Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

India Won’t Forget Kargil War: Musharraf

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 May, 2015 02:42 PM
    Recalling the Kargil conflict of 1999 between India and Pakistan, former military strongman Pervez Musharraf on Sunday said New Delhi would never be able to forget the three-month-long battle when his armed forces "grabbed India by the throat".
     
    "There was a second line force, too, which caught India by the throat and that was latter given the status of an army," Geo News reported citing Musharraf as saying while addressing a function of his All Pakistan Muslim League (APML) political party.
     
    "We entered Kargil from four points of which India was not aware," he said, adding that New Delhi will also remember the battle of Kargil.
     
    In May 1999, India and Pakistan, in their most serious military engagement since 1971, clashed in Kargil area of Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir. In the spring, as snows melted in the Kargil sector to the northeast of Srinagar, some 1,000 or more infiltrators crossed the Line of Control from Pakistani-occupied Kashmir into Indian Kashmir. 
     
    Equipped for high-altitude warfare, with snowmobiles and mortars, and protected by Pakistani artillery fire from the other side of the border, they established positions at heights above 14,000 feet, overlooking the strategically vital road that connects Srinagar with Leh in Ladakh. 
     
    The operation, Pakistan hoped, would give new stimulus to the decade-long insurgency within Indian Kashmir, and, in its direct impact, both raise the military costs for India in Kashmir and cut the strategic highway link between Srinagar and Leh. It failed on all counts.
     
    On September 2007, Nawaz Sharif, admitted that he had "let down" his then Indian counterpart Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and maintained that the then Pakistan Army chief Pervez Musharraf was behind the 1999 Pakistani aggression in Kargil without his knowledge. 
     
    He said Musharraf had "subverted" the process of improving relations with India and regretted not having taken any action against the military strongman who deposed him barely three months later.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Gaza toll 213, Hamas rejects ceasefire deal

    Gaza toll 213, Hamas rejects ceasefire deal
    Four more Palestinians were killed Wednesday in a new Israeli airstrike on the Gaza Strip, taking the death toll in nine days of bombing to 213 even as the Islamic Hamas movement rejected a Egyptian ceasefire proposal with Israel.

    Gaza toll 213, Hamas rejects ceasefire deal

    British Indian MP appointed exchequer secretary

    British Indian MP appointed exchequer secretary
    Indian-origin British MP Priti Patel has been appointed exchequer secretary to the Treasury department dealing with tax policy in a major cabinet reshuffle announced by British Prime Minister David Cameron Tuesday.

    British Indian MP appointed exchequer secretary

    Turned away by hospital, Indian-origin woman gives birth at home

    Turned away by hospital, Indian-origin woman gives birth at home
    An Indian-origin woman in labour was turned away from a hospital's maternity unit in Britain - only to give birth 40 minutes later in her mother's living room, a media report said.

    Turned away by hospital, Indian-origin woman gives birth at home

    Hiring former employees is actually beneficial

    Hiring former employees is actually beneficial
    Returning employees understand the key components of an organisation's work culture and may also be more committed to the focal organisation upon their return, making them less risky hires, says a study.

    Hiring former employees is actually beneficial

    Haryana SGPC brazen interference in the religious affairs of the Sikh community: Badal

    Haryana SGPC brazen interference in the religious affairs of the Sikh community: Badal
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Monday described as "provocative and a brazen interference in the religious affairs of the Sikh community" the action of the Congress government in Haryana in getting a law enacted to set up a separate body for Sikh shrines in that state.

    Haryana SGPC brazen interference in the religious affairs of the Sikh community: Badal

    Indian Muslim youth being drawn into Iraqi conflict

    Indian Muslim youth being drawn into Iraqi conflict
    Hundreds of Indian Muslim youth, mostly from poor and vulnerable backgrounds, are lining up for visas at the embassies of some of the Gulf and Middle East nations with the aim of joining the 'jehad' in Iraq, according to diplomatic sources.

    Indian Muslim youth being drawn into Iraqi conflict