Kargil Vijay Diwas - We salute our Kargil War's Heroes.
Kargil Vijay Diwas, named after the success of Operation Vijay.
On this day, 26 July 1999, India successfully took command of the high outposts
which had been lost to Pakistani intruders. The Kargil war was fought for more
than 60 days, ended on 26 July and resulted in the loss of life on both sides,
India and Pakistan and with the India regain possessions of Kargil. Kargil
Vijay Diwas is celebrated on 26 July every year in honour of the Kargil War's
Heroes. This day is celebrated in the Kargil - Dras sector and the national
capital New Delhi, where the Prime Minister of India, pays homage to the
soldiers at Amar Jawan Jyoti at India Gate every year. Functions are also
organized all over the country to commemorate the contribution of the Armed
forces.
History
After the India-Pakistani War of 1971, there had been a long
period with relatively few direct armed conflicts involving the military forces
of the two neighbours – not with standing the efforts of both nations to
control the Siachen Glacier by establishing military outposts on the
surrounding mountains ridges and the resulting military skirmishes in the
1980s. During the 1990s, however, escalating tensions and conflict due to
separatist activities in Kashmir, some of which were supported by Pakistan, as
well as the conducting of nuclear tests by both countries in 1998, led to an
increasingly belligerent atmosphere. In an attempt to defuse the situation,
both countries signed the Lahore Declaration in February 1999, promising to
provide a peaceful and bilateral solution to the Kashmir conflict. During the
winter of 1998 -1999, some elements of the Pakistani Armed Forces were covertly
training and sending Pakistani troops and paramilitary forces, some allegedly
in the guise of mujahideen, into territory on the Indian side of the line of
control (LOC). The infiltration was code named "Operation Badr." The
aim of the Pakistani incursion was to sever the link between Kashmir and Ladakh
and cause Indian forces to withdraw from the Siachen Glacier, thus forcing
India to negotiate a settlement of the border Kashmir dispute. Pakistan also
believed that any tension in the region would internationalize the Kashmir
issue, helping it to secure a speedy resolution. Yet another goal may have been
to boost the morale of the decade-long rebellion in Indian Administered Kashmir
by taking a pro-active role.
Initially, with little knowledge of the nature or extent of the infiltration, the Indian troops in the area assumed that the infiltrators were jihadis and claimed that they would evict them within a few days. Subsequent discovery of infiltration elsewhere along the LOC and the difference in tactics employed by the infiltrators, caused the Indian army to realize that the plan of attack was on a much bigger scale. The total area seized by the ingress is generally accepted to between 130 km² – 200 km².
The Government of India responded with Operation Vijay, a mobilization of 200,000 Indian troops. Finally war came to an official end on July 26, 1999, thus making it as Kargil Vijay Diwas.
527 soldiers from Indian Armed Forces sacrificed their lives during the war.
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