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A Defence Ministry Committee is reported
to have recommended releasing into the public domain, the official
reports on India's wars against Pakistan 1947, 1965 and 1971. Also
the 1962 border war against China, India's intervention in Sri Lanka
and others. Reproduced here is British author Neville Maxwell's
summary of what he believes the Henderson Brooks Report contains.
This article first appeared in the Economic & Political Weekly.
Neville Maxwell is the author of India's China War.
WHEN THE Army's report into its debacle in the border war was completed
in 1963, the Indian government had good reason to keep it Top Secret
and give only the vaguest, and largely misleading, indications of
its contents. At that time the government's effort, ultimately successful,
to convince the political public that the Chinese, with a sudden
'unprovoked aggression', had caught India unawares in a sort of
Himalayan Pearl Harbour was in its early stages and the report's
cool and detailed analysis, if made public, would have shown that
to be self-exculpatory mendacity.
But a series of studies, beginning in the late 1960s and continuing
into the 1990s,1 revealed to any serious enquirer the full story
of how the Indian Army was ordered to challenge the Chinese military
to a conflict it could only lose. So by now only bureaucratic inertia,
combined with the natural fading of any public interest, can explain
the continued non-publication - the report includes no surprises
and its publication would be of little significance but for the
fact that so many in India still cling to the soothing fantasy of
a 1962 Chinese 'aggression'.
It seems likely now that the report will never be released. Furthermore,
if one day a stable, confident and relaxed government in New Delhi
should, miraculously, appear and decide to clear out the cupboard
and publish it, the text would be largely incomprehensible, the
context, well known to the authors and therefore not spelled out,
being now forgotten. The report would need an introduction and gloss
- a first draft of which this paper attempts to provide, drawing
upon the writer's research in India in the 1960s and material published
later.
Two preambles are required, one briefly recalling the cause and
course of the border war, the second to describe the fault-line,
which the border dispute turned into a schism, within the Army's
officer corps, which was a key factor in the disaster - and of which
the Henderson Brooks Report can be seen as an expression.
Origins of Border Conflict:
India at the time of independence can be said have faced no external
threats. True, it was born into a relationship of permanent belligerency
with its weaker Siamese twin Pakistan, left by the British inseparably
conjoined to India by the member of Kashmir, vital to both new national
organisms; but that may be seen as essentially an internal dispute,
an untreatable complication left by the crude, cruel surgery of
partition.
In 1947 China, wracked by civil war, was in what appeared to be
death throes and no conceivable threat to anyone. That changed with
astonishing speed and by 1950, when the newborn People's Republic
re-established in Tibet the central authority which had lapsed in
1911, the Indian Government will have made its initial assessment
of the possibility and potential of a threat from China and found
those to be minimal, if not non-extent.
First, there were geographic and topographical factors, the great
mountain chains which lay between the two neighbours and appeared
to make large-scale troop movements impractical. More important,
the leadership of the Indian Government - which is to say, Jawaharlal
Nehru - had for years proclaimed that the unshakable friendship
between India and China would be the key to both their futures and
therefore Asia's, even the world's. The new leaders in Beijing were
more chary, viewing India through their Marxist prism as a potentially
hostile bourgeois state. But in the Indian political perspective
war with China was deemed unthinkable and through the 1950s New
Delhi's defence planning and expenditure expressed that confidence.
By the early 1950s, however, the Indian government, which is to
say Nehru and his acolyte officials, had shaped and adopted a policy
whose implementation would make armed conflict with China not only
'thinkable' but inevitable. From the first days of India's independence,
it was appreciated that the Sino-Indian borders had been left undefined
by the departing British and that territorial disputes with China
were part of India's inheritance. China's other neighbours faced
similar problems and over the succeeding decades of the century,
almost all of those were to settle their borders satisfactorily
through the normal process of diplomatic negotiation with Beijing.
The Nehru government decided upon the opposite approach. India would
through its own research determine the appropriate alignments of
the Sino-Indian borders, extend its administration to make those
good on the ground and then refuse to negotiate the result. Barring
the inconceivable - that Beijing would allow India to impose China's
borders unilaterally and annex territory at will - Nehru's policy
thus willed conflict without foreseeing it. Through the 1950s, that
policy generated friction along the borders and so bred and steadily
increased distrust, growing into hostility, between the neighbours.
By 1958 Beijing was urgently calling for a stand-still agreement
to prevent patrol clashes and negotiations to agree boundary alignments.
India refused any standstill agreement, since such would be an impediment
to intended advances and insisted that there was nothing to negotiate,
the Sino-Indian borders being already settled on the alignments
claimed by India, through blind historical process.
Then it began accusing China of committing 'aggression' by refusing
to surrender to Indian claims. From 1961 the Indian attempt to establish
an armed presence in all the territory it claimed and then extrude
the Chinese was being exerted by the Army and Beijing was warning
that if India did not desist from its expansionist thrust, Chinese
forces would have to hit back. On October 12, 1962 Nehru proclaimed
India's intention to drive the Chinese out of areas India claimed.
That bravado had by then been forced upon him by the public expectations
which his charges of 'Chinese aggression' had aroused, but Beijing
took it as in effect a declaration of war.
The unfortunate Indian troops on the front line, under orders to
sweep superior Chinese forces out of their impregnable, dominating
positions, instantly appreciated the implications: "If Nehru had
declared his intention to attack, then the Chinese were not going
to wait to be attacked".2 On October 20 the Chinese launched a pre-emptive
offensive all along the borders, overwhelming the feeble - but in
this first instance determined - resistance of the Indian troops
and advancing some distance in the eastern sector. On October 24
Beijing offered a ceasefire and Chinese withdrawal on condition
India agreed to open negotiations: Nehru refused the offer even
before the text was officially received. Both sides built up over
the next three weeks and the Indians launched a local counter-attack
on November 15, arousing in India fresh expectations of total victory.3
The Chinese then renewed their offensive. Now many units of the
once crack Indian 4th Division dissolved into rout without giving
battle and by November 20 there was no organised Indian resistance
anywhere in the disputed territories. On that day Beijing announced
a unilateral ceasefire and intention to withdraw its forces: Nehru
this time tacitly accepted.4
Naturally the Indian political public demanded to know what had
brought about the shameful debacle suffered by their Army and on
December 14 a new Army Commander, Lt General J N Chaudhuri, instituted
an Operations Review for that purpose, assigning the task of enquiry
to Lt General Henderson Brooks and Brigadier P S Bhagat.
Factionalisation of the Army:
All colonial armies are liable to suffer from the tugs of contradictory
allegience and in the case of India's that fissure was opened in
the second world war by Japan's recruitment from prisoners of war
of the 'Indian National Army' to fight against their former fellows.
By the beginning of the 1950s two factions were emerging in the
officer corps, one patriotic but above all professional and apolitical
and orthodox in adherence to the regimental traditions established
in the century of the Raj; the other nationalist, ready to respond
unquestioningly to the political requirements of their civilian
masters and scorning their rivals as fuddy-duddies still aping the
departed rulers and suspected as being of doubtful loyalty to the
new ones. The latter faction soon took on eponymous identification
from its leader, B M Kaul.
At the time of independence Kaul appeared to be a failed officer,
if not disgraced. Although Sandhurst-trained for infantry service
he had eased through the war without serving on any front line and
ended it in a humble and obscure post in public relations. But his
courtier wiles, irrelevant or damning until then, were to serve
him brilliantly in the new order that independence brought, after
he came to the notice of Nehru, a fellow Kashmiri brahmin and indeed
distant kinsman. Boosted by the prime minister's steady favouritism,
Kaul rocketed up through the army structure to emerge in 1961 at
the very summit of Army HQ. Not only did he hold the key appointment
of chief of the general staff (CGS) but the Army Commander, Thapar,
was in effect his client.
Kaul had of course by then acquired a significant following, disparaged
by the other side as 'Kaul boys' ('call girls' had just entered
usage) and his appointment as CGS opened a putsch in HQ, an eviction
of the old guard, with his rivals, until then his superiors, being
not only pushed out, but often hounded thereafter with charges of
disloyalty. The struggle between those factions both fed on and
fed into the strains placed on the Army by the government's contradictory
and hypocritical policies - on the one hand proclaiming China an
eternal friend against whom it was unnecessary to arm, on the other
using armed force to seize territory it knew China regarded as its
own.
Through the early 1950s, Nehru's covertly expansionist policy had
been implemented by armed border police under the Intelligence Bureau
(IB), whose director, N B Mullik, was another favourite and confidant
of the prime minister. The Army high command, knowing its forces
to be too weak to risk conflict with China, would have nothing to
do with it. Indeed when the potential for Sino-Indian conflict inherent
in Mullik's aggressive forward patrolling was demonstrated in the
serious clash at the Kongka Pass in October 1959, Army HQ and the
Ministry of External Affairs united to denounce him as a provocateur,
insist that control over all activities on the border be assumed
by the Army, which thus could insulate China from Mullik's jabs.5
The takeover by Kaul and his 'boys' at Army HQ in 1961 reversed
that. Now regular infantry would takeover from Mullik's border police
in implementing what was formally designated a 'forward policy',
one conceived to extrude the Chinese presence from all territory
claimed by India. Field commanders receiving orders to move troops
forward into territory the Chinese both held and regarded as their
own, warned that they had no resources or reserves to meet the forceful
reaction they knew must be the ultimate outcome: They were told
to keep quiet and obey orders. That may suggest that those driving
the forward policy saw it in kamikaze terms and were reconciled
to its ending in gunfire and blood - but the opposite was true.
They were totally and unshakably convinced that it would end not
with a bang but a whimper - from Beijing. The psychological bedrock
upon which the forward policy rested was the belief that in the
last resort the Chinese military, snuffling from a bloody nose,
would pack up and quit the territory India claimed.
The source of that faith was Mullik, who from beginning to end proclaimed
as oracular truth that, whatever the Indians did, there need be
no fear of a violent Chinese reaction. The record shows no one squarely
challenging that mantra, at higher levels than the field commanders
who throughout knew it to be dangerous nonsense: There were civilian
'Kaul boys' in External Affairs and the Defence Ministry too, and
they basked happily in Mullik's fantasy. Perhaps the explanation
for the credulousness lay in Nehru's dependent relationship with
his IB chief: Since the prime minister placed such faith in Mullik,
it would be at the least lese-majesty and even heresy, to deny him
a kind of papal infallibility. If it be taken that Mullik was not
just deluded, what other explanation could there be for the unwavering
consistency with which he urged his country forward on a course
which in rational perception could lead only to war with a greatly
superior military power and therefore defeat?
Another question arises: Who, in those years, would most have welcomed
the great falling-out which saw India shift in a few years from
strong international support for the People's Republic of China
to enmity and armed conflict with it? From founding and leading
the non-aligned movement to tacit enlistment in the hostile encirclement
of China which was Washington's aim? Mullik maintained close links
with the CIA station head in New Delhi, Harry Rossitsky. Answers
may lie in the agency's archives.
China's stunning and humiliating victory brought about an immediate
reversal of fortune between the Army factions. Out went Kaul, out
went Thapar, out went many of their adherents - but by no means
all. General Chaudhuri, appointed to replace Thapar as Army Chief,
chose not to launch a counter-putsch. He and his colleagues of the
restored old guard knew full well what had caused the debacle: Political
interference in promotions and appointments by the prime minister
and Krishna Menon, defence minister, followed by clownish ineptitude
in Army HQ as the 'Kaul boys' scurried to force the troops to carry
out the mad tactics and strategy laid down by the government. It
was clear that the trail back from the broken remnants of 4 Division
limping onto the plains in the north-east, up through intermediate
commands to Army HQ in New Delhi and then on to the source of political
direction, would have ended at the prime minister's door - a destination
which, understandably, Chaudhuri had no desire to reach. (Mullik
was anyway to tarnish him with the charge that he was plotting to
overthrow the discredited civil order but in fact Chaudhuri was
a dedicated constitutionalist - ironically, Kaul was the only one
of the generals who harboured Caesarist ambitions.6)
The Investigation: While the
outraged humiliation of the political class left Chaudhuri with
no choice but to order an enquiry into the Army's collapse, it was
up to him to decide its range and focus, indeed its temper. The
choice of Lt General Henderson Brooks to run an Operations Review
(rather than a broader and more searching board of enquiry) was
indicative of a wish not to reheat the already bubbling stew of
recriminations. Henderson Brooks (until then in command of a corps
facing Pakistan) was a steady, competent but not outstanding officer,
whose appointments and personality had kept him entirely outside
the broils stirred up by Kaul's rise and fall. That could be said
too of the officer Chaudhuri appointed to assist Henderson Brooks,
Brigadier P S Baghat (holder of a WWII Victoria Cross and commandant
of the military academy). But the latter complemented his senior
by being a no-nonsense, fighting soldier, widely respected in the
Army and the taut, unforgiving analysis in the report bespeaks the
asperity of his approach. There is further evidence that Chaudhuri
did not wish the enquiry to dig too deep, range too widely, or excoriate
those it faulted. These were the terms of reference he set:
- Training
- Equipment
- System
of command
- Physical
fitness of troops
- Capacity
of commanders at all levels to influence the men under their command
The
first four of those smacked of an enquiry into the sinking of the
Titanic looking into the management of the shipyard where it was
built and the health of the deck crew; only the last term has any
immediacy and there the wording was distinctly odd - commanders
do not usually 'influence' those they command, they issue orders
and expect instant obedience. But Henderson Brooks and Baghat (henceforth
HB/B) in effect ignored the constraints of their terms of reference
and kicked against other limits Chaudhuri had laid upon their investigation,
especially his ruling that the functioning of Army HQ during the
crisis lay outside their purview.
"It would have been convenient and logical", they note, "to trace
the events [beginning with] Army HQ, and then move down to Commands
for more details, ...ending up with field formations for the battle
itself ". Forbidden that approach, they would, nevertheless, try
to discern what had happened at Army HQ from documents found at
lower levels, although those could not throw any light on one crucial
aspect of the story - the political directions given to the Army
by the civil authorities.
As HB/B began their enquiry they immediately discovered that the
short rein kept upon them by the Army Chief was by no means their
least handicap. They found themselves facing determined obstruction
in Army HQ, where one of the leading lights of the Kaul faction
had survived in the key post of Director of Military Operations
(DMO) - Brigadier D K Palit. Kaul had exerted his powers to have
Palit made DMO in 1961 although others senior to him were listed
for the post and Palit, as he was himself to admit, was "one of
the least qualified among [his] contemporaries for this crucial
General Staff appointment"7 Palit had thereafter acted as enforcer
for Kaul and the civilian protagonists of the 'forward policy',
Mullik foremost among the latter, issuing the orders and deflecting
or overruling the protests of field commanders who reported up their
strategic imbecility or operational impossibility.
Why Chaudhuri left Palit in this post is puzzling: The Henderson
Brooks Report was to make quite clear what a prominent and destructive
role he had played throughout the Army high command's politicisation
and through inappropriate meddling in command decisions, even in
bringing about the debacle in the North-east. Palit, though, would
immediately have recognised that the HB/B enquiry posed a grave
threat to his career, and so did all that he could undermine and
obstruct it. After consultation with Mullik, Palit took it upon
himself to rule that HB/B should not have access to any documents
emanating from the civil side - in other words, he blindfolded the
enquiry, as far as he could, as to the nexus between the civil and
military.
As Palit smugly recounts his story, in an autobiography published
in 1991, he personally faced down both Henderson Brooks and Baghat,
rode out their formal complaints about his obstructionism and prevented
them from prying into the "high level policies and decsions" which
he maintained were none of their business.8 In fact, however, the
last word lies with HB/B - or will do if their report is ever published.
In spite of Palit's efforts, they discovered a great deal that the
Kaul camp and the government would have preferred to keep hidden
and their report shows that Palit's self-admiring and mock-modest
autobiography grossly misrepresents the role he played.
The Henderson Brooks Report is long (its main section, excluding
recommendations and many annexures, covers nearly 200 foolscap pages),
detailed and far-ranging. This introduction will touch only upon
some salient points, to give the flavour of the whole (a full account
of the subject they covered is in the writer's 1970 study, India's
China War).
The Forward Policy: This was
born and named at a meeting chaired by Nehru on November 2, 1961,
but had been alive and kicking in the womb for years before that
- indeed its conception dated back to 1954, when Nehru issued an
instruction for posts to be set up all along India's claim lines,
"especially in such places as might be disputed". What happened
at this 1961 meeting was that the freeze on provocative forward
patrolling, instituted at the Army's insistence after Mullik had
engineered the Kongka Pass clash, was ended - with the Army, now
under the courtier leadership of Thapar and Kaul, eagerly assuming
the task which Mullik's armed border police had carried out until
the Army stopped them. HB/B note that no minutes of this meeting
had been obtained, but were able to quote Mullik as saying that
"the Chinese would not react to our establishing new posts and that
they were not likely to use force against any of our posts even
if they were in a position to do so" (HB/B's emphasis).
That opinion contradicted the conclusion Army Intelligence had reached
12 months before: That the Chinese would resist by force any attempts
to take back territory held by them. HB/B then trace a contradictory
duet between Army HQ and Western Army Command, with HQ ordering
the establishment of 'penny-packet' forward posts in Ladakh, specifying
their location and strength and Western Command protesting that
it lacked the forces to carry out the allotted task, still less
to face the grimly foreseeable consequences. Kaul and Palit "time
and again ordered in furtherance of the 'forward policy' the establishment
of individual posts, overruling protests made by Western Command".
By August 1962 about 60 posts had been set up, most manned with
less than a dozen soldiers, all under close threat by overwhelmingly
superior Chinese forces.
Western Command submitted another request for heavy reinforcements,
accompanying it with this admonition: [I]t is imperative that political
direction is based on military means. If the two are not co-related
there is a danger of creating a situation where we may lose both
in the material and moral sense much more than we already have.
Thus, there is no short cut to military preparedness to enable us
to pursue effectively our present policy...
That warning was ignored, reinforcements were denied, orders were
affirmed and although the Chinese were making every effort, diplomatic,
political and military, to prove their determination to resist by
force, again it was asserted that no forceful reaction by the Chinese
was to be expected. HB/B quote Field Marshall Roberts: "The art
of war teaches us to rely not on the likelihood of the enemy not
coming, but in our own readiness to receive him; not on the chance
of his not attacking, but rather on the fact that we have made our
position unassailable". But in this instance troops were being put
in dire jeopardy in pursuit of a strategy based upon an assumption
- that the Chinese would not resist with force - which the strategy
would itself inevitably prove wrong.
HB/B note that from the beginning of 1961, when the Kaulist putsch
reshaped Army HQ, crucial professional military practice was abandoned:
This lapse in Staff Duties on the part of the CGS [Kaul], his deputy,
the DMO [Palit] and other Staff Directors is inexcusable. From this
stemmed the unpreparedness and the unbalance of our forces. These
appointments in General Staff are key appointments and officers
were hand-picked by General Kaul to fill them. There was therefore
no question of clash of personalities. General Staff appointments
are stepping stones to high command and correspondingly carry heavy
responsibility. When, however, these appointments are looked upon
as adjuncts to a successful career and the responsibility is not
taken seriously, the results, as is only too clear, are disastrous.
This should never be allowed to be repeated and the Staff as of
old must be made to bear the consequences of their lapses and mistakes.
Comparatively, the mistakes and lapses of the Staff sitting in Delhi
without the stress and strain of battle are more heinous than the
errors made by commanders in the field of battle.
War and Debacle: While the main
thrust of the Forward Policy was exerted in the western sector it
was applied also in the east from December 1961. There the Army
was ordered to set up new posts along the McMahon Line (which China
treated - and treats - as the de facto boundary) and, in some sectors,
beyond it. One of these trans-Line posts named Dhola Post, was invested
by a superior Chinese force on September 8, 1962, the Chinese thus
reacting there exactly as they had been doing for a year in the
western sector. In this instance, however, and although Dhola Post
was known to be north of the McMahon Line, the Indian Government
reacted aggressively, deciding that the Chinese force threatening
Dhola must be attacked forthwith and thrown back.
Now again the duet of contradiction began, Army HQ and, in this
case, Eastern Command (headed by Lt General L P Sen) united against
the commands below: XXXIII Corps (Lt General Umrao Singh), 4 Division
(Major General Niranjan Prasad) and 7 Brigade (Brigadier John Dalvi).
The latter three stood together in reporting that the 'attack and
evict' order was militarily impossible to execute. The point of
confrontation, below Thagla Ridge at the western extremity of the
McMahon Line, presented immense logistical difficulties to the Indian
side and none to the Chinese, so whatever concentration of troops
could painfully be mustered by the Indians could instantly be outnumbered
and outweighed in weaponry. Tacticly, again the irreversible advantage
lay with the Chinese, who held well-supplied, fortified positions
on a commanding ridge feature.
The demand for military action, and victory, was political, generated
at top level meetings in Delhi. "The Defence Minister [Krishna Menon]
categorically stated that in view of the top secret nature of conferences
no minutes would be kept [and] this practice was followed at all
the conferences that were held by the defence minister in connection
with these operations". HB/B commented: "This is a surprising decision
and one which could and did lead to grave consequences. It absolved
in the ultimate analysis anyone of the responsibility for any major
decision. Thus it could and did lead to decisions being taken without
careful and considered thought on the consequences of those decisions".
Army HQ by no means restricted itself to the big picture. In mid-September
it issued an order to troops beneath Thagla Ridge to "(a) capture
a Chinese post 1,000 yards north-east of Dhola Post; (b) contain
the Chinese concentration south of Thagla." HB/B comment: "The General
Staff, sitting in Delhi, ordering an action against a position 1,000
yards north-east of Dhola Post is astounding. The country was not
known, the enemy situation vague and for all that there may have
been a ravine in between [the troops and their objective], but yet
the order was given. This order could go down in the annals of history
as being as incredible as the order for 'the Charge of the Light
Brigade' ".
Worse was to follow. Underlying all the meetings in Delhi was still
the conviction, or by now perhaps prayer, that even when frontally
attacked the Chinese would put up no serious resistance, still less
react aggressively elsewhere. Thus it came to be believed that the
problem lay in weakness, even cowardice, at lower levels of command.
General Umrao Singh (XXXIII Corps) was seen as the nub of the problem,
since he was backing his divisional and brigade commanders in their
insistence that the eviction operation was impossible. "It was obvious
that Lt General Umrao Singh would not be hustled into an operation,
without proper planning and logistical support. The defence ministry
and, for that matter, the general staff and Eastern Command were
prepared for a gamble on the basis of the Chinese not reacting to
any great extent".
So the political leadership and Army HQ decided that if Umrao Singh
could be replaced by a commander with fire in his belly, all would
come right and victory be assured. Such a commander was available
- General Kaul. A straight switch, Kaul relinquishing the CGS post
to takeover from Umrao Singh would have raised too many questions,
so it was decided instead that Umrao Singh would simply be moved
aside, retaining his corps command but no longer having anything
to do with the eviction operation. That would become the responsibility
of a new formation, IV Corps, whose sole task would be to attack
and drive the Chinese off Thagla Ridge. General Kaul would command
the new corps.
HB/B noted how even the most secret of government's decisions were
swiftly reported in the press and called for a thorough probe into
the sources of the leaks. Many years later Palit, in his autobiography,
described the transmission procedure. Palit had hurried to see Kaul
on learning of the latter's appointment to command the notional
new corps: "I found him in the little bedsitter den where he usually
worked when at home. I was startled to see, sitting beside him on
the divan, Prem Bhatia editor of The Times of India, looking like
the proverbial cat who has just swallowed a large yellow songbird.
He got up as I arrived, wished [Kaul] good luck and left, still
with a greatly pleased smirk on his face".9 Bhatia's scoop led his
paper next morning. The 'spin' therein was the suggestion that whereas
in the western sector Indian troops faced extreme logistical problems,
in the east that situation was reversed and therefore, with the
dashing Kaul in command of a fresh 'task force', victory was imminent.
The truth was exactly the contrary, those in the North-East Frontier
Agency (NEFA) faced even worse difficulties than their fellows in
the west and victory was a chimera. Those difficulties were compounded
by persistent interference from Army HQ. On orders from Delhi, "troops
of [the entire 7 Brigade] were dispersed to outposts that were militarily
unsound and logistically unsupportable". Once Kaul took over as
corps commander the troops were driven forward to their fate in
what HB/B called "wanton disregard of the elementary principles
of war". Even in the dry, numbered paragraphs of their report, HB/B's
account of the moves that preceded the final Chinese assault is
dramatic and riveting, with the scene of action shifting from the
banks of the Namka Chu, beneath the menacing loom of Thagla Ridge,
to Nehru's house in Delhi - whither Kaul rushed back to report when
a rash foray he had ordered was crushed by a fierce Chinese reaction
on October 10.
To follow those events, and on into the greater drama of the ensuing
debacle is tempting, but would add only greater detail to the account
already published. Given the nature of the dramatic events they
were investigating, it is not surprising that HB/B's cast of characters
consisted in the main of fools and/or knaves on the one hand, their
victims on the other. But they singled out a few heroes too, especially
the jawans, who fought whenever their senior commanders gave them
the necessary leadership, and suffered miserably from the latter's
often gross incompetence. As for the debacle itself, "Efforts of
a few officers, particularly those of Capt N N Rawat" to organise
a fighting retreat, "could not replace a disintegrated command",
nor could the cool-headed Brigadier Gurbax Singh do more than keep
his 48 Brigade in action as a cohesive combat unit until it was
liquidated by the joint efforts of higher command and the Chinese.
HB/B place the immediate cause of the collapse of resistance in
NEFA in the panicky, fumbling and contradictory orders issued from
corps HQ in Tezpur by a 'triumvirate' of officers they judge to
be grossly culpable: General Sen, General Kaul and Brigadier Palit.
Those were, however, only the immediate agents of disaster: Its
responsible planners and architects were another triumvirate, comprised
of Nehru, Mullik and again, Kaul, together with all those who confronted
and overcome through guile and puny force.
Notes: 1 The series began with Himalayan Blunder, Brigadier
John Dalvi's account of the sacrifice of his 7 Brigade on the Namka
Chu, a classic of military literature, continuing with the relatively
worthless Untold Story by General Kaul. In 1970 this writer's India's
China War told the full military story in political and diplomatic
context. In 1979 Colonel Saigal published a well-researched account
of the collapse of 4 Division in the North-East Frontier Agency.
Two years later General Niranjan Prasad complemented Dalvi's study
with his own fine account of The Fall of Towang 1962 and In 1991
General Palit, who as a brigadier had been director of military
operations in 1962, followed up with War in High Himalaya - like
Kaul's book self-exculpatory, but much more successfully so because
by then very few were left with the knowledge that could challenge
Palit's version of events and his role in them.
2. Major General Niranjan Prasad, The Fall of Towang, Palit and
Palit, New Delhi, 1981, p 69
3. With near-criminal disregard for military considerations, this
attack was launched, near Walong in the eastern sector, to obtain
a 'birthday' victory for Nehru! It failed.
4. He might well have aspired to another act of Churchillian defiance
but the American ambassador, J K Galbraith, up betimes, got to the
prime minister in time to persuade him that discretion would serve
India better than a hollow show of valour. Thirty years later the
Chinese expressed their appreciation with a banquet in Galbraith's
honour in Beijing.
5. The government misrepresented the Army's takeover as evidence
of the seriousness of the 'Chinese threat'. In fact it was a measure
to try to insulate China from the steady pinprick provocations Mullik
had been organising. The truth emerged only years later, in Mullik's
autobiography, My Years with Nehru: The Chinese Betrayal, Allied
Publishers, New Delhi, 1971, pp 243-45.
6. Welles Hangen, After Nehru, Who?, Harte-Davis, London, 1963,
p 272.
7. D K Palit, War in High Himalaya: The Indian Army in Crisis,1962,
Hurst and Co, London, 1991, p 71.
8. Ibid, pp 390-92.
9. Ibid, p 220.
Copyright: Economic & Political Weekly April14-20, 2001 (www.epw.org)
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