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aksha

Captain

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Two teams of terrorists attacked the Pathankot air base on Saturday, and they had – in all likelihood – reached there in different vehicles, security sources told HT.

“The two terrorists who remained hidden at the air base and exchanged fire with security personnel on Sunday were part of another team of terrorists that had entered the vast air base area. We also suspect that they might have reached there in another vehicle,” said a senior security official on the condition of anonymity.

Sources said a lot could be deduced from the experience of Punjab superintendent of police Salwinder Singh and his jeweller friend, who were overpowered by four heavily armed persons in military uniforms – who then used his vehicle to travel nearly 500 to 1,000 metres in the direction of the air base. “This goes to confirm that there was at least one group of four terrorists that entered the air base area on the intervening night of Thursday and Friday, when they snatched Salwinder Singh’s vehicle. The calls made from the mobile phone snatched from Salwinder and his friend show they didn’t move from one area,” said another security official.

Counter-terror sources said there were intercepts that referred to a group of six terrorists infiltrating into India to carry out the attack. The security establishment is now looking for any other vehicle that might have been hijacked from the area, and used by the second group to reach the Pathankot air base.

When asked about the number of militants who may have jointly attacked the air base, a senior police officer said that it could be “as high as eight or ten”. And as a second vehicle has not been recovered despite the Punjab police combing the entire periphery of the air base, investigation officers are almost certain of the involvement of a local module of terror outfit Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) that may have dropped the other team of terrorists at the spot.

Sources said all the phone calls made by the terrorists to Pakistan were on numbers identified as that of JeM by the security establishment for a long time now.

The police are also scrutinising footage acquired from the toll plaza on the Gurdaspur-Pathankot highway – besides various police and BSF checkpoints on the Bamiyal-Pathankot road – for clues.

Police will also go into the details of the calls made to Ikagar Singh – a taxi driver from Bhagowal village who was killed by the terrorists. Initial reports have suggested that he was called from a Pakistan number, and “hired” to transport someone to a hospital. But security sources are yet to verify the timing of the call, to check if it was made when the militants were with the driver or earlier.

Security sources are looking at the timing of the call made on the phone to see if it was made when the terrorists were with him or before that.

However, as soon as Singh discovered the identity of his passengers – who were apparently picked up at the Kathlana T-point on the Bamiyal-Pathankot road – he rammed his vehicle into a rock near Kathlour bridge over the Ravi and tried to escape. Singh was, however, killed by the militants.



Meanwhile, sources said that combing the thick forested areas within the air base is turning out to be a herculean task. There are few buildings in the area, other than a deserted workshop and some empty hangars.The combing operations continued through the night, but – considering that there are militants around – we have to be very cautious to ensure that our men are not hunted down,” a top police officer said.

The officer said that the firing was confined to the same general area where the other four terrorists were killed. “The good news is – the time lapse between the firing is increasing, which means they are running short of ammunition. It is only a matter of time before we win the battle,” he added.

Security agencies halted the combing operation late in the night to prevent chances of their personnel incurring further casualties, stating that it would be resumed at first light. They said the operation would be deemed complete only after the bodies of the terrorists are recovered.
 

aksha

Captain
and now this , bad new year , and fighting still goes on in pathankot

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Explosions and gunfire have been heard at the Indian consulate in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif.

Officials said the attackers had tried to enter the compound but had not been able to and were now in an adjacent building. Security forces reportedly cordoned off the area.

Indian diplomatic missions have come under attack from militants in the past in Afghanistan.

In 2008 and 2009, the embassy in Kabul was attacked twice, with dozens killed.

An Indian consulate official told the AFP agency from inside the compound that fighting was going on around the building.

No group said it was behind the attack. Indian officials said no staff had been harmed in the attack.

In May 2014, heavily-armed gunmen attacked the Indian consulate in Herat, while in August 2013 nine civilians died when the Indian consulate in Jalalabad was targeted.
 
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Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
and now this , bad new year

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very sorry Master Aksha of these events of terror and treachery, so very sorry that we live in an age where compassion and kindness have come to be regarded as weakness and opportunity by those who possess no such virtues, and own only hate. Sad men destined to meet their Master, and be cast down into the lake the burneth with fire.
 

aksha

Captain
seems pathankot airbase is the size of delhi, and heavily forested (not cleared for camoflauge ) and rocky too.
took 500 soldiers 3 days to sweep up the entire airbase even with the help helicopters and UAV'S with thermal imaging



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Lt. colonel Niranjan Kimar leaves an 18 month old daughter who will have to grow up without her father
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his wife widowed after just 45 days of marriage
 
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aksha

Captain
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Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) based militant body United Jihad Council (UJC) on Monday claimed responsibility for the Pathankot Airbase attack, which has left seven security personnel and five militants dead.

According to Srinagar-based wire service CNS, UJC spokesman Syed Sadaqat Hussain has said that Kashmiri militants associated with the ‘Highway Squad’ attacked the airbase.

“The attack on Pathankot Air Base from Kashmiri Mujhadeen carries a message to India that no security establishment and garrison are out of reach from militants,” said the spokesman.

UJC is a conglomerate of around 13 militant outfits, including the Lashkar-e-Toiba.

However, the Jash-e-Muhammad, which is under the scanner for the Pathankot attack , had in the past distanced itself from the conglomerate after it expanded militant activities beyond Jammu and Kashmir and pursued a pan-Islamic agenda.

Indian intelligence agencies in the past two days have accused JeM for the attack.
 

aksha

Captain
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what went wrong, goof ups explained

His bold opening to Pakistan last week, which shifted the moribund peace dialogue from the morgue to intensive care, depends upon peace – both on the Indo-Pakistan border, and in the relative absence of terrorist strikes originating from Pakistan. But National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval’s inept handling has transformed what should have been a short, intelligence-driven, counter-terrorist operation into something that increasingly seems like a debacle. For the peace dialogue to continue, India cannot afford to gift an aura of success to the terrorist “spoilers” who will inevitably follow up with further strikes. If only for our own sake, India must competently defend itself.

Providentially, the jihadis who entered Pathankot Air Base and killed seven security men and injured another 20 have not achieved their main aim --- which was clearly to derail the peace dialogue even before a preliminary meeting between India’s and Pakistan’s foreign secretaries in mid-January. If talks remain on track, it is because both sides have demonstrated unusual restraint. Mr Modi blamed the incident on “enemies of humanity who can’t see India progress”. And Pakistan’s foreign office condemned the terrorist attack and proposed to “partner with India... to completely eradicate the menace of terrorism afflicting our region.”

Yet it was a close run thing. Had the terrorists inflicted mass casualties in the family lines, or entered the technical area and blown up some fighter aircraft, India’s forbearance would have been seriously strained. By good luck, India’s intelligence agencies were forewarned on Friday, the day before the attack, by telephone calls the terrorists foolishly made to Pakistan. This intelligence, which went straight up to the NSA, provided precious hours to beef up security at potential terrorist targets – a list headed by the Pathankot Air Base. The means for this were readily available from the nearby Pathankot cantonment, India’s biggest, which houses two infantry divisions and two armoured brigades (over 50,000 troops). Yet, when the NSA met the army chief on Friday, he asked for only two
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of soldiers (some 50 troops).
Intent on directly controlling what he anticipated would be a walk in the park, and without anticipating that there might be more than one group of terrorists, Mr Doval led with his trump card --- he ordered 150-160 National Security Guard (NSG) troopers to be flown down immediately from New Delhi. The army was placed on the side-lines.

In effect, knowing that armed terrorists were prowling the vicinity, the NSA left the Pathankot Air Base in the hands of Defence Security Corps (DSC) jawans; a handful of air force Garud commandos; and the
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contingent.
The DSC, composed of retired military veterans well past their prime, can hardly repulse a well-equipped and motivated terrorist suicide squad. The NSG is not a first responder, and is neither trained nor equipped to protect sprawling air bases; it is meant for pinpoint operations like hostage rescue or flushing out terrorists holed up in a house. As for the Garuds, even the air force has not been able to adequately clarify what they are meant for. The army, which flushes militants out of large forests every day in Jammu & Kashmir, was given a peripheral role. Only when things started going wrong was the army asked for more troops. Although six army columns (150 soldiers) were eventually deployed, it was never in command of the operations.



It is revealing that not a single Pathankot casualty is from the army. The hapless DSC jawans took most of the casualties. The NSG took unacceptable losses, including an officer killed from a booby-trapped terrorist body. The army knows this ploy well and approaches terrorist bodies in J&K with caution, knowing the jihadi’s dying act could have been to activate a grenade and lie on it.



Stepping in to explain the continuing casualties that day, Home Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi – clearly a votary of the police tradition of throwing troopers into action without training or equipment – declared the Pathankot attack was not a security lapse, because “when weapons are in use, [a] few security personnel are bound to be injured.”

This attack comes on the heels of dialogue resumption, exactly as predicted by analysts in both India and Pakistan. It underlines the fact that New Delhi’s penchant for calling off talks in response to a serious terrorist strike provides an attractive incentive to jihadi groups to launch such strikes. After all, terrorist groups stand to lose the most from improved Indo-Pakistan relations. New Delhi must state clearly that it will continue talks through even the most heinous terrorist attack – and through the inevitable Indian response that will follow such an attack. Currently, the possibility of an Indian military response against terrorists does not deter them, since this capability is not evident. If Mr Doval wishes to provide real options to his boss, he must stop dabbling in day-to-day intelligence operations and, instead, coordinate the development of strike options that are a viable alternative to stalling the dialogue (yawn from Islamabad) yet again.

 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
seems pathankot airbase is the size of delhi, and heavily forested (not cleared for camoflauge ) and rocky too.
took 500 soldiers 3 days to sweep up the entire airbase even with the help helicopters and UAV'S with thermal imaging



HX0rgDE.png


3nyc12p.png


i2vsP1I.png


Lt. colonel Niranjan Kimar leaves an 18 month old daughter who will have to grow up without her father
LWTb87j.jpg


AH97Dvc.jpg

his wife widowed after just 45 days of marriage

Oh my, Patriots one and all, hopefully their sacrifice will embolden and inspire the rest of us to be more aware, and to wake up to this threat before its too late? Again my condolences.
 

aksha

Captain
another goof up, though i think the terrorists kidnapped a suritendent of police and let him off alive to decieve them into beleiving that there were only 4 of them into 6

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cb6vbGU.jpg

Gurdaspur Superintendent of Police Salwinder Singh, who was released unharmed by five Jaish-e-Mohammad terrorists on the night of December 31, slammed the authorities for not taking him seriously.

In an exclusive telephonic interview with Mail Today, Salwinder said it was his job to inform them about his abduction by the terrorists and had the authorities acted immediately, the terror attack could have been averted. "My duty was to share the inputs and I did that. If they did not act on time, that was their fault. The results are in front of you," Salwinder said.


The senior cop, in his complaint given to the Narot Jaimal Singh Police station, has said he was abducted around 11.30 pm on December 31 when he was on his way back to Gurdaspur, after offering prayers at a Talur shrine. He was signaled by some men for a lift at a curve near Kolian village. These men turned out to be the terrorists who later attacked the Indian Air Force base in Pathankot.



"They were in army fatigues and were carrying backpacks. They forcibly got inside my vehicle. They first asked my friend Rajesh Kumar to sit at the back seat. They then blindfolded me, tied my hands and slapped me hard. My cook was also in the car," Salwinder said.


Sources said the terrorists had earlier taken an Innova car from taxi driver Ikagar Singh who they killed near the Kathlor bridge. But when tyres of that taxi got punctured, they abandoned it and waited at Kolian for a lift. That's when they spotted the SP's vehicle. When asked why he was released unharmed, Salwinder said the terrorists took him to be a commoner as he was in civil dress. "I was not in my uniform. They thought I am a commoner. When one of the terrorists accidentally pressed the hooter, they realised the vehicle was not an ordinary one.

Sensing trouble, they pushed me and my cook off the car at Gulpur Simbli village. I had lost consciousness. I later got to know they let Rajesh go after a while," Salwinder explained. Salwinder insisted he is not a suspect but a victim of circumstances. He clarified he was not under detention of any agency . He said he alerted the control room immediately after he gained consciousness.


Incidentally, Salwinder is facing five sexual harassment cases slapped by lady constables. Police officials have said the accusations will not come in the way of Salwinder being made the prime witness in the terror attack case.

The terrorists who had kidnapped Salwinder and his companions struck the Pathankot Air Force Station in the early hours of January 2. Five terrorists have been neutralised so far and the operation to neutralise the other terrorists hiding in the base is on.
 

aksha

Captain
So it's finally over:

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the Indian Air Force's quest for a Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) is finally over with the Indian government confirming the order for 36 Rafale jets with the French government.

According to sources, documents for the government-to-government deal were delivered by New Delhi to Paris on New Year's eve, and the agreement is on the same lines as that for the Mirage 2000 aircraft signed in the early 1980s. IAF will buy all the Rafale aircraft from Dassault, the French aircraft builder and integrator, in a flyaway condition.

As the deal is between governments, the French authorities will ensure that Dassault complies with the terms of reference as it has successfully done in the case of Mirage 2000 -- about 60 of which were delivered beginning 1985. The basic agreement was for 49 and 10 more were acquired later.

Significantly, this is the second deal for IAF - and Indian Army - within one week, the other being for Russian Kamov-31 helicopters signed on Christmas Eve with the Russian Government in Moscow during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit there. That deal involves substantial manufacture of these machines in India as the number is large -- more than 200.

It may be noted that originally IAF was to acquire 126 aircraft after the Rafale was selected in the MMRCA competition some time back, 18 in flyaway condition and 108 as progressively assembled and made in India by HAL under part Transfer of Technology (ToT). Private industry was to be involved, but HAL's share was negotiated as more than 70 percent.

There were a lot of hiccups, over costs of the aircraft -- over $100 million-plus per aircraft -- and offsets from the Indian side and responsibility over the quality of production in India from the French side. Finally, keeping in mind IAF's urgent requirements, the prime minister intervened to order 36 aircraft, or two squadrons, in a direct government-to-government deal during his visit to Paris in April.

This time, the deal involved no production in India but there were still some hiccups over the 50 percent stipulated offsets although aircraft costs would by and large have been the same as for the French Air Force (Armée de l'Air). Offset obligations would always be additional.

Modi, intervening again, spoke directly with French President Francois Hollande on telephone in early September, and expressed difficulty in concluding the deal without the offsets. Hollande graciously agreed, and IAF approved the deal in mid-December. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) delivered a copy of the Inter-Government Agreement in this regard through the established diplomatic channels just as the New Year was set to begin.

Under the deal, Dassault and its main partners -- engine-maker Safran and electronic systems-maker Thales -- will share some technology with DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation) and maybe some private sector companies and HAL under the offsets clause. Details are not known but as the aircraft have to be flown and maintained in India for at least three-to-four decades, a lot of information and technology upgrades will be needed to keep them operational.

The twin-engine Rafale combat jet is designed from the beginning as a multi-role fighter for air-to-air and air-to-ground attacks, is nuclear- capable and, thanks to its onboard Electronic Warfare (EW) systems, can also perform reconnaissance and radar jamming roles.

The deal involves delivery of aircraft to begin within three years of signing the agreement -- 2018-end in this case -- but French industry sources told this writer some time back in Paris that Dassault had started planning for the Indian order from mid-2015 itself, and "maybe the deliveries could be faster, if required".

Last year had been lucky for Dassault as the Rafale has also been selected by Egypt and Qatar, while the UAE is considering it seriously.

There are suddenly too many orders, and the only way to meet them is to divert the French Air Force requirements for the next few years. That is being done.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Seems close, very but according infos i get right now no completely sure the deal is not signed, waiting, with this deal !

The signing could take place on January 26 during the visit of Francois Hollande in India. Deliveries of the aircraft is expected to take three years.
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