By Michael
Dalvi.
A brilliant write
up by Michael Dalvi on
his father’s book “HIMALAYAN BLUNDER” written in the aftermath of 1962
Sino-Indian War, so to say after the debacle and great humiliation suffered by
India due to a total political failure and also failure of Nehru’s Government
to provide adequate political leadership, military hardware and resources to
fight a large scale war. All the same the Indian soldiers fought bravely and
acquitted themselves creditably in spite of all the odds pitted against them.
Pitiably, the Government seems to have avoided a big embarrassment to itself,
by not disclosing the facts brought out by the ‘Henderson Brooks - PS Bhagat
Report” that carried out an in-depth study of the happenings and should have
highlighted the actual reasons for the ignominious defeat. Host : Col LK Anand Retd.
********
A few comments by admirers on the write up
A
brilliant tribute by a son to his father. A slice of history from which we should have learnt many
lessons. Instead it was warped and twisted to shield the real culprits. I hope
another such debacle is not waiting to break on the horizon for one more child of the military services to give us one more story
of ecstasy and agony in the life of a soldier. Ram Gulrajani
********
The ONLY thing
more difficult than being a soldier, they say, is to be Married to be one. I am
sure the same thing goes for being a soldier's off spring.
An Army Officer's
Son recalls.
Michael Dalvi's
write up on happenings in 1962 and after, makes IMMENSELY interesting and
revealing reading.
I found this, one
of the most interesting write ups, from up close, yet from a 'removed from the
front' angle.
MUST Read Slowly
and Introspectively. It is for those who are capable of such reading.
PS. If you
have not read 'Himalayan Blunder' Please Read it. RP Chaturvedi
********
It
is great reading and all the more for me as I am first hand witness to the
activity in Delhi just before the Brigs return and on his return. I have seen a
real broken man a good soldier totally disillusioned by his country and true he
was. Ranjit
********
My father, was a brilliant student, educated by Jesuit Brothers,
and schooled in Latin, at St. Mary's School and St. Xavier's College in Bombay.
When WWII broke out he was already a graduate. He decided to join the army,
eventually passing out from the Indian Military Academy in June of 1941, an
enthusiastic and patriotic 21 year old. His younger brother, Jaiwant, followed
two years later from the IMA in 1943. My father joined a far off Battalion - 10/5
Baluch, (now in the Pakistani Army). Jai became a Cavalry man (Armoured Corps),
joining 8 Cavalry.
Baluchistan was a far cry from the cobbled streets of Bombay.
Father's initial postings were in Quetta, Fort Sandeman and Muree. The
Battalion was in training to go off to fight the Japanese in Burma. Training
and living amongst these rugged, fearless and simple tribesmen was a completely
new world. He was subjected to a brand new culture system, where justice, even
in the Army, was often swift and harsh. Death was no big deal.
Finally, circa 1942, came the expected call to move to Burma, via
Madras port. Here, an incident occurred, that left a deep & lasting
impact on his psyche. As a young student in Bombay he was never really
subjected to any form of racial discrimination; but Madras was another story.
10/5 Baluch was billeted in tented accommodation on the outskirts
of Madras, waiting to be shipped to Burma. An urgent message for the British CO
of the Battalion was to be hastily delivered. He was dining at the prestigious
Madras Club. Well, Second Lt. J P Dalvi, motor bike borne despatch rider, duly
arrived at the porch of the club to be confronted by a sign stating something
to the effect that "Dogs & Indians not allowed". His blood
boiled. After all, were Indians not fighting the war for the British ? But
there was nothing he could do except let this fester in his mind. Orders are orders
and he stood his ground, as the instruction was to give the message to the CO,
and no one else. The CO came to the porch, opened the telegram &
sent his youngest officer off to inform 'the men' that movement orders had
finally arrived and to 'polish bayonets', so to speak. Off to Burma then!
Years later, when I was working in Madras, and he was visiting, I
could not understand his 'strong' and persistent desire to visit the Madras
Club. Only when the cigars & cognac were out did he relate this story.
That was typical of him, stoic, reticent & profound.
Burma was hell. Mosquitos, snakes, leeches, disease and the
constant threat of a Japanese bullet. As his English was second to no
Englishman, he was seconded to the Staff of Gen.Sir Montague 'Monty' Stopford,
GCB, OBE, DSO, MC, Corps Commander XXXIII Corps and later Commander, 12th Army.
Several important battles were fought, lost and won, till, eventually the
Japanese were vanquished. Three important Companies of the Indian Military
Academy are named after memorable battles won by Indian soldiers, in WW II.
Meikteila, Imphal & Kohima. The Baluchi's were part of 19 Division, and
part of the larger army of Field Marshal Sir William Slim. It was the era of
the legendary & heroic Chindits, who fought lengthy, bloody &
legendary battles and, in the process, crisscrossed the Chindwin &
Irrawaddy rivers, in a ding-dong slugfest for military supremacy.
What has all this got to do with 1962 and the Himalayan Blunder ?
Plenty. The fresh 21 year old who had gone off to war returned from Burma, a
battle hardened, steely, fearless professional soldier, all of 25 years of age.
It changed him irrevocably. It made him impervious to fear and danger. It made
him a professional soldier, and he opted to continue serving the Indian
Army.
Then came partition, Independence and traumatic times again. He
was briefly sent to 2/5 Gorkha Rifles, in Dehradun, having been withdrawn from
the Baluch Regiment, which, naturally, stayed in Pakistan.
His very unpleasant task was, during those horrific months of
1947, to escort & supervise the transfer of refugees back and forth
from India to Pakistan, under escort. Muslims from here and Hindus and Sikhs
from the other side across the newly created border. Gorkha troops were
considered "neutral" and hence their 'escort' presence with each
truck load of refugees.
His career was on track and he was considered one of Independent
India's brightest young officers. He was an Instructor at the IMA, commanded
the prestigious 4th Guards (at the age of 32), was posted to the crucial DGMO
for 5 years, at Army Headquarters, was Dy Commandant of the IMA and Brig, Admn
15 Corps, at Udhampur, in J and K. All systems were on "GO", and then
came his elevation to Command 7 Infantry Brigade, in Tawang, then in NEFA, now
Arunachal Pradesh.
On a personal level, nothing could have been more traumatic, for
me. Domestic life was unstable. Despite being the wife of a very senior
officer, my mother was sharing accommodation with another Army officers family,
in a bungalow, on Mall Road, in Meerut Cantonment. The fact that the two
families were old and close personal friends was incidental, and providential
as both Col and Mrs. Ram Singh were of invaluable strength & solace in
the drastic days that were to come, sooner than later.
We did not have a permanent address. Because of the nature of the
assignment in NEFA, and the inherent dangers, my mother was extremely stressed
out. Remember, she had only just 'recovered' her husband from WW II, in 1945,
barely a few years earlier ࡡ Once again, she was forced into the role of a war wife. The mood
in the Army was tense & uncertain. The Indian Army seemed sure,
notwithstanding the Nehruvian chants of "Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai" that
the Chinese were building up towards some form of armed action.
I was in my final year at the Doon School, Dehradun and did a good
deal of 'tooing and froing' from Meerut. Not the best of situations. The summer
of 1962 was spent studying for the Senior Cambridge Exam. We made short trips
to see my father in Lucknow, for that was where his HQ was, and that was as far
as he wanted to be from his Brigade. We saw him for five days ! Almost as long
as it took by train, to and from Lucknow, in those days!
It was the era of Radio news. Computers were unheard of. 24x7 TV
was not even a Sci-Fi phenomena !!. There were only a few newspapers, and those
being published were influenced by Govt propaganda, aimed at misleading the
Indian public. In fact, even Parliament was grossly deceived at the time by a
treasonous distortion of the truth. A famous saying was so true of the times.
" if you don't read the Newspapers you are uninformed; if you read the
Newspapers you are misinformed" ࡡ BBC Radio provided authentic and unbiased news. Reuters was to be
trusted with the written word. I used to wait for the newspapers, displayed on
a large table outside our "Common Room", in Tata House, for any bit
of news on the latest border situation.
October 1962 arrived, and we were all suddenly very confident,
spurred on by Prime Minister NehruⳠstrident & reassuring words, that the Indian Army would
teach the Chinese PLA a fitting lesson. Amongst his vain boasts was that he had
"instructed his army to throw out the Chinese aggressors". This
vainglorious utterance was to haunt my father later on, during his
incarceration. The Chinese Commissar who visited him during his 'solitary
confinement' , in an abandoned army barrack on the outskirts of Lhasa, taunted
him weekly about this foolish boast. One was too young to question as to where
the bear-hugs with Chou-En-Lai and Mao had gone ?? One was too naive to see
that Hindi-Chini bhai bhai" was a fallacy. One was, actually, too young to
question anything.
But one was not too young to sense that his father was in a danger
- zone and that the military situation was desperate.
After brief introductions, there was a dreadful and painful period
of silence when nobody really knew what to say, and certainly not how to say it!
I broke the ice by saying one word. "Father"? The Army officers, and,
in retrospect, I was glad for their presence, as the uniform, and all it stood
for, was part of my life, and provided a sombre and solemn solace, despite the
awesome message they had brought.
They told me, briefly, that the Army had lost contact with my
father, and his forward HQ, sometime around noon on the 20th of October. That
was the day the Chinese had attacked, and what was to come to be known as the
beginning of the little of the Namka Chu. Chu, in the local language, means River. Apparently, his HQ had
been overrun and that he, along with some troops, and certainly some of his
immediate staff officers were trying to link-up with another of his Battalions.
Alas, that was in the pre-GPS era.
They explained that the last visual sighting of the Brigade
Commander had been in the early afternoon of the 20th. The terrain was
mountainous, deeply forested & hostile. Rations and provisions were
scarce, if not non-existent. Most ominously, it was confirmed that the Chinese
troops had reached positions, way behind his last known location! In short the
message was "lost, presumed killed in action". That is Army parlance
for a battlefield death. Suddenly, my world had turned on it's head. I was
numb. I was too proud to break down, especially not in the presence of my HM
& Dy HM, and certainly not in front of the olive green. Only I know
what it took to keep my dignity. Maybe it was the numbness.
Apparently, the same two officers had come to Dehradun, via
Meerut, and broken the news to her. The news had broken her. She was in a state
of virtual collapse, but in the comforting company of Col & Mrs Ram
Singh, God bless them ! They were unable to get through to Meerut, on the
telephone. Remember, those were the days when, to achieve a connection, you
needed to twirl your arm several times round, and always speak through an "operator"
. Meerut had a military exchange. Anyway, it was decided, Martyn sahib, along
with Holdie, would accompany me, at the crack of dawn the next day, to Meerut
to meet the 'old lady' . Thereafter, there was some animated discussion on whether
it would be Holdie's dilapidated jeep or John's equally antiquated Fiat. The
Fiat won the Meerut sweepstakes!
Mother was a mess. The future was suddenly bleak &
uncertain. The winter vacations came and went in a blur of inactivity &
depression. School term came again, and I went through the motions. Cricket
kept me alive. Then, sometime around March, 1963, I was woken by the Tata House
chowkidar to say that Holdie's servant had come to fetch me. "sahib nay
bulaya". Again not an ominous portent. But, at 10.30 pm in the night ? I
rushed across the Chandbagh Estate, and froze. Holdie and Martyn again ! But,
this time there was good news. Holdie, a BBC radio addict, had heard, on the
late news, that the Red Cross had announced, with categorical proof, that one
of their operatives had actually met with my father and that he was "very
much alive & in reasonable spirits". He was a POW of the Chinese
PLA. Holdie to John - "I think this calls for a celebration - a scotch for
you and me and a glass of beer for Michael"? Good Lord, the School captain
enjoying a drink with two senior masters. Anyway, no one would believe it!
Another animated discussion. The Fiat won again. Mother was relieved
& ecstatic. Widows weeds were summarily discarded. But, would they ever
send our POW's back? If so, when? Euphoria was tinged with nagging doubts.
Remember, this is being written with hindsight. At that time no one could say
with any certainty what the outcome of the bi-lateral talks would be. The
Chinese had proven to be unreliable friends and ruthless enemies! And, in cold
war times, very non-transparent. Information was certainly not forthcoming. The
Red Cross was the lifeline.
But, hope springs eternal. At least he was alive.
During his incarceration, the commissars kept harping on the fact
that the Indian army had attacked first. They had a case. To establish our
territorial claims along the McMohan Line, Prime Minister Nehru had embarked on
an ill-advised policy fraught with danger - the 'forward policy' which entailed
the establishment of forward posts, & a demarcation &
unilateral interpretation of the McMohan line.
And why did we not upgrade the WWI rifles? Did the mandarins in
Delhi really believe that the WWI vintage Lee Enfield .303, (10 shot bolt -
action rifles) could rival the semi-automatic - AK 47?
What about big guns? Ammunitions? Infrastructure? Roads?
Accommodation? Front line fortifications? Supply routes. An army
marches on its stomach!! Rations and food.
The mandarins in Delhi failed to even provide
basic tools to dig trenches with !! Our soldiers were literally using their
bare hands to dig themselves in? Somebody should have paid for this
unforgiveable neglect with their jobs rather than our brave soldiers with their
lives.
Then, miraculously, some letters from father. They arrived by a
circuitous & complicated route - Chinese army - Chinese communist party
censors- UN Authorities- Red Cross Authorities- Indian Army censors- and then
to MD c/o The Doon School, Chandbagh, Dehradun. It's a wonder there were any
words left ? I kept the letters, in the hope that on his eventual repatriation,
he could explain what he had actually written. Just one example. Most of his
letters exhorted me, as usual, to concentrate on my cricket - at the nets,
sweat, practice, till your hands are blistered and sore & that there
were "no shortcuts to success"! One garbled letter's interpretation
was that he had said something to the effect that "remember to keep your
left elbow high, and play the ball late, to penetrate the enemy extra
cover" ! To the Chinese censors this was obviously some sinister coded
message advising his son to lead a counter-attack on the Great Wall. By the
way, our censorship was no better!
Father would probably have died of hunger & exposure
anyway, as he, and some 40 Jawans and a handful of officers had been without
food, water and shelter for more than 48 hours. It is important to remember
they were at heights in excess of 17000 feet, and at temperatures well below
zero. My aunt had sent him from Canada a Canadian Air force Fliers fleece lined
leather jacket. He never wore it. Not if his troops were not similarly clad. It
remained in his Orderly's backpack for the entire time. One of the Officers
with him was Maj. later Gen. Rex Kharbanda. Somewhere along the path they came
to a fork. Typically, my father took out a coin and asked Maj. Kharbanda to
call. He won and was asked to decide whether he wanted the left or the right
track. He opted to go left. My father, apparently, and I heard this from an
officer who was there with him, chose who would go left and who went right. Rex
Kharbanda and his half of the men went 1000 yards down the left path and found
themselves in Bhutan. Unknown to them this was the exact spot of the
tri-junction of China, Bhutan and India ! A 1000 yards down the right path and
my father ran into 1000 Chinese soldiers. He was taken into custody. He was
officially a POW of the Chinese PLA.
That's fate.
Captivity was not easy. For a gregarious human being, solitary
confinement was hell. He became reticent and brooded deeply for hours on end.
He hovered perilously close to becoming depressed. Then there was that terrible
feeling that, perhaps, he could have done more to prevail on his Div. Cdr and,
above all, Gen Kaul, to save his troops, from certain annihilation.
He spent his time playing table tennis, cards & chess with
his captors. The regular PLA soldiers were like those of any other peasant army.
Simple and semi-literate. It was the hard core commissars who attempted the
'mind breaking' bit. I used to pester him to tell. He spent his time reading
simple books provided to him. The Chinese are not English speaking. They had no
library of English books. After weeks they got him a pen and some reams of
paper. He would write down the names of all the books he'd read. All the movies
he'd seen. All the actors and actresses he could think of. Each week the
commissar would come, take the notes from the guards and tear them up. The
whole process would start again! The food was atrocious and cooked by his
guards. It was far from nutritious. Potato was the staple, served twice a day.
They gave him an egg on two occasions. It was simple vegetarian fare. They gave
him a chicken to eat on Christmas night, 1962. This was part of their pathetic
propagand! He promptly shared it with his guards. His hair was cut once a
month. He was shaved every day, by a barber. They did not trust him with
blades.
One event worth relating was that, around the end of April, 1963,
all Indian POW's were moved to Peking. It was the first time, since October of
the previous year that he met his officers. My father guessed, rightly so, that
the Chinese would attempt to display them as part of the May Day parade, on May
1 on the streets of Peking, in complete contravention of the Geneva Convention
and all norms governing the treatment of prisoners. Who knows, maybe in
shackles, to portray Indian soldiers in poor light. He put his foot down, and
with the aid of the UN officials, the idea was dropped. Language was a problem.
Eventually, he got his way. They watched the parade from the side-lines.
Eventual repatriation took place in 1963. The family was provided
accommodation in Defence colony. Male servants and even a maid appeared
miraculously. My father always suspected they were intelligence operatives.
Whenever we went out we were followed. Those operatives were horribly inept. We
had fun suddenly stopping to window shop in Connaught Place. These bozo's would
almost bump into us. Father was terribly cut up. He was under suspicion!! The final
ignominy.
If memory serves me, he and his officers were repatriated by the
Red Cross from a military airstrip in the Chinese city of Kunming. Apparently
the plane ferrying them had to circle Dum Dum airport for some time to burn
fuel. The undercarriage refused to come down ! After all they had been through
- to die in an air crash. But, all ended well and they landed safely. Then on
to Ranchi by train to be "debriefed". The train journey was a
travesty. In a characteristic display of disrespect & departure from
protocol he was 'interrogated' by a second Lieutenant from Army Intelligence !
He had to prove he was not 'brain-washed' and had not become a commie ! The
young officer was embarrassed & apologetic, & very conscious
that he was 'interrogating' one of the senior most Brigadier General's of the
Indian Army.
Dad had become single-minded. During the time when his status was,
conveniently, "missing presumed killed in action" the actual culprits
of the previous years ignominious debacle had clearly made him the scapegoat.
Here was this inept Brigadier who had "handed his brigade to the Chinese,
on a platter" . Case closed. Brigadier JPD and his reputation dead and
buried. ( It is ironic that this much maligned Brigadier was given command of a
brigade, on the East Pakistan border, within 24 hours of the outbreak of
hostilities, in September, 1965) !!! Now this inconvenient development -
the man was alive, and worse still, would eventually head home, telling a
different and inconvenient story. The "other" truth would come out.
He was told the remnants of his brigade were "furious" with him, and
were blaming him for all their casualties. This was part of the bureaucratic
propaganda being dished out by the Ministry of Defence. For many a reputation,
it was an end game of sorts. His first step was to go to see his brigade, then
stationed in Ambala. The rag tag left overs actually staged a parade for him.
He was deeply moved and spent some days with his 'boys'. So much for being
'furious'. When he casually asked one of his NCO's whether he'd been on leave
the reply was typical Indian Army. How could he go to his village? How could he
show his face there with his CO and Brig in Chinese custody. Great spirit as
always.
He was the man on the spot. He had witnessed, first hand, the
unbelievable gallantry, selflessness & bravery of his troops, which was
way beyond the call of duty. Our simple, sturdy & undemanding Jawans
had acquitted themselves with honour & respect & bravery. He
was very keen and desperately determined that gallantry medals be awarded to
those who had fought to the last bullet and the last drop of blood. A majority
of them would have to be awarded posthumously. It would entail piecing together
actual battle situations indicating individual acts of gallantry. All these
would eventually be put before the country, and the world, in his book -
'Himalayan Blunder' published in the winter of 1969. The Govt of India
promptly banned it. Why would they not. It ruthlessly exposed the incredible
ineffectiveness, apathy, arrogance, ignorance of matters military &
nepotism of the Political and Bureaucratic classes. No surprise then that the
'Henderson Brooks Report', an in-depth study of the actual reasons for the
defeat, co-authored by the redoubtable and legendary Lt Gen PS Bhagat, never
saw the light of day. Almost everyone involved with the '62 ops were, at one
time or another, interviewed by this duo. Any other country would have hungered
for an 'expose' of the truth, if only to rectify matters. Not surprisingly, the
report has still not been put in the public domain. Fifty years on and not even
available under the vaunted RTI Act. What's there to hide? I'm sure the Indian
public would eventually want to know. But then it might just tarnish the
historical reputation of some pretty well known characters.
Sadly, he never really came to terms with the indifferent attitude
of the Establishment. He was told, by one revered leader, "Brig, you
should know, losing armies don't get medals"! It was these kinds of
statements that broke his will, spirit, resolve and left him an embittered,
lonely and angry man. Added to this was the debilitated state of his body - broken
and battered due to scurvy and malnutrition during his POW days. About this
time he also began to feel the symptoms of muscular atrophy, definitely
acquired during his incarceration. All put together these aspects took a final
deadly and fatal toll. There was a brief bright period when he met and came
under the spell of the charismatic Minoo Masani. He actually joined the
Swatantara Party. However, that was
the briefest of respites for his troubled soul and he died, sad, broken and
disillusioned at the age of 54, in October 1974, at INS Ashwini, the Military
Hospital in Bombay.
Any which way - RIP dad you did your duty in the best traditions
of an Officer and a Gentleman.
Michael,
ReplyDeleteAs a veteran of the 1962 war myself, my salute to your Dad and the gallant men of 7 Inf Bde.
I also had the privilege of serving in Staff College where Brig TK Gupta was a senior colleague.
Today is the 51st anniversary of the Chinese attack across the Namka Chu.
Best regards,
J Thomas
I was a battalion commander in1984 in the same Niamjungchu area.Before taking over command I had gone through Brig.Dalvi's Himalayan Blunder word by word and later walked over the area inch by inch including the place where Brig.Hoshiar sing was killed.
ReplyDeleteHats off to the heroes!
This country will never furgive those political basterds who led this country then and thereafter.col(Retd)P.Ganesan,VSM.