On the morning or June 1, the briefing
hall of Headquarters 2 Corps of Indian Army was brimming
with excitement. The western army commander Lt-General K.
Sunderji and his chief of staff Lt-General Ranjit Singh
Dayal were briefing a stunned audience of brass hats on the
Operation Bluestar plan. It is known that the operation was
subdivided along two specific co-ordinates:
Operation Metal: To prise the extremists
out of the Golden Temple and to neutralise Bhindranwale, the
task given to Brar’s Infantry Division.
Operation Shop: To raid extremist hideouts all over the
state and to mop up the terrorist remnants from the
countryside.
In addition, there was the equally crucial
Operation Woodrose, under which the army units were to move
into the border areas taking over pickets routinely held by
the BSF. As far as possible, the pickets were to be held in
at least company strength. Plans had been carefully made out
on each operation and with it all, barring Operation Shop,
more or less over now, it would be time now for the top
brass and defence analysts to dissect the operations.
On the afternoon of June 3, as the first
units of army began the siege or the Temple the Generals
still strongly felt that it would be possible to overawe the
extremists with a show of strength and prevent large-scale
bloodshed. But the first indications to the contrary came
when the defenders refused to be quietened with the
bombardment of their high-rise pillboxes atop the Ramgarhia
Bungas, the 18th century brick towers and thc water tank
behind Teja Singh Samundari Hall. Knocked out first on the
morning of June 4, the battlements were found to be manned
again the following morning, forcing the army to use a tank
firing from a distant locality near the Sultanwind Gate,
which provided a clear view to them of the fortification on
the water tank.
It was at this stage that the commanders
accepted the inevitability of an infantry assault into the
temple. According to original plan, the 10 Guards commanded
by Lt-Colonel Israr Khan were to break into the Parikrama
from the main clock tower gate. To join up simultaneously,
were the troops of 26 Madras, brought in hastily from
Jalandhar, from the serais’ side. In view of the “plunging
fire” from the battlement on the Parikrama and the clock
tower, the Guardsmen were to approach the gate following
tanks and then spill over inside the Parikrama, clearing
rooms and battlements held by the extremists. Similarly the
Madrasis coming in from the other end were supposed to clear
the other side. And while the infantry did this, the
commandos not of the regular army but from Special Frontier
Force (SFF), an outfit run by the Cabinet Secretariat at
Chakrata, also called the RAW’s Establishment 2 (set up in
the early 60’s to train Tibetan refugees in guerrilla
warfare) were supposed to assault the temple and the Akal
Takht and deliver the coup de grace. But in spite of the
specialised gear, weapons and bullet-proof jackets, the SFF-men,
who were the only ones to have rehearsed the raid
thoroughly, found the fire from the Akal Takht too daunting
and failing to break into the Akal Takht, asked for tank
support.
Complications had meanwhile arisen
elsewhere also. While the commander waited impatiently, the
Madarasis were seemingly taking too long to get to the
Parikrama. But as it latter turned out, it was not for want
of trying. The steel gate at the entrance facing the semis
had proved to be stronger than anticipated and a tank had to
be used to knock it down. Again, just as they stepped in,
the Madrasis, commanded by Lt-Colonel Pannikkar, ran into
heavy fire and suffered casualties. They again ran into
stiff resistance from terrorists who had taken a deadly
position inside a strategically placed Piao (drinking water
stall). The problem was compounded as the troops of the
Madras Regiment and a company of Kumaon Regiment, originally
held as reserve, got mixed in the darkness on the steps
leading to the Parikrama, leaving the officers with the
frustrating task of first separating their respective troops
while the extremists inflicted casualties.
With commandos failing to break through
the Akal Takht the Generals had already begun in terms of an
old-fashioned infantry assault and reserves were being
summoned in the form of 7th Battalion of the Garhwal
Regiment, who were in fact the part of the 15 Division,
Brigadier A.K. Diwan, nicknamed ‘Checky’ and Deputy GOC of
the 15 Division had come in to coordinate the transfer of
his Division's troops to the operation and found, himself in
the Parikrama, under heavy fire.
The infantry was facing its most daunting
challenge from the machine-guns sited nine inches above the
ground along the Parikrama. The defenders had correctly
guessed that the troops will first neutralise the rows of
rooms on the two floors of the Parikrama. Recalls an
officers: “Shabeg and shrewd judgement in siting the
machineguns nine inches above the ground to cover the area
with what we call as the grazing fire. He knew the regular
Indian army drill for such an operation where troops are
taught to crawl and throw grenades into the rooms one by one
and the machine-guns would have slaughtered crawling
troops.” Fortunately, the officers decided that space in and
around the Parikrama was too narrow for the men to crawl
around. They thus decided to hide behind the pillars and
spring out occasionally to throw a grenade into a room. This
explains the high incidence of bullet injuries in the leg.
Among the first to be wounded in the Guards’ assault was
their company commander. Later, the Madrasis lost young
Lieutcenant Ram Parkash Rupdria to a sniper’s bullet.
Ignoring the Akal Takht for the moment, Brar asked the
infantry to first clear the first floor of the Parikrama in
spite of the casualties. The approach at the two ends was
efflectively guarded by extremists hiding in manholes placed
right next to the staircases. The troops were ordered to
improvise assault ladders, which they did.
The commanders pressed the troops into a
desperate bid to lob gas-grenades into the Akal Takht. The
SFF commandos were again asked to somehow reach close enough
to the building and lob canisters containing gas. According
to the commanders, there were three reasons that the move
did not succeed:
i. The gas grenade can be launched only at very short
distances. The cost of getting that close, in terms of
casualties, was prohibitive.
ii. With most of the entrance and windows heavily sandbagged
it was difllcult to aim a canister inside the building.
iii. A stiff breeze, also diminisned the gas grenades
effectiveness.
With the move failing and infantry pinned
down by effective fire from the Akal Takht and parts of the
Parikrama, it was now time for frontal assaults. It was in
one of these that the Kumaon Regiment’s Major Misra, along
with seven other ranks, was killed a few yards from the Akal
Takht’s entrance. Facing the daunting prospect of moving
over the heap of their bodies, a batch of volunteers from
the Madras Regiment led by a young captain, stormed into the
buildings. They were the first troops to have “contacted”
the Akal Takht. Of the 10 volunteers, seven died, two
crawled back severely wounded and only the captain returned
unhurt much later, after trying to retrieve an injured
junior commissioned officer (JCO), who was ultimately
abandoned.
By this time, Brigadier (now
Major-General) Diwao Dy. GOC 15 Division who was inside the
temple, had taken charge of the affairs. A decision was now
made to use harsher methods, and armoured personal carriers
(APC’s) of a mechanised infantry battalion were called in.
But the APC’s of the Scot variety, which is wheeled and not
tracked, unlike the more modern APC’S had trouble coming
down the steps from the entrance into the Parikrama. A
Vijayanta tank had to be summoned to break the marbles steps
“This was a tricky operation”, recalls on officer, adding,
“our fear was that if the tank rolls down or gets bogged
down, it may block the only good entry point we had for
armoured vehicles,” The tank, had to be used carefully
breaking a step at a time, reversing, and then repeating the
process.
But even when the APC’s finally made it to
the Pankmma,. the move did not make to much difference as
the Sikhs fired from a rocket Launcher knocking out an APC.
A decision was made to abandon the APC and while alighting,
the driver was shot in the eye and killed. Alongside, yet
another novel trick was being tried to neutralise the Akal
Takht. The commanders brought in a tank with its bright
blinding xenon lamps to momentarily blind defenders in the
Akal Takht while the troops closed in. In conventional
warfare, the lamp is used only for a few seconds at a time
to light up a target as the filament burns out in just two
minutes. The tank had to be replaced each time the filament
was burnt and the intervening delay reduced the
effectiveness of the move. Later, as the night wore on,
xenon lights were used in short spells.
The commanders were now faced with a
terribly difficult situation. The dawn was not to far away
and as a senior officer recalls, once the place was lighted,
each of the nearly 1800 troops inside the Parikarma could
have been picked out by snippers. This is when tanks of thet
16 Cavalry were asked to come in. The tank-men were
initially told to use only the “secondary armament” meaning
thereby the machine-gun on the turret. Later however the
main gun was used too.
Simultaneously an artillery colonel was
asked to take an ancient 3.7 inch howitzer atop a tall
building overlooking the Akal Takht. Officers explain the
howitzer was chosen for shelling since it can fire straight
on-horizontally, promising greater accuracy at close range.
Initially the artillery men tried to mount the gun atop the
building of a nationalised bank. But in spite of generous
help from the scores of civilians it proved impossible to
haul up the heavy artillery piece with ropes. Later another
building was chosen. To ensure that the aim was accurate,
the gunners first fired smoke shells, then the real
fireworks began.
As shelling continued troops lay
sprawling, firing intermittently. By morning of June 6,
resistance had diminished and there was guess work among the
commanders as to what had happened to Bhindranwale and his
key lieutenants. At 11 a.m., officers’ recall, there was a
mad dash-out from the Akal Takht building. Nearly 25 men
sprinted across, probably to make for the Temple building,
but most of them were mowed down. A few threw away their
weapons and succeeded in jumping into the holy tank. They
were killed there.
The suicidal break-out made the generals
guess that Bhindranwale had by now died or escaped, though
till the evening, stray firing continued. It was later
discovered that a handful of survivors inside had been
keeping the army’s attention diverted with stray sniping to
gain time to throw weapons, cash and valuables in a well
behind the Akal Takht building. Later in the day the troops
caught a wounded youngster, perhaps a temple Sevadar
(worker), crawling out of the Akal Takht, who first reported
that Bhindranwale was dead and Shabeg seriously wounded. He
later took the jawans to the Akal Takht basement where
Bhindranwale's body was found, in a heap of about 40.
Away from the main theatre of operations a
body of troops near the Serais was grappling with another
problem-thousands of pilgrims, including many women and
children were trapped inside the rooms. A majority of these
were part of a Jatha that had come from Sangrur to court
arrest as part of the on going Akali morcha. The rest
included SGPC employees, labourers and pilgrims who had come
from faraway places on June 3, the martyrdom day of Guru
Arjun Dev. Survivors’ accounts vary but it seems that panic
gripped everyone and the army’s warning over megaphones
often got lost in the din or gunfire and shrieks. Many
pilgrims died as a result of fire. Later, as the army got
sniped at from a number of as in the Parikrama and the
serais, the troops just threw grenades into the rooms.
“People were dying on both sides”, recalls an officer,
adding, “and there was no time to find out who was inside a
room”. Some of the pilgrims also died of thrist. Many died
of the fires which broke out.