Operation Blue Star

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Operation Blue Star
Part of Indo-Khalistan wars
Date June 1st, 1984 - June 6th, 1984
Location Amritsar, Punjab (India)
Result Indian military phyrric victory
Combatants
Image:Flag of India.svg
India
Image:Flag-of-Khalistan.svg
Khalistan
Commanders
Major General K.S. Brar Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale & Shabeg Singh
Strength
100,000[citation needed] 237
Casualties
83 killed
249 wounded
207 millitants (+ Ca. 1600 civilians)[citation needed]

Operation Blue Star ( ਬਿਲਯੂ ਸਟਾਰ , बिल्यू स्टार ) (June 1 to June 6, 1984) was an Indian military operation ordered by Indira Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of India,[1] to flush out Sikh militants from Harimandir Sahib in Amritsar[2] and several other gurudwaras in Punjab[citation needed].

Contents

[edit] The operation

On June 3, a 36 hour curfew was imposed on the state of Punjab. The period commemorated the martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev, a major religious holiday in Sikh calendar, which draws larger than usual crowds annually.

[edit] Bhindranwale in the Golden Temple

Bhindranwale had earlier taken refuge in the Golden temple in April 1980, when he was named as a suspect in the killing of Sant Nirankari Guru, Baba Gurbachan Singh[3], but only for a short time.

In 1982, Bhindranwale along with about 200 followers moved into a guest house called the Guru Nanak Niwas, in the precincts of the Golden Temple [4].From here he began to meet international television crews as the violence in Punjab grew and Hindu travellers were targeted.

On 23 April 1983, Punjab Police Deputy Inspector General (DIG) A. S. Atwal was shot dead as he left the Golden Temple compound. On Oct 5, 1983 and Nov 18, 1983, two buses were hijacked, Sikh and Hindu passengers were separated and Hindus were shot. When Darbara Singh resigned as chief minister of Punjab after the massacre of Hindu travellers on October 6, 1983, Bhindranwal said "Hundreds of Sikhs have been killed, but the government only falls when six Hindus get killed."[5]

On December 15, 1983, Bhindranwale was forced to move out out of Guru Nanak Niwas by members of the Babbar Khalsa with Longowal's support, who feared for his own safety. By 1983, the Golden Temple became a shelter for a large number of militants. Mark Tully and Satish Jacob wrote[6]:

"All ... [Bhindranwale's] terrorists were known by name to the shopkeepers and the householders who live in the narrow alleys surrounding the Golden Temple...The Punjab police must have known who they were also, but they made no attempt to arrest them. By this time Bhindranwale and his men were above the law."

The Golden Temple compund and some of the surrounding houses were fortified. The Statesman reported on July 4 that light machine-guns and sophisticated self-loading rifles were known to have brought into the compound.

[edit] Overview

Image:Armyinbluestar.JPG
Indian Army taking position outside the temple complex

The operation was launched to eliminate the Sikh militants who had taken control of the Amritsar Golden Temple Complex. The Sikh militants within the Harminder Sahib were led by Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and former Major-General Shabeg Singh MVC (who had resigned from the Indian Army in 1976).

The operation was undertaken under the cover of night. Due to the immense firepower and sophisticated weaponry of the Indian Army, the operation was expected to be a swift one.

[edit] 20 hrs - 22 hrs

The first task was the destruction of Shabeg Singh's outer defenses. Much of this had been completed in the preliminary firing. Major-General Brar had hoped to frighten Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale into surrendering, which did not happen. These defenses included the seventeen houses which the police believed Bhindranwale's followers occupied in the alleys surrounding the Golden Temple. They were all in wireless contact with Shahbeg Singh's command post in the Akal Takht. Next to it was Brahmbuta Akhara, a large building housing the headquarters of a Sikh sect. Then there were three main towers which had been fortified to make positions from which Bhindranwale's men could fire into the Golden Temple complex. Because they rose well above the surrounding buildings, the towers were excellent observation posts for tracking the movement of Indian troops in the narrow alleys surrounding the Temple. The tops of these towers were blasted off in the preliminary artillery fire.

[edit] 22 hrs - 2330 hrs

Between 10:00 and 10:30 PM on June 5 commandos from 1st Battalion, the parachute regiment, were ordered to run down the steps under the clock tower on to the parikarma, or pavement, turn right and move as quickly as they could around the edge of the sacred tank to the Akal Takht. But as the paratroopers entered the main gateway to the Temple they were gunned down by militants with light machine-guns who were hiding on either side of the steps leading down to the parikarma. The few commandos who did get down the steps were driven back by a barrage of fire from the building on the south side of the sacred pool. In the control room, in a house on the opposite side of the clock-tower, Major-General Brar was waiting with his two supporting officers to hear that the commandos had established positions inside the complex[7].

The few commandos who survived regrouped in the square outside the Temple, and reported back to Major-General Brar. He reinforced them and ordered them to make another attempt to go in. The commandos were to be followed by the 10th Battalion of the Guards commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Israr Khan. The second commando attack managed to neutralize the machine-gun posts on both sides of the steps and get down on to the parikarma. They were followed by the Guards who came under withering fire and were not able to make any progress. They radioed for permission to fire back at the buildings on the other side of the tank. That would have meant that the Golden Temple itself, which is in the middle of the tank, would have been in the line of fire. Brar initially refused, but then started to get messages from the commander of Guards reporting heavy casualties.

[edit] 2330 hrs - 01 hrs

Brar again requested tanks after an APC that had been sent in was destroyed by a rocket fired by a Sikh militant. This time his request was granted. According to eyewitness accounts, as many as 20 Stephine tanks were brought into the parikarma and lined up on the eastern side, thus destroying the marble flooring of the eastern parikarma[citation needed]. A total of 90 shells were fired and the separatists were brought down by the Indian army. Later the Holy Temple was found to have more than 300 bullet holes.

[edit] Aftermath

Image:Blue star akal takht.jpg
Bullet and shell riddled Akal Takht building after Operation Blue Star

As per the affidavit filed by retired Brigadier D.V. Rao in court of Harjit Singh Khalsa, judicial magistrate first class, Amritsar, on March 19, 2007, the Indian Army suffered 83 deaths, which included four officers, four Junior Commissioned Officers and 75 other ranks. As per the affidavit, 13 Indian Army officers, 16 JCOs and 220 other ranks were injured in the operation. Indian army recorded 492 civilian deaths inside Golden Temple while 433 persons were segregated as separatists amongst 1592 persons apprehended [8] [9]. During June of 1984, brigadier D.V. Rao served as Commander of 350 Infantry Brigade based in Jalandhar, which formed part of Ninth Infantry Division of Indian Army. The unofficial casualty figures recorded by eye-witness accounts was much higher.[citation needed]. According to some Indian Army officials, 4 Singhs alone killed 5-600 army men, when they were trying to march upon the stairs in the Akal Takht. And they even said in an interview directly after the Operation BLue Star, that 'thousands' of army men where killed. [10].

The operation led to the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. On October 31 of that year, two of her armed Sikh security officers shot her dead[11]. Anti-Sikh riots allegedly organized by the Congress leaders Jagdish Tytler, Sajjan Kumar and H.K.L. Bhagat, amongst others, were triggered by Mrs Gandhi's assassination. The widespread killing of Sikhs, principally in national capital Delhi and other major cities in North India, led to major divide between Sikhs and Indian Government, which continued for a long time.

General A S Vaidya, the Chief of Army Staff at the time of Operation Blue Star, was also assassinated in 1986 in Pune by Sukhdev Singh Sukha and Harjinder Singh Jinda. Both were sentenced to death, and hanged on 7 October, 1992.

[edit] Choice of time to attack by Government

The day chosen by the government for army attack has baffled even the most moderate Sikhs as it was martyrdom day of Guru Arjan Dev, the founder of Golden Temple and Sikhs from all across the Globe visit Golden Temple during this time. In 1736, about 2 and a half centuries earlier, Golden Temple was attacked by Mughal army which caused heavy casualties of civilian Sikhs [12]. Attack of Ahmad Shah Abdali on Golden Temple (Darbar Sahib) also came on Baisakhi day when Sikhs gather in large numbers in Amritsar. The Sikhs view the attack by Indian Army and choice of the specific time to attack by Government as an attempt to inflict maximum casualties on Sikhs and demoralize them[13]

[edit] Criticism of the Operation

Operation Blue Star is regarded by some military observers in India and the international community as a major military embarrassment often compared with the bothched up Beslan hostage crisis. It was criticized as the most poorly conducted and managed military operation in the history of the Indian Army due to the large number of military and civilian casualties. Moreover, the success in emptying and depoliticising the temple was marred by the damage to the temple building and the death of civilian worshipers caught in the crossfire.[14] The use of artillery in the congested inner city of Amritsar proved deadly for many people living in proximity of Golden Temple. Moreover a media blackout placed in Punjab during the time of the operation resulted in widespread doubt of official stories and the promotion of hearsay.[15]

However the army responds to such criticisms pointing out that the militants in the temple were armed with machine guns, anti tank missiles and rocket launchers and resisted the army's attempts to dislodge them from the shrine. The militants also appeared to have planned for a long occupation of the shrine having arranged for water from wells within the temple compound, and had stocked food provisions that would have lasted months. Thus it is a difficult point as to whether the Army could have waited out the militants, cut off electricity, water etc in order to ensure a peaceful non-violent end without the loss of life and damaging the temple. The wearing out approach taken by Rajiv Gandhi five years later, in Operation Black Thunder when a handful of sikh extremists had again taken over the temple complex, was highly successful when the standoff was peacefully solved.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.rediff.com/news/2004/jun/03spec.htm Operation BlueStar, 20 Years On
  2. ^ http://www.bharat-rakshak.com/LAND-FORCES/Army/History/1970s/Bluestar.html
  3. ^ India in 1984: Confrontation, Assassination, and Succession, by Robert L. Hardgrave, Jr. Asian Survey, 1985 University of California Press
  4. ^ http://www.india-today.com/itoday/millennium/100people/jarnail.html
  5. ^ SANT JARNAIL SINGH BHINDRANWALE - LIFE, MISSION, AND MARTYRDOM by Ranbir S. Sandhu, May 1997 http://www.sikhcoalition.org/SantJarnailSingh.pdf
  6. ^ Mark Tully and Satish Jacob, Amritsar -Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (Calcutta: Rupa & Co. by arrangement with Pan Books, London, 1985)
  7. ^ http://www.sikh.com.au/blue/ Indian Army Viewpoint
  8. ^ http://www.tribuneindia.com/2007/20070320/punjab1.htm
  9. ^ http://www.tribuneindia.com/2007/20070914/punjab1.htm#7
  10. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQmYRr3IEUI Video of Interview with an Indian Army Officer who explains detailed how the Singhs fought, and around how many casualties there where.
  11. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/october/31/newsid_2464000/2464423.stm
  12. ^ Gyani, Gian SIngh (1923). Twarikh-i-Guru Khalsa. 
  13. ^ Dhillon, Gurdashan Singh. Truth About Punjab (SGPC White Paper). Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee. 
  14. ^ http://www.onwar.com/aced/data/india/india1984a.htm OnWar Repository of Conflicts
  15. ^ Anniversary Issue, India Today, Dec 26, 2005,p 136.

[edit] External sources

fr:Massacre du Temple d'Or

it:Operazione Blue Star pa:ਆਪਰੈਸ਼ਨ ਬਲੂ ਸਟਾਰ pl:Operacja Niebieska Gwiazda sv:Massakern i Gyllene templet

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