Headlines
India won’t forget Kargil war: Musharraf
Islamabad, May 17
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.