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Clarification: News agency PTI had erroneously reported that an “insulting” question by a TV anchor prompted the then Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar to plan last year's surgical strikes in PoK. In fact, Parrikar had said he felt “insulted” by a 4 June 2015 ambush on an Indian Army convoy by the north-eastern militant group NSCN-K. The PoK surgical strike was planned after that attack. A corrected version follows.
Former defence minister Manohar Parrikar has said the planning for the September 2016 surgical strikes in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir started in June 2015 after the NSCN-K ambushed an army convoy in Manipur.
Recapping events that led to the surgical strike in September last year, Parrikar told a gathering of industrialists yesterday that he felt "insulted" when he heard about the 4 June 2015 incident in which 18 jawans were killed.
The Swathi Weapon Locating Radar, developed by the DRDO, was used first in September 2016 to locate "firing units" of Pakistani Army, though the system was inducted officially three months later, Parrikar said.
It was thanks to the Swathi Radar that 40 firing units of Pakistani Army were destroyed, he added.
Disclosing that the surgical strikes against PoK militants were planned 15 months in advance after the Manipur killings, he said, "I felt insulted....A small terrorist organisation of 200 people killing 18 Dogra soldiers was an insult to the Indian Army and we sat in the afternoon and sat in the evening and worked out the (plan of) first surgical strike which was conducted on 8th June morning in which about 70-80 terrorists were killed (along the India-Myanmar border)."
"It was a very successful strike," he said. On the Army's side, the only injury was a leech attaching itself to a soldier's leg.
Contrary to some reports, no helicopters were used. "I had placed helicopters (on standby) only in case of emergency evacuation," he said.
He also listened intently to a TV discussion with his ministerial colleague Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore.
"...one question hurt me. Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, an ex-Armyman, was on TV and he was explaining about all kinds of search operations. An anchor asked him 'would you have the courage and capability of doing the same on the western front'," Parrikar recalled.
"I listened very intensely but decided to answer when the time came."
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