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- <text id=89TT1968>
- <title>
- July 31, 1989: War At The Top Of The World
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 31, 1989 Doctors And Patients
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- THE HIMALAYAS
- War at the Top Of the World
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Fighting at breathtaking altitudes, Indians and Pakistanis are
- locked in an icy stalemate
- </p>
- <p>By Edward W. Desmond/Kashmir
- </p>
- <p> The blast is startling, and so is the reverberation that
- echoes like a landslide. But the sound of artillery fire -- the
- sound of war -- fades quickly in the gigantic stillness of
- mountain and glacier. Soldiers clad in dirty white snowsuits,
- their faces burned black by the sun, scramble to put another
- shell in the 105-mm howitzer and fire again. They are
- Pakistanis, serving at an outpost 17,200 ft. up on the Baltoro
- Glacier, just short of a sweeping ridgeline called the Conway
- Saddle. Their fire is aimed over the ridge at similar positions
- manned by Indian troops seven miles away on the Siachen Glacier,
- the longest in the Karakoram mountains. When the weather is
- clear, the big guns sometimes boom round the clock.
- </p>
- <p> On this day, the other side is not shooting back, so only
- a handful of Pakistanis man machine guns, to ensure that no
- Indian reconnaissance helicopter passes unchallenged. Blue sky
- forms a stunning canvas for the cathedrals of snow-laden
- mountains topping 20,000 ft., including K2, the world's second
- highest peak. The Pakistani brigadier who commands the northern
- sector of the area looks around and says, "This place is
- beautiful. It was not meant for fighting."
- </p>
- <p> But fighting there is -- and has been for more than five
- years. The Karakoram fastness of northern Kashmir is an area no
- men ever inhabited, and only a few had traversed, before
- Pakistani and Indian troops moved in to wage a bitter conflict,
- largely out of sight of their own people and the rest of the
- world. Pakistan and India each deploy several thousand troops
- in the region. Neither side releases casualty figures, yet
- hundreds of men have died from combat, weather, altitude and
- accidents, and thousands have been injured. Says the general
- commanding the Indian sector: "This is an actual war in every
- sense of the word. There is no quarter asked and no quarter
- given."
- </p>
- <p> The paradox is that India and Pakistan are supposedly at
- peace and that Prime Ministers Rajiv Gandhi and Benazir Bhutto
- are trying to move from a chilly standoff into a friendlier era.
- Both say they want to erase what Bhutto calls the "irritant" of
- the Siachen Glacier problem, and both instructed their
- negotiators to do so in the most recent round of talks that
- began last month in Pakistan. When Gandhi and Bhutto met face
- to face in Islamabad last week, however, they failed to come
- close to devising a practical solution. Progress has been as
- thin as the atmosphere in the Karakorams, as the negotiators
- struggle to settle the central issue: how to divide the disputed
- mountain area between Pakistan and India.
- </p>
- <p> At stake is national prestige as well as control of
- Kashmir's northern reaches. Since gaining their independence
- from Britain in 1947, both countries have wanted the 85,805 sq.
- mi. of the state of Jammu and Kashmir as their own. In 1949
- Pakistan and India signed the so-called Karachi Agreement, which
- drew a cease-fire line that ended at map coordinate NJ 9842, at
- the southern foot of the Saltoro Range. The negotiators did not
- extend the line because there had been no fighting in Kashmir's
- northernmost reaches, but merely mentioned that the line should
- continue "thence north to the glaciers." Despite minor
- adjustments after the 1965 and 1971 India-Pakistan wars, the
- official boundary still ends at NJ 9842, leaving the Siachen
- ownership question unresolved.
- </p>
- <p> Almost from the beginning, New Delhi has argued that India
- is entitled to control all of Kashmir. Islamabad's claim is
- more complex: besides supporting a 1949 U.N. call for a
- plebiscite on Kashmir's future, Pakistan has marshaled what it
- considers proof that it has all along controlled the area from
- NJ 9842 to the Karakoram Pass on the Chinese border. Islamabad
- cites circumstantial evidence, like the fact that
- mountaineering expeditions for years sought Pakistan's
- permission to enter the region, and its agreement to cede some
- of the territory to China in 1963.
- </p>
- <p> India was the first to deploy troops on the Siachen
- Glacier. In April 1984 the Indian army launched Operation
- Meghdoot (Cloud Messenger), placing forces at two key passes of
- the Saltoro Range, which runs along the Siachen Glacier's
- western edge toward the Chinese border. India says it was
- pre-empting a planned Pakistani move -- a contention Islamabad
- denies. The Indian advance captured nearly 1,000 sq. mi. of
- territory claimed by Pakistan; ever since then New Delhi has
- wanted to establish a formal boundary along that natural divide.
- The conflict escalated slowly as each side deployed more men,
- established more outposts, introduced more artillery and
- rockets. In September 1987 the action peaked, but neither side
- has been willing to take the next steps, which might involve
- introducing air power or expanding the conflict to the south.
- </p>
- <p> The only benefit for both sides has been improvement in
- their capability for high-altitude warfare. Both forces have
- built all-weather roads that twist up between towering peaks to
- base camps on the glaciers. Soldiers spend six weeks
- acclimatizing to the torturous conditions, learning ice climbing
- and winter survival. From the camps, men fan out to front-line
- positions in snow-choked mountain passes. They take turns
- watching for movement on the other side -- and the opportunity
- to call in artillery.
- </p>
- <p> The rules of engagement are clear-cut on both sides: if
- there is a target, fire. Thus the battle is largely indirect,
- as howitzers and mortars lob shells -- mostly inaccurately --
- over the ridges. Infantry assaults are rare, mainly because it
- is so hard for men to move, let alone charge, at such heights
- and over crevasse-riddled glaciers. At 18,000 ft. and higher,
- even a fully acclimatized soldier carrying rifle and combat pack
- can jog only a few yards without losing his breath. "The terrain
- does not allow much movement," says a Pakistani officer at an
- outpost on the Baltoro Glacier. "There is a natural limit to
- this conflict."
- </p>
- <p> The principal causes of casualties are terrain and weather.
- Never before have men fought for any length of time at such
- altitudes, breathing air that contains less than half the
- oxygen at sea level, at temperatures that drop below -43 degrees
- F, in blinding blizzards that can last days. Both sides admit
- that 8 out of 10 casualties are caused by the harsh conditions
- -- including soldiers being swept away in cascades of snow or
- tumbling into crevasses. Says a Pakistani officer at the
- northern end of the Saltoro sector: "We are brave. They are
- brave. And we both face the same enemies: the weather and the
- altitude."
- </p>
- <p> On those occasions when the antagonists do fight at close
- range, the results can be fearsome. In a month-long clash
- ending last May, soldiers battled intensely on a mountain and
- ridges near the Chumic Glacier. Both sides dispatched men in a
- furious race to an icy 21,300-ft.-high peak that commanded the
- area. "The secret in this terrain," says an Indian officer, "is
- to be the first on top." Seeing that the Indians would in fact
- get there first, the Pakistanis took a gamble: in howling winds
- they tied two soldiers to the runners of a helicopter for a
- seven-minute ride to the peak, not certain whether wind speed
- and icy temperatures would cause them to freeze to death before
- they reached their destination. The soldiers survived, landed
- on the summit and held off about a dozen Indians climbing toward
- the same spot.
- </p>
- <p> During a month of fighting, the Pakistanis claim six of
- their men died, while at least 34 Indians were killed; India
- refuses to release its casualty figures. Though accounts of the
- struggle differ, it appears that the Indians eventually
- requested a meeting between the two opposing brigade commanders.
- After three sessions, both sides pledged to pull back their men,
- and the Indians agreed to accept two enemy posts that the
- Pakistanis said had been there all along. It was the first time
- local commanders had met face to face to sort out a
- disengagement.
- </p>
- <p> By sitting down with each other, the two commanders were
- clearly acting in the spirit their Prime Ministers want to
- establish. But who will compromise?
- </p>
- <p> Pakistan wants India to pull back from the glacier, after
- which the two sides could discuss a new boundary line. The key
- requirement: it must begin at NJ 9842 and end at the Karakoram
- Pass. But Pakistan would be willing to draw a demarcation
- between those points that would fall somewhere between its
- earlier claims and India's current position on the Saltoro
- Range.
- </p>
- <p> India proposes a cease-fire in place, followed by a
- thinning out of forces in the Saltoro area; the suggestion has
- been rejected by Pakistan. In the talks last month, New Delhi
- broached a new formula slightly closer to Pakistan's: pull back
- all troops and establish a demilitarized zone, then negotiate
- on establishing a line from NJ 9842 to the Chinese border. So
- far, there has been no agreement.
- </p>
- <p> After investing heavily in lives and money to take and hold
- the Saltoro, it would be politically difficult for Gandhi to
- yield even part of the territory to Pakistan, especially with
- national elections only months away. Bhutto is in an even more
- sensitive position. Having once taunted late President Mohammed
- Zia ul-Haq, her predecessor, for losing the territory in the
- first place, she now faces poisonous criticism from opposition
- leaders who accuse her of "submission" to India. In the end,
- both Gandhi and Bhutto will have to stare down their political
- antagonists in order to agree on a boundary line across the
- north's icy fastness. Otherwise it will continue to be drawn in
- men's blood.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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