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OPERATIONS
The Indian Army (IA; IAST: Bhāratīya Thalsēnā) is the land-based branch and the largest component of the Indian Armed Forces. The President of India serves as Supreme Commander of the Indian Army,[5] and it is commanded by the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), who is a four-star General. Two officers have been conferred the rank of Field marshal, a Five-star rank, which is a ceremonial position of great honour. The Indian Army originated from the armies of the East India Company, which eventually became the British Indian Army, and the armies of the princely states, which finally became the national army after independence. The units and regiments of the Indian Army have diverse histories and have participated in a number of battles and campaigns across the world, earning a large number of battle and theatre honours before and after Independence.[6]
The primary mission of the Indian Army is to ensure national security and unity, defending the nation from external aggression and threats, and maintaining peace and security within its borders. It conducts humanitarian rescue operations during natural calamities and other disturbances, like Operation Surya Hope, and can also be requisitioned by the government to cope with internal threats. It is a major component of national power alongside the Indian Navy and the Indian Air Force.[7] The army has been involved in four wars with neighbouring Pakistan and one with China. Other major operations undertaken by the army include Operation Vijay, Operation Meghdoot and Operation Cactus. Apart from conflicts, the army has conducted large peace time exercises like Operation Brasstacks and Exercise Shoorveer, and it has also been an active participant in numerous United Nations peacekeeping missions including the ones in Cyprus, Lebanon, Congo, Angola, Cambodia, Vietnam, Namibia, El Salvador, Liberia, Mozambique and Somalia.
The Indian Army has a regimental system, but is operationally and geographically divided into seven commands, with the basic field formation being a division. It is an all-volunteer force and comprises more than 80% of the country's active defence personnel. It is the 3rd largest standing army in the world, with 1,325,000 active troops and 2,143,000 reserve troops.[1] The army has embarked on an infantry modernization program known as Futuristic Infantry Soldier As a System (F-INSAS), and is also upgrading and acquiring new assets for its armored,artillery and aviation branches.[8][9][10]
HISTORY
OPERATIONS
- During First Kashmir War (1947)
- Operation Polo (1948) - Indian armed forces ended the rule of the Nizam of Hyderabad and led to the incorporation of the princely state of Hyderabad in Southern India, into the Indian Union.
- Operation Vijay (1961) - the operation by the Military of India that led to the capture of Goa, Daman and Diu and Anjidiv Islands from the Portuguese colonial holding in 1961.
- During Sino-Indian War (1962)
- During Second Kashmir War (1965)
- Operation Steeplechase (1971)
- During Bangladesh Liberation War-1971 (See also Battle of Longewala, Battle of Hilli, Battle of Basantar)
- Amalgamation of Sikkim- Indian Army disarmed and disbanded the Royal Guard of the Sikkimese King, after which Sikkim joined India as a State of India.
- During Siachen conflict (1980)
- Operation Blue Star (1984)
- Operation Woodrose (1984)
- Operation Meghdoot (1984) — Indian military's capture of the majority of Siachen Glacier.
- Operation Rajiv (1987) — Indian military's capture of Quaid Post/Bana Top.
- Operation Pawan (1987) – Operations by the Indian Peace Keeping Force to take control of Jaffna from the LTTE in late 1987 to enforce the disarmament of the LTTE as a part of the Indo-Sri Lankan Accord.
- Operation Viraat (1988) – It was an anti-insurgency operation launched by the IPKF against the LTTE in April 1988 in Northern Sri Lanka.
- Operation Trishul (1988) - Along with Operation Viraat, was an anti-insurgency operation launched by the IPKF against the LTTE in April 1988 in Northern Sri Lanka.
- Operation Checkmate (1988) - It was an anti-insurgency operation carried out by the IPKF against the LTTE in the Vadamarachi area of northern Sri Lanka in June 1988.
- Operation Cactus (1988) — Paracommandos of Indian Army and MARCOS of Indian Navy oust Tamil nationalist mercenaries of PLOTE who instigated a coup in Malé in the Maldives.
- Operation Vijay (1999) - name of the successful Indian operation to push back the infiltrators from the Kargil Sector, in the 1999 Kargil War.
- Operation Parakram (2001)
- Operation Black Tornado, and Operation Cyclone, (2008)
- Operation Goodwill- humanitarian tasks in J&K
- Operation Good Samaritan- humanitarian tasks in Manipur/Nagaland
- Operation Surya Hope - for saving people trapped in the 2013 North India floods
- Operation All Out (2015) - for flushing out Bodo militants Assam
- Operation Maitri (2015) -India's Army-led rescue and relief mission in quake-hit Nepal
- 2015 Indian counter-insurgency operation in Myanmar - A cross-border counter-insurgency raid in Myanmar,
- Operation Vijay (1961) - the operation by the Military of India that led to the capture of Goa, Daman and Diu and Anjidiv Islands from the Portuguese colonial holding in 1961.uu
- During Sino-Indian War (1962
- During Second Kashmir War (1965)
- Operation Steeplechase (1971)
- During Bangladesh Liberation War-1971 (See also Battle of Longewala, Battle of Hilli, Battle of Basantar)
- Amalgamation of Sikkim- Indian Army disarmed and disbanded the Royal Guard of the Sikkimese King, after which Sikkim joined India as a State of India.
- During Siachen conflict (1980)
- Operation Blue Star (1984)
- Operation Woodrose (1984)
- Operation Meghdoot (1984) — Indian military's capture of the majority of Siachen Glacier.
- Operation Rajiv (1987) — Indian military's capture of Quaid Post/Bana Top.
- Operation Pawan (1987) – Operations by the Indian Peace Keeping Force to take control of Jaffna from the LTTE in late 1987 to enforce the disarmament of the LTTE as a part of the Indo-Sri Lankan Accord.
- Operation Viraat (1988) – It was an anti-insurgency operation launched by the IPKF against the LTTE in April 1988 in Northern Sri Lanka.
- Operation Trishul (1988) - Along with Operation Viraat, was an anti-insurgency operation launched by the IPKF against the LTTE in April 1988 in Northern Sri Lanka.
- Operation Checkmate (1988) - It was an anti-insurgency operation carried out by the IPKF against the LTTE in the Vadamarachi area of northern Sri Lanka in June 1988.
- Operation Cactus (1988) — Paracommandos of Indian Army and MARCOS of Indian Navy oust Tamil nationalist mercenaries of PLOTE who instigated a coup in Malé in the Maldives.
- Operation Vijay (1999) - name of the successful Indian operation to push back the infiltrators from the Kargil Sector, in the 1999 Kargil War.
- Operation Parakram (2001)
- Operation Black Tornado, and Operation Cyclone, (2008)
- Operation Megh Rahat- Jammu & Kashmir floods, 2014
- Operation Goodwill- humanitarian tasks in J&K
- Operation Good Samaritan- humanitarian tasks in Manipur/Nagaland
- Operation Surya Hope - for saving people trapped in the 2013 North India floods
- Operation All Out (2015) - for flushing out Bodo militants Assam
- Operation Maitri (2015) -India's Army-led rescue and relief mission in quake-hit Nepal
- 2015 Indian counter-insurgency operation in Myanmar - A cross-border counter-insurgency raid in Myanmar,
- Operation Vijay (1961)
- Operation Trident (1971)
- Operation Python (1971)
- Operation Cactus (1988)
- During Operation Restore Hope (1992–2003)
- Operation Parakram (2001)
- During Operation Enduring Freedom (2001)
- During 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake (Operation Madath, Operation Sea Waves, Operation Castor, Operation Rainbow, Operation Gambhir & Operation Rahat-II)
- Operation Sukoon (2006)
- Operation Search Light-The Search Operation Undertaken by Indian Navy to find the missing Boieng 777 M.H 17 Malaysian Flight
- Operation Raahat (2015) - Operation by the Indian Armed Forces to evacuate Indian citizens and other foreign nationals from Yemen during the 2015 military intervention by Saudi Arabia and its allies in that country during the Yemeni Crisis.
Air Operations
- During World War II (1939–1945) (Main article- India during World War 2)
- During First Kashmir War (1947)
- During Congo Crisis (1961)
- During Sino-Indian War (1962)
- During Second Kashmir War (1965)
- During Bangladesh Liberation War (1971)
- Meghna Heli Bridge (1971)
- Tangail Airdrop (1971)
- Operation Meghdoot (1984)
- Operation Poomalai (1987)
- Operation Cactus (1988)
- Operation Safed Sagar (1999)
- Atlantique Incident (1999)
- Operation Rahat (2013) in Uttarakhand floods
- Operation Maitri (2015) Indian Military's rescue and relief mission in quake-hit Nepal
The Indian Army (IA; IAST: Bhāratīya Thalsēnā) is the land-based branch and the largest component of the Indian Armed Forces. The President of India serves as Supreme Commander of the Indian Army,[5] and it is commanded by the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), who is a four-star General. Two officers have been conferred the rank of Field marshal, a Five-star rank, which is a ceremonial position of great honour. The Indian Army originated from the armies of the East India Company, which eventually became the British Indian Army, and the armies of the princely states, which finally became the national army after independence. The units and regiments of the Indian Army have diverse histories and have participated in a number of battles and campaigns across the world, earning a large number of battle and theatre honours before and after Independence.[6]
The primary mission of the Indian Army is to ensure national security and unity, defending the nation from external aggression and threats, and maintaining peace and security within its borders. It conducts humanitarian rescue operations during natural calamities and other disturbances, like Operation Surya Hope, and can also be requisitioned by the government to cope with internal threats. It is a major component of national power alongside the Indian Navy and the Indian Air Force.[7] The army has been involved in four wars with neighbouring Pakistan and one with China. Other major operations undertaken by the army include Operation Vijay, Operation Meghdoot and Operation Cactus. Apart from conflicts, the army has conducted large peace time exercises like Operation Brasstacks and Exercise Shoorveer, and it has also been an active participant in numerous United Nations peacekeeping missions including the ones in Cyprus, Lebanon, Congo, Angola, Cambodia, Vietnam, Namibia, El Salvador, Liberia, Mozambique and Somalia.
The Indian Army has a regimental system, but is operationally and geographically divided into seven commands, with the basic field formation being a division. It is an all-volunteer force and comprises more than 80% of the country's active defence personnel. It is the 3rd largest standing army in the world, with 1,325,000 active troops and 2,143,000 reserve troops.[1] The army has embarked on an infantry modernization program known as Futuristic Infantry Soldier As a System (F-INSAS), and is also upgrading and acquiring new assets for its armored,artillery and aviation branches.[8][9][10]
HISTORY
The distinguished
history of Indian Army dates back more than ten thousand years. The two
grand epics of ‘Ramayana’ and ‘Mahabharata’ constitute the fundamental
framework around which the edifice of Indian Army is built. The massive
war ‘Mahabharata’, fought at Kurukshetra in north-central India, has
left indelible imprints on the Indian psyche. Fought relentlessly for
eighteen days in the quest of peace, the force level described in the
Epic states 18 ‘Akshaunis’, seven with the ‘Pandavas’ and eleven with
the ‘Kauravas’, amounting to nearly 400,000 assorted troops fighting on
chariots, horses, elephants and foot soldiers.
Though innumerable wars
have been fought thereafter, most were in quest of universal peace and
‘dharma’. Recourse to arms was only taken when peace was threatened. In
fact the word 'peace' forms the very core of Indian philosophy, which
can most aptly be traced to one of India's ancient scriptures known as
the ‘Yajurveda’. It is stated in verse, the English translation of which
reads - “May the sky be peaceful; may the atmosphere be peaceful; may
the earth be peaceful; may eternal peace cometh upon us”.

The archaeological
history of India dates back to more than 2500 BC, when an urbanised
civilisation known as the Indus Valley Civilisation flourished along the
banks of River Indus, in the alluvial north - western plains. Similar
findings like the coastal cities of Lothal and Dwarka came to light more
recently along the coast of Gujarat. However, the Indus Valley
Civilisation’s two urban centres at Mohenjodaro and Harappa gradually
declined in the second millennium BC, and almost completely
disintegrated around 1500 BC due to ecological reasons like drying up of
rivers and drought. The coastal cities disintegrated due to massive
floods.
Due to the gradual
extinction of such civilizations, the north-western invasion route
through the Hindu Kush Mountains remained unguarded for centuries, and
gradually many people and tribes managed to cross over for better
economic prospects. With many recent landmark findings refuting the
invasion of Asian-European people, or the Aryans, into the Indian sub
continent en masse, the military history of India dates back to 6th
century BC, encompassing the period when some of the more belligerent
forces like the Persians, Greeks, the Turks, Huns, Mongols and so on
crossed over into the more fertile and alluvial plains of India from the
north-western route.
Though scanty details
are available of the early conflicts between the invading forces,
evidence shows that some of the invaders did manage to slowly overrun
western India and consolidated their hold along the Indo - Gangetic
plains, and in the process subdued numerous native tribal kingdoms
through pitched battles. Their advance further south was generally
halted by the jungle covered Vindhya Mountains. Those apart, certain
areas along the western coast and the Deccan plateau were hilly and
sparse – unsuitable for the movements of considerable bodies of people.
However, this vast area also lent itself favourably to resistance
against invasion by loose fighting warriors, such as the Marathas who
subsequently became a force to reckon with. The other major
pre-condition of war in India was and continues to be the climate.
Monsoon rains between June and September rendered movement of armies
virtually impossible. The best season for campaigning was always October
and November, when the crops were ripe, the herbage green and it was
possible to live off the country.

Between foreign
invasions, wars in the north became a sport of kings and noblemen, and
rarely become a national struggle for existence save when a new invader
from the northwest entered the fray.

The armies of the
native tribes were made up mostly of foot-soldiers, later come to be
known as the infantry. The bow and arrow were their principal weapons.
Cavalry was non-existent as horses were scare. Around 537 BC Cyrus of
Persia reached the region of modern Peshawar, and his successor Darius
conquered part of north-western Punjab. Their invasions brought home to
the Indians the importance and utility of cavalry, however Indian
climate conditions were not conducive for the breeding of good horses,
and therefore reserved for pulling the war chariots of kings and nobles.
So the infantry continued to be relied upon as the decisive weapon of
war. Warriors were the most honoured and leading classes of society.
Wars usually had
limited objectives and were fought for the most part with far less
savagery than elsewhere in the world. Rarely did the locals indulge in
mass slaughter after a victory. Such chivalrous and rather ritualistic
conduct of war made conquest by less punctilious invaders rather easy.
The first definitely
recorded fact in Indian political history is the invasion by the Greeks
under Alexander the Great during 327-6 BC. After crossing the Hindu Kush
Mountains, Alexander captured the city of Taxila and defeated India’s
King Porus at the battle of the Jhelum, or Hydespes as referred to by
the Greeks. Chariots were still a considerable force in the army under
Porus, these being made of wooden struts bound together with leather
thongs, and drawn by two horses. Each chariot had a driver and a bowman.
Some heavier chariots had four horses and carried upto six men, of whom
two were shield-bearers, two were archers and two were drivers who also
functioned as javelin throwers during the battle. The chariots at
Jhelum did not fare well, getting stuck in the mud. King Porus himself
had come to battle mounted on an elephant. Invaders like Alexander, who
came to conquer India, appreciated and adopted local military customs,
and even its civilian culture. New kingdoms and a few alliances were
soon formed, but these proved to be woefully inadequate against yet more
foreign invaders.
Wars were most
prominent in the politics and literature of ancient India. Occasionally
great kings like Chandragupta Maurya succeeded in subduing and unifying
most of the people of India. Manuals of statecraft such as the
‘Arthashastra’ of Kautilya, relating to the period 300 BC to 100 AD,
indicate the prominence of war as an instrument of state policy. The
‘Arthashastra’ is one of the most significant documents of military
history ever to be written. It is an exhaustive treatise on the early
concepts of government, law and war. Its military section cover the
composition and structure of armies, the role and function of the arms
and services, training concepts and methods, duties of various military
functionaries, strategic and tactical concepts, defensive
fortifications, leadership and management of large armies.
Under Chandragupta
Maurya, Central Asian invaders like the Huns, who in their days had
razed and plundered a major portion of the known civilized world, were
to stand checked. Chandragupta defeated the remnants of the Macedonians
and established the first great dynasty, the Mauryan Empire.
Chandragupta added to the extent of the empire, and he was the first to
maintain a large, permanent standing army. Bindhusara expanded the
empire and Ashoka brought the Mauryan Empire to the height of its power
and glory. The Kalinga war proved to be the turning point of his life.
It was after this, Ashoka renounced the sword and took to Buddhism,
which he spread far and wide through his disciples and emissaries.

It was during this
period that war elephants made an appearance on battlefields and they
continued to be used by Indian warriors, right unto the seventeenth
century. Although the Mauryan standing army was based on infantry, it
had a force of 30,000 cavalry, 8,000 chariots and 9,000 elephants. The
cavalry was well trained and was employed to attack from a flank, and
for exploiting captured positions. During advance they protected the
front, flanks and rear. In defence they were held in reserve and were
used to harass the attacking forces and to pursue them when enemy
offensive was defeated. The principal weapon used with the elephant was
the bow and arrow, supplemented with javelins and spears.

After peace was
restored by the Mauryan Empire, the pacifist culture accompanied the
spread of Buddhism from India to Afghanistan, Tibet, Burma, China, Indo
China, Japan and the Indonesian archipelago, had a greater moral bias
and preached non-violence. This kind of spiritual ‘conquest’ lacked any
territorial cohesion and political unity to oppose concerted invasions
from the vulnerable north-west.
The ‘Golden Age’ of The
Gupta Empire was restored between 320-550 AD. The most significant
achievements of this period were in the fields of religion, education,
mathematics, science, the arts, Vedic and Sanskrit literature and the
theatre. Harshavardhana managed to restore India’s glory and North India
was reunited once again. The many years of peace and prosperity began
to feel the strain in 1000 AD and the Indian civilization became
complacent. Thus leading to another great chapter in Indian ancient
history, the arrival of Islamic invaders.
While Northern India
now contended with a new chapter of foreign powers, The Cholas, in
Southern India projected their regional military might between 985-1054
AD. Naval ships sailed out from the Coromandal coast, along the eastern
Indian peninsula to Sri Lanka and directly to the Malayan peninsula,
Jawa, Sumatra and Borneo. Thereafter Chola Kings extended their hold
further eastward to Thailand and Vietnam. These conquests were more
trade based, and reflected the spread of Hindu culture rather than
conquest by the sword. In due course Indian arts, cultural and religious
influences spread to these countries where they have survive till date.

Coming back to the
north, the Turkish conquest of India developed in a definite pattern. It
was a gradual process that began in the tenth century. Turks would
begin by conducting raids across the frontier. These developed into
invasions during which the nearest Indian King was defeated in pitched
battle. The first conquest was used as a springboard for the next one.
The process went on into the seventeenth century when the tribesmen of
the thick Assam jungles halted the invading forces.
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