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Indian Army
to raise Pak, China specific units
NEW DELHI—The Army has launched preparations to raise two new mountain
divisions, with around 15,000 soldiers each, which will be tailor-made
for swift offensive operations in the mountains of north and North-East
India for countering Pakistan and China.
The groundwork on the ‘organizational structure’ and ‘equipment profile’
of the two new proposed mountain divisions is already under way after
the cabinet committee on security recently approved this plan, said
sources. The two new mountain divisions, to be raised at a cost of
around Rs 650-700 crore each, will have ‘integral tactical air mobility
assets’ in the shape of medium to heavy-lift helicopters.
They are also likely to be equipped with the new ultralight howitzers
which the Army plans to induct in the near future. As first reported by
TOI , the Army is hunting for 140 ultralight howitzers at a cost of
around Rs 2,900 crore in the overall Rs 12,000-crore artillery
modernization plan.
The approval for the new mountain divisions comes at a time when the
Indian security establishment is warily watching the massive upgrade of
Chinese military infrastructure along the 4,057-km Line of Actual
Control (LAC) in all the three sectors - western (Ladakh), middle (Uttarakhand,
Himachal) and eastern (Sikkim, Arunachal). China has established a
robust network of road, rail and air links between its mainland and
Tibet over the last few years, which makes it possible for it to rush a
couple of army divisions near the border with India within a matter of
days.
The need to have additional specialised offensive mountain formations
has been felt even on the front with Pakistan despite the fact that the
14 Corps, with around 50,000 troops, now guards the Ladakh region after
the 1999 Kargil conflict. “There was a move to establish an offensive
corps in the mountains after Kargil. But the 14 Corps has limited
offensive capabilities, roughly equivalent to that of any other corps in
the mountains,” said an officer.
The 1.13-million strong Army does have 10 mountain formations in a total
of around 35 divisions. But in terms of being organized and equipped for
“dispersed operations” in mountains, with adequate “fire-support
elements”, only six of them (Silchar, Dibrugrah, Bombdila, Rangia,
Gangtok and Kalimpong) can be said to be true mountain formations. “The
mountain divisions in J&K are more like standard infantry divisions,”
said another officer.
While the two new mountain divisions will be fully in place only by the
middle of the next decade, the government has now finally kickstarted
infrastructure development plans along the Indo-Chinese border.
These plans include a 608-km road network project along LAC, which will
have 27 road links along J&K, Himachal, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and
Arunachal, as well as the overall 7,603-km Special Accelerated Road
Development Programme for the entire North-East.—Agencies
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