Yeh Dil Mange More: The Backstory With Lt Gen YK Joshi

0

Movies and serials have been made on his life. Capt Vikram Batra, winner of India’s highest gallantry award the Param Vir Chakra, posthumously, has been immortalised in the public imagination for his bravery and sacrifice but as his commanding officer, YK Joshi, then a Lt Col, later Lt Gen and Northern Army Commander, recounts it was the line chosen by Vikram Batra as his victory signal that became more famous.

As Joshi remembers, he asked two young officers, Vikram Batra and Capt SS Jamwal before they were to lead the attacks about their possible victory signals. Jamwal told Joshi he wants to use the line ‘oh ya ya ya.’ Asked to elaborate, Jamwal told him that this was the slogan used by the Hunter Squadron in the National Defence Academy and since he belonged to that squadron, he wanted to use it. Joshi gave him the go ahead.

As he turned to Vikram Batra, the young Captain said he will use the line, ‘ Dil maange more.’ Joshi was amused but allowed both of them to finalise those two lines as success signals. Rest is history. Vikram Batra is now forever identified with the line Dil maange more! However there was much more to the operation than slogans.

As Lt Gen Joshi explains, the number of innovations that he had to experiment in trying to gain advantage over the well-perched, well-armed enemy. Trying to use Milan (anti-tank) and Igla (surface to air) missiles in the mountains and how finally direct firing by Bofors guns did the job. That he led from the front and was right up there much like other COs, helped keep the morale up. The ultimate capture of Pt 4875 and 5140 by 13 Jammu and Kashmir Rifles (13 JAK Rif) under Joshi’s command is etched in everyone’s memory.

Apart from Vikram Batra, Hav Sanjay Kumar was also awarded the Param Vir Chakra for his bravery. Speaking to Editor-in-Chief Nitin A. Gokhale in Mushkoh Valley and at the base of 4875, Lt Gen Joshi recalls those tumultuous weeks to transport us back a quarter century ago that had the nation worried as well as enthralled because of the brave Indian soldiers and their heroics. Listen in.

+ posts

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

Previous articleUtilisation Of Artillery In Kargil Was Innovative, Unique, Says Maj Gen Alok Deb
Next articleBravery, Enthusiasm & Zeal Of Our Young Officers Gave Us The Edge In Kargil, Recalls Lt Gen Puri

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here