Capturing Qaid Post or Bana Top!
Brigadier Virendar Singh, Siachen hero, valued
friend, passes away by Ajai Shukla
This is a personal loss for me, but also a loss to the army and to India. Brigadier (Retd) Virendar Singh, the intrepid Jammu & Kashmir Light Infantry (JAK LI) officer who defied death while assaulting the Pakistan-held Qaid Post, on the Saltoro Ridge in the Siachen sector, has moved on to the resting place of great warriors.
I post below an article that I wrote describing that incredible feat, in which Viru won a Vir Chakra, and one of the men he led, Naib Subedar Bana Singh, won the Param Vir Chakra, India's equivalent of the Victoria Cross and the Medal of Honor. The article was published in Business Standard on 30th May 2011.
Qaid Post is now called Bana Top. Thanks to Viru and his men it is an Indian post. May it always be so. And may Viru always rest in peace.
Good bye, my friend.
ARMY WATCHES AS SIACHEN DIALOGUE RESUMES
by Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 30th May
2011
On a moonless night in Siachen, in May
1987, Second Lieutenant Rajiv Pande’s thirteen-man patrol silently climbed
towards Quaid Post, a 21,153-feet high pinnacle near the crucial Bilafond La
pass that was held by 17 Pakistani soldiers. Quaid had to be captured and Pande
was fixing ropes on the near-vertical, 1500-feet ice wall just below the post,
to assist a larger follow-on force in making a physical assault. As the jawans
fixed the ropes, gasping for breath in that oxygen-depleted altitude, the
Pakistani sentries just a few hundred feet above heard them. Gunfire rang out
killing nine Indian soldiers, including Pande. But the four survivors could tell
their unit, 8 Jammu & Kashmir Light Infantry (8 JAK LI), that the ropes were
fixed.
Capturing Quaid post was vital being the
only Pakistani post that dominated key Indian positions at Bilafond La.
Realising its importance, Pakistan named it after Qaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali
Jinnah. The post, commanded by Subedar Ataullah Mohammed, was held by commandoes
from the elite Special Services Group.
With the ropes in place, 8 JAK LI
helicoptered an assault team to Bilafond La. Since the Cheetah helicopter can
only ferry a single passenger in those extreme heights, and because of frequent
blizzards, it took 25 days for the team to gather. On 23rd June, sixty-four
soldiers, commanded by Major Virendar Singh, began the attack. All night they
searched in waist-deep snow for the rope fixed by Pande’s patrol. Unable to find
it, they fell back to base.
The next night a silent cheer went up as
the rope was found. In single file, with their rifles slung across their backs,
the first section (10 men) started the ascent to Quaid, crossing en route the
bodies of Pande and his patrol, still roped together in death. Halfway up, the
Pakistani defenders spotted them and opened a murderous fire. Pinned to the ice
wall and unable to fire back --- their weapons had suffered “cold arrest”,
jammed solid from the minus 25 degree cold --- the assault team sheltered in
craters formed by artillery shells. There they spent the entire day exposed,
frozen, hungry and under Pakistani fire.
At nightfall on the 25th, the attack
began anew. Now the neighbouring Indian posts ---Sonam and Amar --- also fired
at Quaid, supplementing an artillery barrage. But each metre gained was paid for
in blood; every Indian casualty needed four comrades to ferry him down. A brief
rest, a cup of tea, and the four helpers were thrown back into
battle.
“By any measure, we should have dropped
from exhaustion”, said Major Virendar Singh, describing the events to Business
Standard. “But Pande had to be avenged, and the relentless firing from Quaid
reminded us of what we had to do.”
By daybreak on the 26th, it became
evident that capturing Quaid post would need a daylight frontal assault. With
the entire army brass’ attention riveted on this unfolding drama, the brigade
commander, Brigadier Chandan Nugyal, radioed Virendar, promising him fire
support from every artillery gun in range if he could finish the
job.
“I knew we would not last another night
on a bar of 5-Star chocolate. We fixed the attack for noon”, says
Virendar.
After a massive barrage of artillery
fire, Virendar closed onto the post with his 8-man assault party.
Simultaneously, another small team outflanked Quaid from below and cut the ropes
that the Pakistanis used. Subedar Mohammad knew the game was up. Four defenders
jumped off the post, preferring instant death in the abyss below to being shot
or bayoneted in combat. The two who remaining were quickly killed. By 3 p.m. the
Indian assault party staggered onto Quaid.
“We had no strength to celebrate. At
21,000 feet, nobody does the bhangra, yells war cries, or hoists the tricolour.
Ultimately, sheer doggedness wins. If we had once hesitated, Quaid would still
be with Pakistan,” recounts Virendar. An admiring army awarded a Param Vir
Chakra to Naib Subedar Bana Singh of the assault party and renamed Quaid post
Bana Top; and a Maha Vir Chakra and 7 Vir Chakras to other bravehearts of 12 JAK
LI. Virendar, who was severely wounded by an artillery shell after Quaid post
was captured, won a Vir Chakra, as did Lieutenant Pande.
Indian posts across Siachen, like Bana
Top, many of them won at similar cost, will be on the negotiating table today
and tomorrow, as the defence secretaries of India and Pakistan meet for the 12th
round of dialogue to resolve the Siachen dispute. The Pakistan Army --- for whom
Siachen represents a stinging defeat at the hands of the Indian Army --- wants
to erase that memory by “demilitarising” Siachen. It wants both sides to vacate
their positions and pull back to an agreed line, well short of the glacier. But
the Indian Army has little trust for its Pakistani counterpart after the Kargil
intrusion and years of fighting terrorism. It asks: how do we know that Pakistan
will not reoccupy Siachen after we withdraw? How can you assure us that we will
not have to capture Bana Top again?
During 11 previous rounds of dialogue New
Delhi had demanded a signed map from Pakistan, showing its forward troop
locations, as a prerequisite for a Siachen settlement. Pakistan demurs,
ostensibly because that would “legitimise” India’s “intrusion” into Siachen.
Rawalpindi’s refusal to authenticate its positions has scuttled all previous
dialogue. The reason for that reluctance, the Indian Army believes, is that a
signed map would clearly show how badly Pakistan was beaten in Siachen. Although
Pakistan terms it “the Siachen dispute”, its forward-most positions cannot even
see the glacier. From 13th April 1984, when an all-volunteer Indian force was
helicoptered to the Bilafond La pass, India’s complete control of the Saltoro
Ridge has shut Pakistan out of Siachen.
Over the years, at enormous cost in dead
and injured, the Indian Army has developed enormous skill at surviving at “super
altitudes”. In the 1980s, casualties from frostbite and altitude sickness ran in
the hundreds. By the end of the last decade, they were down to 20-22 per year.
During the last eight years, nobody has died. Today, barely 10-12 soldiers are
evacuated annually.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has termed
Siachen “a mountain of peace”, and has tended to view it as a bargaining chip in
the larger dialogue process with Pakistan. For the Indian Army, though, Siachen
symbolises a superhuman feat of arms, sustained over decades. Generals today
recall that the blood-soaked capture of the strategic Haji Pir Pass in 1965 was
undone at the negotiating table in Tashkent. And many wonder whether history is
about to repeat itself.
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