured corps officer, had quickly marshalled a mixed bag of troops and led the attack on Desraj’s platoon.

‘We were unaware that the Pakistanis were holding these PT 76 tanks. We learnt later that five of them had been given to Pakistan by Indonesia,’ Paunchy explained. ‘Initially, when we saw the tanks approaching, I thought they were ours, since the armoured squadron supporting us was also using the PT 76. It is only when they started firing that we realized they were enemy tanks.’

With the Indian armour supporting 4 Guards and the RCL guns still stuck in the slush and marsh enroute, Desraj’s platoon had little to blunt the Pakistani counter attack with.

‘To make matters worse, the artillery OP deployed with that platoon, Captain Mahipal Singh, had lost his operator and radio sets in enemy shelling. They could not even call for artillery support to break up the Pakistani assault,’ Paunchy’s anguish was obvious. ‘By now we had also lost the 3.7 inch RL man, so Desraj’s platoon was completely at the mercy of the Pakistani armour.’

Now totally unsupported, with its back to the wall, the platoon fought back tooth and nail, trying to hold out till the rest of the company fetched up. But the pressure was immense, men were falling like ninepins now, and the platoon was inexorably driven back by the Pakistani tanks.

Lance Naik Lakhpat Singh saw the shattered remains of his section trying to extricate as the nearest enemy tank closed in on them. He must have known his Light Machine Gun (LMG) would not have any effect on the tank, yet hoping to provide his comrades with a window of opportunity that would allow them to escape, he kept firing. The last sight Lakhpat saw was a Pakistani tank bearing down on him.

Naik Ram Khilawan Singh saw Lakhpat ground to dust as the tank’s tracks churned over him. Having been in battle myself, it was easy to understand that by now blood lust would have swamped all vestiges of reason. Racing forward, he went for the tank with nothing but a grenade and will power.

‘I saw Ram Khilawan jump on top of the tank and actually punch one of the Pakistani soldiers. Himmeth had come up to my location and was with me at that time. Even he saw the whole incident.’ There was awe in Paunchy’s tone. ‘What Ram Khilawan did was absolutely amazing. He must have known he would not survive that attack.’

Ram Khilawan did not. Neither did the Pakistani tank.

Paunchy, still struggling to fight his way through to his beleaguered platoon, also saw Lance Naik Pirabhu Singh go down.

The loss of every man is a knife in the heart of every commander. In the case of Pirabhu, it was more so, perhaps because Pirabhu, a loyal and caring Jat from Hissar had been by Paunchy’s side for many years. As Paunchy’s batman, Pirabhu had literally been his shadow. The two had been so close that when, earlier that year, Pirabhu had passed the promotion cadre and been promoted to Lance Naik, Paunchy had gifted him with an HMT watch, an expensive and treasured item in those days, even for an officer.

Paunchy was boiling with rage as he saw his platoon being shredded into pieces, but he knew he was still too far away. He could see his men fighting back valiantly. And he could see them falling like chaff before a threshing machine as enemy tanks thundered over the trenches. Here and there, he could see his men being hauled out of trenches by Pakistani soldiers, and being clubbed and shot down in cold blood.

‘I
could not stop myself.’ Paunchy was shaking with anger. ‘The brutal manner in which the Pakistanis were gunning down even wounded men was too much. I ordered my Medium Machine Gun (MMG) to open fire, even though the Pakistanis and the men from my own platoon were too closely intermingled.
I knew that some of my own men would also get hit, but by now it was clear that the enemy would not let them live in any case.’

The MMG fire accounted for several Pakistani soldiers. However, I did not see any satisfaction on Paunchy’s face as he narrated that. Whatever satisfaction it may have given him had been drowned by the sorrow of seeing his men also mowed down.

 

 

 

Despite such raw courage, Desraj’s platoon was fighting a losing battle and trying hard to extricate from that impossible position. Superior numbers and the Pakistani tanks soon overran the platoon.

By the time Number Three Platoon finally managed to extricate itself, it had been decimated by almost half its numbers. Despite their best efforts to get their dead and wounded back, the bodies of seven of the men lay where they fell. Fallen, but not forgotten.

Captain Mahipal Singh, the artillery OP, managed to crawl back to safety with the shattered remanants of Desraj’s platoon. He was doing so when an enemy artillery shell landed almost beside him.

‘Himmeth was with me at that time. We both saw the shell land almost on top of Mahipal and the handful of men crawling back towards us. We were pretty sure they were all gone, but when the dust and smoke cleared,’ there was disbelief all over Paunchy’s face, ‘we saw that they were still coming towards us.’

Luckily, the ground was soft and the shell buried itself in, sufficiently deep for it to leave Mahipal, and the others around him, unscathed. Not one of them so much as got a scratch.

Like every other man in the company, Paunchy knew he would not leave the bodies of his men behind. But in that moment, he was desperate to stabilize the situation. He was also clearly aware that his options were limited, and falling back was not one of them. There was no back to fall upon. After all, when you infiltrate behind enemy lines and cut off the enemy, you also get automatically cut off from your base. Alpha Company knew they had to stand and fight. They began to dig in.

‘There were four engineer men, six anti-tank mines and about as many American manufactured M14 jumping mines with us. I ordered these to be planted on the main approach that led to where I had deployed the rest of my company. There was a clear path leading up to our position. It lay between two water tanks,’ Paunchy drew a rough sketch to help me get a clearer picture. ‘The water tanks were about twenty feet by twenty feet in size, and offered some kind of an anti-tank obstacle. I hoped they would funnel the Pakistani tanks into the open patch between them.’

However, the Pakistani tanks now decided to attack the guardsmen through Kodda village. Alpha Company saw the tanks come rumbling through the villages, knocking down the huts. There was nothing that could stop them overrunning the infantrymen caught out in the open.

‘That was the first time I felt real fear,’ and it was still audible in Paunchy’s hushed tone. ‘Seeing those monstrous things coming at us, and knowing that we had nothing in our arsenal to stop them. I’m not afraid to admit it: I was petrified.’ He gave a slow headshake. ‘But I also knew that I was the Company Commander, and every man would be looking up to me to lead by example.’ He halted. ‘It was a matter of honour … regimental izzat … you know how it is… officers are not allowed to show fear. Well, somehow, neither did I.’ There was a much longer pause. ‘We held our ground.’

The five Pakistani tanks closed in slowly but surely. The menacing roar of tank engines escalated as they closed in, till they were about seventy-five metres short of the first foxholes of Alpha Company.

‘They now halted and kept revving their engines, as though to scare us off. However, for some reason, they did not fire their main guns at us. Nor did they complete their attack on our position. Per
haps if they had realized how tenuous our position was, they might have moved in and finished us off.’ Paunchy’s relief was evident.

 

 

Witnessing the ongoing battle from close quarters, Himmeth knew
he had to reinforce Alpha Company or risk losing most of it. Getting
on to his radio set, he ordered Delta Company, deployed just
behind Alpha, to move forward and build up on Kodda.

Meanwhile, the sounds of the Pakistanis coming up again
were increasing and Paunchy sensed they would be under attack
again soon. He somehow managed to re-group and deploy the
remaining two platoons rapidly.

‘Desraj's platoon took seventeen casualties… almost half its
strength,’ Paunchy tried to stay matter of fact, but his anger was
palpable. ‘We were not sure but we had a feeling that a couple of
boys had been taken captive.’

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