Indian Army’s IPKF Experience: ‘We Learnt How To Fight Guerrilla As Guerrilla’

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The Indo-Sri Lanka Accord signed 38 years ago was a major diplomatic blunder, one India could have done without. The agreement signed by then PM Rajiv Gandhi and Sri Lankan President JR Jayawardene on July 29, 1987 led to the deployment of the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) to resolve the ethnic violence in the island nation.

That was by far the largest foreign deployment of Indian troops abroad. And it ultimately turned out to be one of the bloodiest episodes in India’s military history, with over 1100 troops laying down their lives in the line of duty.

The accord pleased neither the majority Sinhalese nor the minority Tamils. The former saw it as a sell-out to India. The Tamils, who initially saw some hope, later turned hostile towards the Indian forces.

One incident turned the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) against the IPKF, says Col. Yash Saxena (Retd) who, as Second Lieutenant, was part of the IPKF.

About 13 Tamil insurgents who were captured by the Sri Lankan army killed themselves while in custody but the LTTE blamed the IPKF for not preventing the incident. That was when LTTE chief Prabhakaran said it was time to “fight our own war and not depend upon India”, recalls Col. Saxena (Retd). The assault was then directed at Indian troops.

How The LTTE Operated

The group practised unconventional warfare. They didn’t believe in copybook styles; rather moves and strategy were tailor-made for a particular operation, says Col. Saxena (Retd). “Guile and surprise were their biggest weapons.”

High Motivation

Fighting for a separate Tamil motherland was the trigger for a high level of motivation. The insurgents knew they were fewer in number and up against a regular army that had more firepower. And if a person has a cyanide capsule around his neck, that’s indicative enough of being prepared to lay down one’s life for the cause.

Optimal Use

For the insurgents, maximum usage of existing resources was a given. They used the weapons or whatever they had very well, recalls Col. Saxena (Retd), citing an example. “An AK-47 rifle has 30 rounds of ammunition but they made it 31 by putting one in the chamber. Also, the trick of using two magazines at one time by strapping one to the opposite side of the other. These are things we learnt from them.”

How LTTE Tracked Indian Troops

Quite familiar with the terrain, the LTTE cadre used innovative methods to track the movement of Indian troops. “We had a typical smell to our bodies, given that we ate a particular type of food and rubbed the same kind of oil, quite different from what Tamils use. That’s what we learnt after we caught a few insurgents,” said Col. Saxena (Retd).

Invaluable Lessons

In a reversal of tactics, the Indian troops then started rubbing fish oil, similar to what the insurgents did. They also didn’t wear jungle shoes to avoid detection due to the markings left by the footwear.

The tactics learnt there from 1987-1990 came in handy. Those years of deployment were sort of a ‘nursery’. “We learnt how to fight guerrilla as guerrilla.”

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Author, thought leader and one of South Asia's leading strategic analysts, Nitin A. Gokhale has forty years of rich and varied experience behind him as a conflict reporter, Editor, author and now a media entrepreneur who owns and curates two important digital platforms, BharatShakti.in and StratNewsGlobal.com focusing on national security, strategic affairs and foreign policy matters.

At the beginning of his long and distinguished career, Gokhale has lived and reported from India’s North-east for 23 years, writing and analysing various insurgencies in the region, been on the ground at Kargil in the summer of 1999 during the India-Pakistan war, and also brought live reports from Sri Lanka’s Eelam War IV between 2006-2009.

Author of over a dozen books on wars, insurgencies and conflicts, Gokhale relocated to Delhi in 2006, was Security and Strategic Affairs Editor at NDTV, a leading Indian broadcaster for nine years, before launching in 2015 his own digital properties.

An alumni of the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Hawaii, Gokhale now writes, lectures and analyses security and strategic matters in Indo-Pacific and travels regularly to US, Europe, South and South-East Asia to speak at various international seminars and conferences.

Gokhale also teaches at India’s Defence Services Staff College (DSSC), the three war colleges, India's National Defence College, College of Defence Management and the intelligence schools of both the R&AW and Intelligence Bureau.

He tweets at @nitingokhale

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