“As they damn well
“So how do we want to proceed on this?” Ravoof asked, unable to conceal his excitement. “I am going to be briefing the P-M in an hour once Tiwari has more details for me. But I thought I will give you a heads up on what that meeting is going to be about.”
“Thank you,” Chakri said. He appreciated the heads-up. He knew he needed time to digest this before heading over to meet the NSA and then the Prime-Minister.
“Ravoof,” he said after a few seconds, “let’s keep this low for now. We don’t want the media gaining even a whiff of this until we know what we are getting into. We don’t want this leaking out to the world just yet. Beijing might be forced to backtrack into their hole if they are publicly humiliated with this news. I can only imagine what is happening in Beijing right now and how delicate the deal might be from their end.”
“I agree,” Ravoof said.
“I am also putting a call to the service chiefs to see what they have to say about this,” Chakri concluded and terminated the call with the Foreign-Minister. He was already lost in thought as he put down the phone.
Lieutenant-General Suman yawned for what seemed to him like the thousandth time. Unlike all other wars that India had fought in nearly seventy years, this war had been truly waged on a near continuous level over the last two weeks. With little or no time for rest and always on the move for fear of Chinese missile attacks, Suman was realizing the limits of his own body’s endurance.
But for all that, his corner of the war was going well.
The XXXIII Corps had broken the PLA 55TH Division in the southern part of the valley into several isolated segments as operation Chimera entered its final phases. The PLA 11TH Division had been pushed away from its sister force and was now effectively separated by the full force of the 2ND Mountain Division in between them. And north of the 11TH were the two Indian airborne battalions under Colonel Thomas.
The 2ND Mountain Division brigades had moved west to east from Sikkim and one of its battalions had even reached the eastern slopes of the Chomolhari on the Bhutanese border. There they had been met by a small recon group from Potgam’s Joint-Force-Bhutan.
With each passing hour the soldiers in that unfortunate unit were being pummeled with heavy artillery. The 55TH Division had now been reduced to a few thousand battered men in small groups surrounded from all sides.
Suman clenched his fists and broke the pencil in his hand in two as he thought about that. He and most other senior officers were old enough to remember growing up as kids learning of the defeat at Namka Chu and the Chip-Chap river valley back in 1962. More than fifty years later, there was little in the way of sympathy that Suman could now bring to bear.
He leaned back in his chair, exhaled and tried to close his eyes for a brief moment of rest.
“What the hell is
“So the chaps up in the 71ST Mountain heard this over their comms,” the Lieutenant-General handed Suman a print-out with a smile. Suman took it and glanced over the usual comms security data down to the relevant part: