The Naxal menace is getting out of control of the Government, both Centre and State. Should the Army be involved in curbing the menace and bring the situation under control ?

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Quotes

1. The best way to get even is to forget...
2. Feed your faith and your doubts will starve to death...
3. God wants spiritual fruits, not religious nuts...
4. Some folks wear their halos much too tight...
5. Some marriages are made in heaven, but they ALL have to be maintained on earth...
6. Unless You can create the WHOLE universe in 5 days, Then perhaps giving "advice" to God, isn't such a good idea!
7. Sorrow looks back, worry looks around, and faith looks up...
8. Standing in the middle of the road is dangerous. You will get knocked down by the traffic from both ways...
9. Words are windows to the heart.
10. A skeptic is a person who when he sees the handwriting on the wall, claims it's a forgery...
11. It isn't difficult to make a mountain out of a molehill ... just add a little dirt.
12. A successful marriage isn't finding the right person -- it's being the right person.
13. The mighty oak tree was once a little nut that held its ground...
14. Too many people offer God prayers with claw marks all over them.
15. The tongue must be heavy indeed, because so few people can hold it.
16. To forgive is to set the prisoner free, and then discover the prisoner was you.
17. You have to wonder about humans...they think God is dead and Elvis is alive!
18. It's okay to sit on your pity pot every now and then. Just be sure to flush once-in-awhile.
19. You'll notice that a turtle only makes progress when it sticks out its neck...
20. If the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, you can bet the water bill is higher.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Remembrance Day

Daddy's poem.

Her hair was up in a pony tail,
he favourite dress tied with a bow,
today was Daddy's Day at school,
and she couldn't wait to go.

But her mummy tried to tell her,
that she probably should stay at home.
Why the kids might not understand,
if she went to school alone.

But she was not afraid;
She knew just what to say.
What to tell her classmates
of why he wasn't there today.

But still her mother worried,
for her to face this day alone.
And that was why once again,
she tried to keep her daughter home.

But the little girl went to school
eager to tell them all
about a dad she never sees
a dad who never calls.

There were daddies along the wall at the back,
for everyone to meet.
Children squirming impatiently,
anxious in their seats

One by one the teacher called
a student from the class,
To introduce their daddy,
as seconds slowly passed.

At last the teacher called her name,
every child turned to stare.
Each of them was searching for
a man who wasn't there.

'Where's her daddy at?'
She heard a boy call out
'She probably doesn't have one,'
another student dared to shout.

And from somewhere near the back,
She heard a daddy say,
‘looks like another deadbeat dad,
too busy to waste his day.'

The words did not offend her,
as she smiled up at her mum.
And looked back at her teacher,
Who told her to go on.

And with hands behind her back,
slowly she began to speak.
And out from the mouth of a child,
came words incredibly unique.

'My Daddy couldn't be be here,
because he lives so far away.
But I know he wishes he could be,
since this is such a special day.

And though you cannot meet him,
I wanted you to know.
All about my daddy,
and how much he loves me so.

He loved to tell me stories
he taught me to ride my bike.
He surprised me with pink roses,
and taught me to fly a kite.

We used to share fudge sundaes,
and ice cream in a cone
and though I cannot see him.
I'm not standing here alone.

'Cause my daddy's always with me,
even though we are apart
I know because he told me,
He'll forever be in my heart'

With that, her little hand reached up,
and lay across her chest.
feeling her own heartbeat,
beneath her favorite dress.

And from somewhere here in the crowd of dads,
her mother stood in tears.
Proudly watching her daughter,
who was wise beyond her years.

For she stood up for the love
of a man not in her life.
Doing what was best for her,
doing what was right.

And when she dropped her hand back down,
staring straight into the crowd.
She finished with a voice so soft,
but its message clear and loud.

'I love my daddy very much,
he's my shining star.
and if he could, he'd be here
but heaven's just too far.

You see he was a British Soldier
and died just this past year,
when a roadside bomb hit his convoy
and taught Britons to fear.

But sometimes when I close my eyes,
it's like he never went away.'
And then she closed her eyes,
and saw him there that day.

To her mothers amazement,
she witnessed with surprise.
a room full of daddies and children,
all starting to close their eyes.

Who knows what they saw before them,
who knows what they felt inside.
Perhaps for merely a second,
they saw him at her side.

'I know you're with me Daddy,'
To the silence she called out.
And what happened next made believers,
of those once filled with doubt.

Not one in that room could explain it,
for each of their eyes had been closed.
But there on the desk beside her,
was a fragrant long-stemmed rose.

And a child was blessed, if only for a moment,
by the love of her shining star,
and given the gift of believing,
that heaven is never too far.


Lest We Forget.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Let go off the baggage of the pretty Lady

Let Go Of The Baggage Of The "Pretty Lady"

Once upon a time a big monk and a little monk were traveling together. They came to the bank of a river and found the bridge was damaged. They had to wade across the river. There was a pretty lady who was stuck at the damaged bridge and couldn't cross the river.

The big monk offered to carry her across the river on his back. The lady accepted. The little monk was shocked by the move of the big monk. "How can big brother carry a lady when we are supposed to avoid all intimacy with females?" thought the little monk. But he kept quiet.

The big monk carried the lady across the river and the small monk followed unhappily. When they crossed the river, the big monk let the lady down and they parted ways with her.

All along the way for several miles, the little monk was very unhappy with the act of the big monk. He was making up all kinds of accusations about big monk in his head. This got him madder and madder. But he still kept quiet. And the big monk had no inclination to explain his situation.

Finally, at a rest point many hours later, the little monk could not stand it any further; he burst out angrily at the big monk. "How can you claim yourself a devout monk, when you seize the first opportunity to touch a female, especially when she is very pretty? All your teachings to me make you a big hypocrite. The big monk looked surprised and said, "I had put down the pretty lady at the river bank many hours ago, how come you are still carrying her along?"

Moral of the Story:

This very old Chinese Zen story reflects the thinking of many people today.

We encounter many unpleasant things in our life, they irritate us and they make us angry.

Sometimes, they cause us a lot of hurt; sometimes they cause us to be bitter or jealous. But like the little monk, we are not willing to let them go away.

We keep on carrying the baggage of the "pretty lady" with us. We let them keep on coming back to hurt us, make us angry, make us bitter and cause us a lot of agony. Why? Simply because we are not willing to put down or let go of the baggage of the "pretty lady".

We should let go of the pretty lady immediately after crossing the river that is after the unpleasant event is over. This will immediately remove all our agonies. There is no need to be further hurt by the unpleasant event after it is over.

(When someone shares something of value with you and you benefit from it, you have a moral obligation to share it with others.)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Pedaller of Hope

Pedaller of hope

Twelve years, 111 cycle rallies, 75 families of Prisoners Of War and martyrs, all with the selfless motive of spreading awareness and keeping them alive in Indian memory. 52-year-old Hira Lal Yadav has been cycling through the streets of India, collecting letters written by POWs and their photographs, trying to create awareness through pamphlets and mass rallies with a hope of somehow bringing back home this lost population.

SUNIL THAPLIYAL reports

Fidus Achates, perhaps this is the title that 52-year-old Hira Lal Yadav can be best honoured with as he has been acting like a trusted friend to many families for decades.

Just like the wheels of time, Yadav's cycle has reached out to families of those persons whose relatives have been Prisoners of War in many Pakistani jails.

Yadav's mission: Highlighting the plight of such families and wiping the dust from the Government's memory so that some action can be taken to bring the soldiers back home.

Since 1997, Yadav has pedaled in more than 111 cycle rallies across the country. While the initial issue taken up by him was drugs, it slowly forayed into another serious one — that of POWs.

Yadav's past is nothing extraordinary. He was just another man who came from a rural background and left his ancestral place in Gorakhpur to head for Mumbai in search of a living. That was in 1981.

The thought of trying to help others came to him while Yadav was smoking a cigarette. "After I threw the stub and walked away, I realised that my son had picked it and was puffing on it. I realised that if a child can learn a thing by just observing, perhaps my selfless motive of helping soldiers' families would force youngsters to ponder over the plight of the hundreds of soldiers languishing in jails across Pakistan, especially the one at Kot Lakhpat.

“My motive is simple. To generate enough publicity and make students and the public aware so that the POWs are released," Yadav says.

For a civilian, the war ends within a few weeks, but a soldier's family has to fight another war that rages for a lifetime. Time and again, the issue of POWs has been raised but the Pakistani Government has cursedly denied having any such prisoners. In July, 2001, when then Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf visited India, he harped on the same chord.

“However, by then the Kargil War had revealed otherwise. We have been trying to pressurise the Government to secure the release of prisoners. A delegation of family members of Indian POWs was sent to Pakistan in 2007. Even many Pakistani human rights activists are working on this," Yadav adds.

When Yadav was touring the country to raise awareness about drugs, the sacrifice of Indian soldiers came to his mind during the golden jubilee Independence Day celebrations in 1997. He says: "I started working on the POWs issue as I felt that in all our Independence Day and Republic Day celebrations we had failed to respect our soldiers.

“We only remember them during crisis. I decided to tour the country to raise awareness because, unfortunately, the young generation does not have any knowledge about the supreme sacrifices made by our freedom fighters and soldiers. There is hardly any information readily available on them.”

“The turning point of my mission came when I saw the bodies of our beloved soldiers covered by the Tricolour. Most martyrs had not even crossed their mid-20s. I felt that if such soldiers were taken POWs, then they would be suffering a great deal in jails," Yadav added.

Since then, Yadav has cycled to the homes of many martyrs, starting from that of the 1965 Indo-Pak War hero Abdul Hameed, whose act of gallantry won him the Paramveer Chakra.

During the Kargil War, Yadav travelled to the war zone from Mumbai on a bicycle without a seat. He travelled for 200 days through Nagpur, Chennai, Bihar and the Wagah border to meet his objective.

During the Kargil War, Captain Vikram Batra became a martyr. But, after 10 years, people hardly remember him. His proud father GL Batra says: "Though we do not expect anything, sometimes it hurts how people can forget the sacrifices of our soldiers. Hira Lal Yadav has been in touch with us and it gives us relief to learn that there are people who still love their soldiers and acknowledge them."


Hira has been working as a bridge between civilians and the armed forces. He collects the last letters of martyrs and POWs and shows them to college students, citing their numerous acts of heroism. He collects posters from students of universities across the country and exhibits them in various cities to spread awareness about the soldiers.

"Today's youth must come out of their fascination for the glamour world of movies and sports. They should look beyond and see soldiers as their idols," Yadav says.

"My son, Captain Saurabh Kalia, sacrificed his life for the nation. He did his duty very well. He made me proud. People respect us. Even though I lost one son, I got thousands in return. All this has come due to people like Hira Lal Yadav, who are in a mission to highlight the bravery of soldiers," said M K Kalia.

Yadav also says that when he started, dissemination of information was tough. "But now, in the era of Internet and Information Technology, people can pressurize Governments of both countries to release the prisoners".

"All this can be achieved by sending emails and being part of signature campaigns that show their concern. We don't have any other option, and we can only try. At least now people have knowledge and are worried about those 54 forgotten war heroes who are in the Pakistani jail for decades. I think this is the result of our campaign," Yadav says.

Yadav even tried his level best to help POW families financially. "Earlier, I used to have donation boxes when I went about my awareness programmes.

This generated some funds that I used to give to the needy families. However, my network is not that huge that I could get enough support for the martyrs' families. But I plan to add more people for the cause and help all those soldiers who are handicapped, or medically unfit," he adds.

Yadav says that even though the Government may not be helping him in his efforts, he's fine with it. He says: "The Government should just concentrate on its job, and I will on mine. I can't say any more in this regard."

Taking his efforts a mile forward, Hira Lal Yadav has even written a book called "Salaam Sainik" which is a collection of poems. Written in 2005, the book was released by Yogendera Singh Yadav, a Paramveer Chakra awardee.

"My poems have been well appreciated by the jawans. When I went to Ambala Cantonment for recitation of my poems, I found hundreds of army men waiting for my programme to start. After I recited the poems, I got a standing ovation from them as they truly paint a picture of the life led by them. An officer even came up and said that it was the first time that he had seen an effort made by any civilian to support the Army," Yadav added.

Yadav has been suffering from kidney stones and back problem. More so, he began his 'act of healing' at the age of 40, when most people resign themselves to the everyday burdens of life and prefer to lead a fixed routine. Yadav was also advised by doctors not to undertake any task that involved a lot of physical activity. But he carried on despite the warnings.

"No hurdle can stop me from my mission. My pain is nothing compared to the sufferings of martyrs' families. If they can bear the pain, then why can't I do this little thing for them?” questions Yadav.

Hira Lal's personal life was also affected by his honest cause. But all is well now on the home front. His 18-year-old son, Pradeep, who is in 12th standard and yearns of becoming an MBA says: "Earlier I used to miss him. Sometimes I felt bad. But as I grew up, I realised the importance of his work. Now it really makes me proud. However, as he's busy traveling and his schedule is awry, all familial responsibilities have fallen on my mother and elder brother. But we don't have any problems. We love him and can bear anything for this noble cause."

Stark reality

· In a book published in 1980 titled Bhutto — Trial and Execution written by Victoria Schofield, a senior BBC London reporter, covering the period 1978 when Bhutto was detained in Kot Lakhpat jail, Lahore. Page No 59 reads: “(Bhutto’s) cell separated from a barrack area by a 10 foot high wall did not prevent him from hearing horrific shrieks and screams at night from the other side of the wall. One of Bhutto’s lawyers made enquires amongst the jail staff and ascertained that they were in fact Indian Prisoners of War who had been rendered delinquent and mental during the course of the 1971 war.”

· The name of Major Ashok Suri was mentioned on January 6 and 7, 1972 in Punjabi Darbar programme of Lahore. His father also received letters from a Karachi jail on August 13, 1975 dated June 14/15/16, 1975 stating that their were 20 other officers with him there.

· Mohanlal Bhaskar, who was in a jail between 1968 and 1974 and repatriated on December 9, 1974 wrote a book (Main Pakistan Mein Bharat Ka Jasoos Tha) and gave a signed affidavit stating that in Fort of Attock, a Pakistani Major Ayaj Ahmed Sipra (imprisoned for conspiring against Bhutto) spoke of his befriending a Gill of the Indian Air Force and a Captain Singh of the Indian Army as well as mentioning that there were around 40 Pows of the 1965 and 1971 wars in that jail who had no chances of release.

· There is other evidence, a photo in Time magazine of Major Ghosh in a Pakistani jail published on December 27, 1971.


What goes around comes around

WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND


One day a man saw a old lady, stranded on the side of the road, but even in the dim light of day, he could see she needed help. So he pulled up in front of her Mercedes and got out. His Pinto was still sputtering when he approached her.

Even with the smile on his face, she was worried. No one had stopped to help for the last hour or so. Was he going to hurt her? He didn't look safe; he looked poor and hungry.

He could see that she was frightened, standing out there in the cold. He knew how she felt. It was that chill which only fear can put in you.

He said, 'I'm here to help you, ma'am. Why don't you wait in the car where it's warm? By the way, my name is Bryan Anderson.'

Well, all she had was a flat tire,
But for an old lady, that was bad enough. Bryan crawled under the car looking for a place to put the jack, skinning his knuckles a time or two. Soon he was able to change the tire. But he had to get dirty and his hands hurt.

As he was tightening up the lug nuts, she rolled down the window and began to talk to him. She told him that she was from St. Louis and was only just passing through. She couldn't thank him enough for coming to her aid.

Bryan just smiled as he closed her trunk. The lady asked how much she owed him. Any amount would have been all right with her. She already imagined all the awful things that could have happened had he not stopped.
Bryan never thought twice about being paid.
This was not a job to him. This was helping someone in need, and God knows there were plenty, who had given him a hand in the past. He had lived his whole life that way, and it never occurred to him to act any other way.

He told her that if she really wanted to pay him back, the next time she saw someone who needed help, she could give that person the assistance they needed, and Bryan added, 'And think of me..'

He waited until she started her car and drove off. It had been a cold and depressing day, but he felt good as he headed for home, disappearing into the twilight.

A few miles down the road the lady saw a small cafe. She went in to grab a bite to eat, and take the chill off before she made the last leg of her trip home. It was a dingy looking restaurant. Outside were two old gas pumps.. The whole scene was unfamiliar to her. The waitress came over and brought a clean towel to wipe her wet hair.. She had a sweet smile, one that even being on her
Feet for the whole day couldn't erase. The lady noticed the waitress was nearly eight months pregnant, but she never let the strain and aches change her attitude. The old lady wondered how someone who had so little could be so giving to a stranger. Then she remembered Bryan ..

After the lady finished her meal, she paid with a hundred dollar bill. The waitress quickly went to get change for her hundred dollar bill, but the old lady had slipped right out the door. She was gone by the time the waitress came back. The waitress wondered where the lady could be. Then she noticed something written on the napkin.

There were tears in her eyes when she read what the lady wrote: 'You don't owe me anything. I have been there too. Somebody once helped me out, the way I'm helping you. If you really want to pay me back, here is what you do: Do not let this chain of love end with you.'

Under the napkin were four more $100 bills.

Well, there were tables to clear, sugar bowls to fill, and people to serve, but the waitress made it through another day. That night when she got home from work and climbed into bed, she was thinking about the Money and what the lady had written. How could the lady have known how much she and her husband needed it? With the baby due next month, it was going to be hard....

She knew how worried her husband was, and as he lay sleeping next to her, she gave him a soft kiss and whispered soft and low, 'Everything' s going to be all right. I love you, Bryan Anderson.'

There is an old saying...... 'What goes around comes around.' Today I sent you this story, and I'm asking you to pass it on. Let this light shine.

Don't delete it, don't return it. Simply, pass this on to a friend

Good friends are like stars.....You don't always see them, but you know they are always there.


WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND

~GOD BLESS!~

Monday, October 12, 2009

Brave Sons of INDIA

Brave sons of India

Brave soldiers of India” (Spectrum, Sept 13) has portrayed a true picture of the bravery of Indian soldiers. Over 1.4 million Indian soldiers fought for the British in World War I. Of these, 47,000 were killed and another 65,000 were wounded. In this war, Indian soldiers became known the world over for their valour and won 12 Victoria Crosses.

The first Victoria Cross was awarded on October 31, 1914, at Hollebeke in Belgium to an infantryman Sepoy Khudadad Khan of Battalion I, 129th Duke of Cannaught’s own Baluchis. Thus, of the 17 Victoria Crosses awarded during World War I, 12 went to the Indian soldiers. Only one of these, Rifleman Gobar Singh Negi of Battalion II, 39th Garhwal Rifles was awarded posthumously, other VC holders had fought on to inspire their fellow soldiers. At the end of the war, 2/3 Gorkha Rifles had two living VCs in the unit.

The Britishers were very tactful, tough and tenacious. They had not considered the Indian soldiers entitled for the Victoria Cross. The “Order of Merit” instituted in 1837 was the highest gallantry award for the Indian soldiers. It was only in 1911 that Indian soldiers became entitled to receive the VC.

The courage of millions of soldiers from the Indian sub-continent, Africa and the Caribbean, who fought and died for the British in the two world wars, has been recognised now with the erection of memorial gates adjacent to the Buckingham Palace. Leading industrialists Gopichand Hinduja, Lakshmi Mittal and Avtar Lit were among influential Asians in Britain who were the driving force behind the setting up of these memorials.

Our politicians have no time for our martyrs. On Kargil Day many leaders had no time to grace the functions held to mark the occasion.

MULTAN SINGH PARIHAR, Jalari (Hamirpur)

Remembering the Brave

Let us remember our Brave Soldiers.

The best way I thought to do this was to create " Salute the Soldier Foundation". My hope and aspirations with this non profit foundation is to increase community awareness and create opportunities for people to assist in the financial, emotional and spiritual needs to those who have served and sacrificed so much for this great country.I would like to invite views and suggestions.

Please click on the following link to read about Maj Gen C Venugopal, PVSM, MVC

http://www.geocitie s.com/siafdu/ amvc28.html

Lt Colonel Chittoor Venugopal was commanding a battalion of Gorkha Rifles during the operations on the Eastern Front.

On 4 December 1971, the battalion came up against well fortified enemy defences at Utrali and Darsana. The position had a series of concrete pillboxes interconnected with elaborate communication trenches. Lt Colonel Venugopal planned the attack with great professional skill. Showing complete disregard for his personal safety, he led the attack and by his presence inspired his men to achieve the objective. After the capture of these two positions, the battalion relentlessly pursued the withdrawing enemy giving him no rest or time to regroup till Jhenida was captured three days later.

Throughout, Lt Colonel Venugopal displayed conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty in the best traditions of the Army.
Gen Venugopal, who is now 83 years young, is at Tirupati; and those who know him may call him on Tel No: 0877-2287242

Saturday, October 10, 2009

REMEMBER

REMEMBER

* Remember that your presence is a present to the world.
* Remember that you are a unique and unrepeatable creation.
* Remember that your life can be what you want it to be.
* Remember to take the days just one at a time.
* Remember to count your blessings, not your troubles.
* Remember that you'll make it through whatever comes along.
* Remember that most of the answers you need are within you.
* Remember those dreams waiting to be realized.
* Remember that decisions are too important to leave to chance.
* Remember to always reach for the best that is within you.
* Remember that nothing wastes more energy than worry
* Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck.
* Remember that the longer you carry a grudge, the heavier it gets.
* Remember not to take things too seriously.
* Remember to laugh.
* Remember that a little love goes a long way.
* Remember that a lot goes forever.
* Remember that happiness is more often found in giving than getting.
* Remember that life's treasures are people, not things.

Monday, September 28, 2009

I am a Fauji by Capt VR Rao

My feet are sore, My limbs are numb
I keep walking, I keep on walking

Smile on my face, my eyes are bright
I feel no pain, am ready to fight

I have seen blood, I have seen tears
I dare the impossible, I have no fears
I am me, I am a Fauji


I am willing to give, everything I store
Ignore my blisters and ask for more

All I have is my spirit and soul
Bag full of discipline and loyalty in my role

No questions asked, I give you dependability
Pride in me, I would give my life for integrity
I am me, I am a Fauji


Strong is my vision, dear are my beliefs
Values are what I bring, sharp are my skills

Competence and commitment, Candor and will
I have always and I always will

Humility and empathy, tact and thinking
Makes me confident and defines my bearing
I am me, I am a Fauji


I live with challenges, challenges inspire me
I lead my men, their drive drives me

My team is me, I live for my team
Come thunder or storm, the mission is supreme

I give sweat and my blood for the task I do
Nothing exists for which I have said No to.
I am me, I am a Fauji

My feet are sore, my limbs are numb
I keep walking, I keep on walking

I am me, I am a Fauji…….I am me, I am a Fauji

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Simple Analogy

Simple Analogy



An economics professor at a local college made a statement that he had never failed a single student before but had once failed an entire class.

That class had insisted that socialism worked and that no one would be poor and no one would be rich, a great equalizer.

The professor then said, "OK, we will have an experiment in this class on socialism. All grades would be averaged and everyone would receive the same grade so no one would fail and no one would receive an A.

After the first test, the grades were averaged and everyone got a B.

The students who studied hard were upset and the students who studied little were happy.

As the second test rolled around, the students who studied little had studied even less and the ones who studied hard decided they wanted a free ride too so they studied little.

The second test average was a D! No one was happy.

When the 3rd test rolled around, the average was an F.



The scores never increased as bickering, blame and name-calling all resulted in hard feelings and no one would study for the benefit of anyone else.

All failed, to their great surprise, and the professor told them that socialism would also ultimately fail because when the reward is great, the effort to succeed is great but when government takes the reward away, no one will try or want to succeed.


Could not be any simpler than that.


What a profound short little paragraph that says it all

"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for,that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."

~~~~ Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931

By Seema Mustafa and Rahul Bedi.......

HAS INDIA BECOME A SOFT STATE ?
The train from Beijing to Tibet reaches strategically sensitive heights. Packed with local Chinese and a handful of foreigners, it weaves its way through breathtaking unexplored territory, even as hacks like us stare out of the windows for a glimpse of military movement. We are not disappointed. With this railway line and a network of excellent roads extending almost till the Indian border, China has increased its capacity to move troops and materiel to the Line of Actual Control in 25 days as against the earlier six months.

China’s ongoing two-month-long Stride-2009 exercises involving over 50,000 soldiers from four major regional commands demonstrate its capability to mobilise large forces to Tibet using civilian air and rail links as well. China has billed these exercises as the PLA’s extended force projection capability. The PLA’s Rapid Reaction Forces, known locally as Resolving Emergency Mobile Combat Forces, are also capable of a 24-48-hour response to emergencies. Analysts said this implies that Beijing is capable of moving up to four divisions, or over 200,000 troops, swiftly to the Indian border if the need arises either in response to a threat or, in all likelihood, to flaunt power. The Chinese also have nine airfields in the Tibetan Autonomous Region, including four at Lhasa to facilitate the PLA’s rapid mobilisation.

Talk in New Delhi of the “China threat” — which visibly agitates Beijing — has resurfaced once again, with the 13th round of discussions on the border issue between Special Representatives M.K. Narayanan and Dai Bingguo registering little movement forward. A Chinese media offensive questioning Indian policy towards China has further alarmed India’s strategic community, with the military stepping in to suggest that the wisest course would be to focus on “quality” improvement in operational capability, instead of erring, as always, on the side of numbers.
Retired Indian Navy [IN] Chief, Admiral Sureesh Mehta clarified his earlier remarks by telling Covert that he had at no stage suggested that India could not confront China, but had at a lecture pointed out that since “in both conventional and non-conventional military terms Delhi cannot match Beijing force-for-force” Indian strategy should focus on “lean and mean” capacity building. “We can, for instance, have far better ships than the Chinese have and technologically beat them at their own game,” Admiral Mehta added.

There is no sense of this realisation in India’s political establishment that remains in a state of denial over China. From occasional alarmist statements to deliberate efforts to underplay the situation to being downright supine, the Government has failed miserably in developing a strategic line of action in keeping with the fast pace of military development across India’s borders. Former Vice Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Vijay Oberoi said it was unfortunate that “policymakers cannot take hard decisions, and are responsible for the perception that we are a soft state and so can succumb to pressure”.

COL. R. HARIHARAN from the Chennai Centre of China Studies said that most of India’s neighbours perceive it as a “soft state”. Perception is what makes beliefs and they come from how India conducts itself both internally and externally. “Most of our security related problems — inability to develop a long-term national vision, inability to use time as a resource, unresolved land and maritime border disputes, mending relations with neighbours, effectively handling homegrown insurgencies — in short failure to walk the talk — has contributed to this negative image,” according to Hariharan who played an active role with the Indian Peacekeeping Force in Sri Lanka in the late 1980s.

Three “moments” to exhibit this resolve for hard action that were not seized by the Government in recent years are acknowledged by the military and strategic establishment as, not striking Pakistani assets during Kargil, not launching punitive strikes against Islamabad after the December 2001 Parliament terror attack and again after last year’s Mumbai terror attacks.

Former Deputy National Security Advisor Satish Chandra said that just after the Kargil occupation became known there was a strong view in the NDA Government that the best option to avoid multiple casualties in trying to re-occupy the heights would be to cross the border and seize territory that could then be traded for a Pakistani pullout from the occupied heights. The then Army Chief, General Ved Prakash Malik reportedly opposed this, maintaining that the Army was neither equipped nor ready for what could erupt into a full-fledged war. He was backed by the two other Service Chiefs, who were equally full of trepidation over the consequences of extending the theatre of conflict.

The second opportunity for hard action came with the attack on Parliament, but after mounting the longest ever mobilisation of its armed forces in December 2001 lasting ten months, the NDA Government withdrew its troops without either firing a single shot or, for that matter, deterring Pakistan in any noteworthy manner. Most Army officers share the view of former Army Chief Gen. S. Padmanabhan, who claimed in an interview at the time that a political decision to go to war could have resulted in significant military gains in January 2002 when the Pakistani military was still to mobilise. He did not agree with the view that at least limited air strikes on specific targets in Pakistan should have been carried out, saying, “If you really want to punish someone for something very terrible he has done, you smash him. You destroy his weapons and capture his territory.” But he stressed that there had to be a policy, a mandate decreed by the political rulers. The third opportunity, of course, was after the Mumbai attacks when the military was keen to go across the border and “hit any target to show that such a strike on a civilian target was not to be tolerated”. But the Government balked at the prospect and the “moment” passed. Chandra tersely pointed out that Pakistan and the international community are well aware that India will not take decisive military action, meekly accepting “whatever comes its way as we blunder along from one disaster to another”.

“India’s problem is that we have never imposed a price on any nation for action taken against us,” Chandra said. “We keep silent and accept whatever comes our way. Whenever there is the question of national interest being at stake, Governments must be prepared to take the consequences, and not emerge as the soft state we have become,” he added.

A CASE FOR strategic action is China, according to experts, but the Government has done little to contain or counter the spread of Chinese influence in the region. China’s “string of pearls”, as US analysts describe it, of stitching up military, diplomatic and economic alliances with all of India’s neighbours like Pakistan, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh and even the Maldives is deftly placing a strategic garrotte around it.

China is developing Sri Lanka’s Hambantota port in the south of the island republic, which will give it access to the Indian Ocean Region [IOR], an area of strategic influence it is seeking to dominate by developing the PLA Navy [PLAN] into a formidable blue water force, with task forces spearheaded by nuclear powered ballistic submarines. Interestingly, Sri Lanka first offered this project to India, but the usual New Delhi vacillation made it turn to China.

China also supplied the Sri Lankan military a varied range of armaments, including anti-aircraft guns, in its fight against the Tamil Tiger rebels, earning in the process Colombo’s undying gratitude for its “steadfast support”. Sri Lankan defence secretary and President Mahinda Rajapakse’s brother, Gotabaya Rajapakse told the Indian authorities, including National Security Advisor M.K. Narayanan in Delhi that “security compulsions” were driving Colombo to seek military equipment from China, Pakistan and other suppliers.

China remains a long standing military and nuclear ally of Pakistan and has extended nuclear energy pacts with Bangladesh, which, in turn, has granted Beijing exploration rights for developing its coal and natural gas fields. China’s economic and diplomatic footprint is also expanding incrementally across Nepal, shifting its support from the deposed King to the Maoists, unlike India that remained on shaky ground throughout the transition of the Himalayan kingdom into a republic. Its palpable presence is in evidence in Myanmar, helping it to modernise its naval bases at Akyab, the Cocos Islands, Hainggyi, Khaukphyu, Kyun, Mergui and Zadetkyi, by building radar, refit and refuelling facilities capable of, eventually, supporting Chinese submarine operations in the Andaman Sea and the IOR.

China has also reportedly established a signals intelligence [SIGINT] facility on the Cocos Islands, 30 nautical miles from the Andamans, reportedly to monitor Indian missile test firings from the eastern Orissa coast: an activity that has proliferated since its 1998 nuclear tests. In August 2008 Indian security officials were alarmed by reports of China’s plans to “upgrade” communication and helipad facilities on the Cocos Islands as part of what it believes is Beijing’s strategy of “encircling” its neighbouring nuclear rival. Official military sources in Delhi said the apprehensions follow the unpublicised 25 June 2008 visit to the Cocos, contiguous to India’s Andaman island territory in the Bay of Bengal, by a Chinese naval delegation led by Col. Chi Ziong Feng.

IN A TANDEM effort to “ring” India, nuclear rival and Beijing-ally Pakistan has also supplied Myanmar with several shiploads of ordnance and military hardware over the past decade. Pakistan also trains Myanmar’s soldiers to operate Chinese tanks, fighter aircraft and artillery, while its officers attend Pakistani defence training institutions. Since 2001 a permanent Pakistan defence attaché has also been posted at Yangon.

Beijing, meanwhile, has made clear to India its heightened sensitivities about Tibet and Arunachal Pradesh, losing no opportunity to attack Delhi through the official and non-official channels on these prickly issues. It doggedly opposed an Asian Development Bank loan to India because a portion of it was for the development of Arunachal Pradesh, refused to give visas to a visiting delegation of Indian officials because it included an official from the “disputed territory”. The Chinese media too has been particularly critical of India recently, with several officially-sponsore d articles questioning its intent vis-à-vis Beijing, a criticism triggered by Delhi clinching a civilian nuclear deal with the US and becoming Washington’s close strategic and military ally.

Other possible future events that could have a serious and unpredictable impact on Indian national security calculations include internal developments in China, in particular those relating to the deification of the next Dalai Lama. Similar changes could result from any rapid moves towards military engagement between the US, Japan and India, which appear to be growing, albeit have slowed somewhat under the Obama administration.

Simmering Sino-Indian political, diplomatic and military tensions had also proliferated over the past two years, with the number of PLA incursions along the bilaterally disputed 4,057 km long Line of Actual Control increasing to 203 in 2008 from 170 the previous year, many of them adjoining “disputed” Arunachal Pradesh. Military officers said, in the endless cat-and-mouse game China was calculatedly “testing” India’s response to their transgressions, confident that they controlled the levers of escalation.

Militarily, India has only just started responding to the Chinese, even though, as Lt. Gen. Oberoi said, the Army has been urging New Delhi to develop its infrastructure for enhanced accessibility. After decades of neglect and diffidence, India has started constructing roads, upgrading and constructing new airstrips as well as numerous bridges to keep pace with the Chinese infrastructure. However, the military is clear that it will be at least 15 years before India can hope to catch up with China on this. Army units deployed in the region since the 1962 war remain dependent on animal transport and airdrops for supplies. Soldiers have to trek for 15 days to reach posts, as compared to China where soldiers are serviced by all weather roads.

Delhi has also cleared the raising of two Army divisions, or around 50,000 troops, for the Chinese frontier and begun stationing two Sukhoi 30 MK1 squadrons or around 36 fighter aircraft at Tezpur. The runway at Tezpur — a MiG 21 base till recently — has been renovated alongside an infrastructure upgrade to house the “air dominance” Su 30 MKIs capable of striking targets deep inside China.

TIMIDITY AND A sense of denial plague Indian decision-making, but apart from this, the military is facing systemic problems that prevent it from adopting a sustained approach to threats from across the borders. Service rivalries, ambiguous policies and vacillation in decision making are some of the roadblocks preventing India’s military modernisation and strategic nimbleness.

Defence Minister A.K. Antony recently lamented the “shameful and dangerous” situation in which the country was impelled to import 70% of its military requirements, despite repeated governmental declarations of becoming self-reliant. “We had set up the goal of self reliance 50 years ago. But it is unfortunate that we are importing 70% of our defence equipment. It is both shameful and dangerous,” he told Parliament. However, Antony is as much responsible for this as are his predecessors in office. Decisions are not taken, or delayed inordinately, defence officers pointed out. “There are many shortages, procurements are cancelled, our tanks are still without night vision equipment, negotiations for Admiral Gorshkov have still not been concluded, the aircraft carrier out of dry dock does not have any aircraft to fly,” Lt. Gen. Oberoi said, adding that the “defence sector has been badly neglected, with the Government unable to decide between the ‘butter’ and the ‘gun’.”

Admiral Mehta wondered at the tendency to ban defence companies at the drop of a hat, and mostly on complaints filed by rivals in the business. He said that conglomerates had been banned from supplying much needed weaponry to India for flimsy reasons, resulting in major losses to the country. He cited the instance of the HDW submarine saying that the purchase in the 1980s was part of a larger agreement to manufacture two submarines indigenously, and “set up a line”. He said that the decision to blacklist HDW set the industry back by over 15 years and “we are still struggling to start a line, being way behind other countries”.

“Allocation of money [for defence] has never been a problem,” Antony declared breezily. Rather, the issue has been the timely and judicious utilisation of the money allocated, he added in an ironic and unbelievably naïve censure of his own performance and inadequacy as the Defence Minister, now for a second term. In financial year 2008-09 the Ministry Of Defence [MoD] returned Rs 7,000 cr of the Rs 48,000 cr earmarked for capital or acquisition expenditure to the Central exchequer due to delayed decision making.

The Defence Minister’s five-year operational directive is invariably outdated — the last one was issued in 2002 after a 15-year hiatus and a fresh one is overdue. The appointment of a Chief of Defence Staff [CDS] has been stymied by inter-service turf wars as well as bureaucratic and political machinations. The CDS was to function as a crucial “interface” between the defence, civilian and political establishments to help reorder archaic procurement and operational procedures.

As a compromise the Government created the “watered down” Integrated Defence Staff [IDS] in October 2001, for greater “synergy” between the Services and the MoD. The strategic force command [SFC], formalised earlier this year, India’s only tri-service command on the Andaman and Nicobar island-territory off the east coast, and the Defence Intelligence Agency [DIA], were all to come under the CDS. The IDS now reports to the Chief of Staff Committee [CoSC] that has been reduced to just a “clearing house” for individual service requirements, with no authority over final procurements or asset commitments in war. Corruption and transparency in defence procurement remains an issue. As Col. Hariharan pointed out, “Defence procurement should be more transparent. There is no accountability for delays in procurement or losses due to poor staff work.”

AS FAR AS national security is concerned, we should not hand over the fate of decision making exclusively to the domain of babudom and politicians. Defence chiefs should have hands on accountability to national security decisions. After all, how many heads have rolled for Kargil except for middle level Army officers? Aggravating matters is the generalist, civilian-dominated MoD that has no stakes in developing India’s military capability in consonance with national security requirements. It remains a disinterested overseer and stern book-keeper with complete financial powers but little operational responsibility. Differences between the military and the bureaucracy continue to affect decision-making, with even the recommendations of the Sixth Pay Commission for the defence services being watered down by the Finance Ministry. The discrimination in status as well as pay with civil servants had the defence chiefs “fighting a long battle from behind”, and although some issues have been addressed, the anger and resentment remain. Col. Hariharan pointed out that several suggestions had been made by the military to overcome the present shortage of soldiers and officers, to boost morale and to attract new talent to the services. “But vested interests in babudom are benefiting from the existing system and are blocking changes in the status quo. I don’t expect any radical change in our attitude of using the soldiers as karipatta, use and throw,” he regretted. Simple proposals for a war museum and a cenotaph for the unknown soldier remain in cold storage, an indicator of bureaucratic stubbornness.

Lt. Gen. Oberoi pointed out that neither the political leaders concerned nor the bureaucracy give two hoots about national security. “Put a policeman on the top and he can only send evidence to Pakistan,” he said with a laugh. Ambassador Chandra said, “Our problem is that we have never imposed a price on any nation for action taken against us, we keep silent and accept whatever comes our way. When there is the question of India’s interests being at stake, Governments must be prepared to take the consequences”

What our Scriptures say.......

This is what our Scriptures say....

YATRA YOGESHWARA KRISHNA,
YATRA PARTHA DHANURDHARA,
TATRA SRI , VIJAYA , BHUTHI : ,
DRUVA , NITIR - MATIR MAMAH:

When translated it broadly means ;
"Good Governance to deliver Wealth & Progress,
Equality, Education, and Justice , needs Great Soldiery".

Is our present Governance complying with our scriptures ???

This blog had featured a post on the apathy of the media towards troops martyred in the fight against terrorism. It is not clear whether it is a mere coincidence or an impact of the post (the blogger would like to think the latter), but there has been a visible change in the coverage accorded to the martyrdom of Maj JS Suri and three jawans on 24 Sep.

These brave men made the supreme sacrifice while battling terrorists in two separate encounters in Kashmir. In a marked difference from the coverage of a similar incident involving Maj Manish Pitambare mentioned in the previous post, almost all the major newspapers, including Indian Express, Hindustan Times, Times of India, The Asian Age and The Pioneer have devoted substantial space on their front pages this time around.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Statement by Air Chief

Pilots and planes
IAF badly needs both

IAF chief Air Chief Marshal P V Naik did not say it in so many words but his frustration was obvious in his statement that the present strength of the country’s air force is inadequate. It is so short in terms of both planes and pilots that leave alone matching up with China – whose air force is about thrice as big as ours – it will have to inch past even Pakistan on the courage and skill of its magnificent airmen rather than the material strength. There has been a steady decline over the years. The IAF’s number of squadrons had fallen to an alarming 31.5 in 2006. The fleet strength increased to about 33.5 squadrons after the induction of British advanced jet trainers “Hawk” in 2008. Even that is inadequate considering that the sanctioned squadron strength is 39.5. Its intended purchase of 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA) is grossly delayed and the flight trials started in Bangalore only on August 17 this year. The Rs 42,000-crore induction will start in 2015 and is expected to increase the squadron strength to 42.5 by 2022.

Many of the planes it has today are aged and unsuitable for being in the service of the world’s fourth largest air force. For instance, MiG-21, which is the mainstay of the IAF, was first developed half a century ago, and barely exudes any confidence. Working on depleted strength not only compromises the country’s security but also tells on the morale of the force.

Even worse is the shortage of manpower. The IAF is short of as many as 1,400 officers. Things are no better in the Indian Army and the Navy, which are short of 11,387 and 1,512 officers, respectively. Obviously, the profession is no longer attractive for the youth. How can it be when there are no avenues of promotion even after 24 or 25 years of service? That is why over 100 pilots of the IAF have applied for voluntary retirement. There is need to take a hard look at their grievances. A country which aims to become a major power of the 21st century needs to have forces in reserve, rather than battling with shortages.

Top

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Arz Kiya Hai

Arz kiya hai

Jeevan me kamyab hone ke liye 3 factory lagao!!!!
1) Dimag me Ice factory.
2) Zuban par Sugar factory.
3) Dil me Love factory.
Phir life hogi satisfactory..

Ek din Sagar ne Nadi se pucha:
Kab tak milati rahogi mujh khare pani se ???
Nadi ne haskar kaha :
Jab tak tujh me mithas na aa jaye tab tak !!!

Thats "RELATIONSHIP".

1 tree makes 1 Lakh matchsticks.
But 1 matchstick can burn 1 Lakh trees.
Similarly 1 negative thought or doubt can burn thousands of
dreams.... Be Positive Always !!!

Chehre ki hasi se har gam chupao,
Bahut kuch bolo par kuch na batao...
Khud na rutho kabhi, par sabko manao,
Ye Raz hai Zindagi ka, Bas Jite chale jao

Dostana andaaz mein Mujhse kisi ne pucha,
Tum sabko email bhejhte ho ? Tumhe kya milta hai ?
Maine hass kar kaha, Dena Lena to Vyaapar hai,
Jo dekar kuch na mange, Wo hi to PYAR hai.

Wa prabhu kya leela teree :
Chuhe Billi se darte hai,
Billi Kutte se darte hai,
Kutta Aadmi se darte hai,
Aadmi Biwi se darta hai,
Biwi Chuhhe se darti hai.

The Pilot who is a fighter

M P Anil Kumar was a dashing MiG-21 pilot in the Indian Air Force when a road accident left him paralaysed below the neck. He was just 24.

For the past 19 years he has lived in the military's Paraplegic Rehabilitation Centre in Pune and has become an inspiration to many in the manner in which he has picked up the threads of his life.

Today Anil Kumar uses a keyboard with his mouth and is a gifted writer whose by-line rediff.com readers will instantly recognise. An article he wrote about his disability was so inspirational that it found its way in school textbooks in Maharashtra.

Nitin Sathe, who was in the same course as Anil Kumar at the National Defence Academy, Khadakvasla, pays tribute to this amazing fighter. Indeed M P ANIL KUMAR is an extraordinary person.

If you ever visit the Paraplegic Rehabilitation Centre at Khadki, Pune, in the very first room, you will meet retired Flying Officer M P Anil Kumar, fondly called MP by those who know him.

On his wheelchair, sitting at the computer and pecking away at the keyboard with a mouth-held stick, MP keeps churning out articles with a finesse and class that few writers can only dream of. You can read a lot of his writings on varied topics, on rediff.com as well as in some national dailies.

MP is a quadriplegic. He was paralysed neck below due to a motorcycle accident on his way back from the squadron after night flying on June 28, 1988. The accident confined him to a wheelchair for life.

Eight years before that fateful night, MP, all of 16, had reported to the National Defence Academy in Pune as a fresh cadet. Just out of the Sainik School Kazhakootam, he had wanted to join the Indian Air Force and fly the fast and furious fighter jets, a dream of every young man.

MP comes from a small village about 35 kilometres from Thiruvananthapuram. At the age of 9, he left home to join the Sainik School. After spending some time there he made up his mind to join the air force one day.

Like the 288 from our batch, he underwent training at the NDA for three years. Thrown in the cauldron of multi-faceted, multi-dimensional training, the cadets hardly got enough time to interact with each other, primarily because of the fact that there is no time from rigorous training. In the little spare time that we managed, most flocked together as 'school types' or 'place types' or 'lingo types.'

Monday, September 21, 2009

Shame on Indian Media

A MUST READ....... Dear Editors of HT, TOI, IndianExpress and TheHindu,NDTV, CNN-IBN, I got the mail below from a friend of mine and following the unwritten code of conduct, I am forwarding it to my friends but all efforts of people who have been forwarding this mail would go waste if this mail doesn't reach YOU...... Something to think about..!! Shame on Indian Media??? Really what a shame... By the time u guys read this news, the body of Major Manish Pitambare, who was shot dead at Anantnag, would have been cremated with full military honors. On Tuesday, this news swept across all the news channels 'Sanjay Dutt relieved by court'. 'Sirf Munna not a bhai' '13 saal ka vanvaas khatam' 'although found guilty for possession of armory, Sanjay can breath sigh of relief as all the TADA charges against him are withdrawn' Then many personalities like Salman Khan said 'He is a good person. We knew he will come out clean'. Mr Big B said "Dutt's family and our family have relations for years he's a good kid. He is like elder brother to Abhishek". His sister Priya Dutt said "we can sleep well tonight. It's a great relief" In other news, Parliament was mad at Indian team for performing bad; Greg Chappell said something; Shah Rukh Khan replaces Amitabh in KBC and other such stuff. But most of the emphasis was given on Sanjay Dutt's "phoenix like" comeback from the ashes of terrorist charges.
Surfing through the channels, one news on BBC startled me. It read "Hisbul Mujahidin's most wanted terrorist 'Sohel Faisal' killed in A nantnag , India .. Indian Major leading the operation lost his life in the process. Four others are injured. It was past midnight , I started visiting the stupid Indian channels, but Sanjay Dutt was still ruling. They were telling how Sanjay pleaded to the court saying 'I'm the sole bread earner for my family', 'I have a daughter who is studying in US' and so on. Then they showed how Sanjay was not wearing his lucky blue shirt while he was hearing the verdict and also how he went to every temple and prayed for the last few months. A suspect in Mumbai bomb blasts, convicted under armory act...was being transformed into a hero. Sure Sanjay Dutt has a daughter; Sure he did not do any terrorist activity. Possessing an AK47 is considered too elementary in terrorist community and also one who possesses an AK47 has a right to possess a pistol so that again is not such a big crime; Sure Sanjay Dutt went to all the temples; Sure he did a lot of Gandhigiri but then......... .. Major Manish H Pitambare got the information from his sources about the terrorists' whereabouts. Wasting no time he attacked the camp, killed Hisbul Mujahidin's supremo and in the process lost his life to the bullets fired from an AK47. He is survived by a wife and daughter (just like Sanjay Dutt) who's only 18 months old. Major Manish never said 'I have a daughter' before he took the decision to attack the terrorists in the darkest of nights. He never thought about having a family and he being the bread earner. No news channel covered this since they were too busy hyping a former drug addict, a suspect who's linked to bomb blasts which killed hundreds. Their aim was to show how he defied the TADA charges and they were so successful that his conviction in possession of armory had no meaning. They also concluded that his parents in heaven must be happy and proud of him. Parents of Major Manish are still living and they have to live rest of their lives without their beloved son. His daughter won't ever see her daddy again.
So guys, please forward this message around so that the media knows which news to give importance, as it is a shame for us since this Army Major's death news was given by a foreign TV channel!!! If you believe in it, don't feel shy in forwarding the blog to all like minded Indians to leave their comment.
Jai Hind
Col Siddhartha Bose
C- 2 Tagore Nagar
Raipur ( CG ) 492001
Tele : 0771 -4263030
Mob : +91 9993032720

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Brave Sons of India

SPARE 5-MINUTES from ur busy schedule .PLEASE !!!
Lt. Saurabh Kalia of 4 JAT Regiment of the Indian Army laid down his life at the young age of 22 for the nation while guarding the frontiers at Kargil. His parents, indeed the Indian Army and nation itself, lost a dedicated, honest and brave son.He was the first officer to detect and inform about Pakistani intrusion. Pakistan captured him and his patrol party of 5 brave men alive on May 15, 1999 from the Indian side of LOC. They were kept in captivity for three weeks and subjected to unprecedented brutal torture, evident from their bodies handed over by Pakistan Army on June 9, 1999 .The Pakistanis indulged in dastardly acts of inflicting burns on these Indian officers with cigarettes, piercing their ears with hot rods, removing their eyes before puncturing them and breaking most of the bones and teeth. They even chopped off various limbs and private organs of the Indiansoldiers besides inflicting unimaginable physical and mental torture.
After 22 days of torture, the brave soldiers were ultimately shot dead. A detailed post-mortem report is with the Indian Army. Pakistan dared to humiliate India this way flouting all international norms. They proved the extent to which they can degrade humanity. However, the Indian soldiers did not break while undergoing all this unimaginable barbarism, which speaks volumes of their patriotism, grit, determination, tenacity and valour - something all of India should be proud of. Sacrificing oneself for the nation is an honour every soldier would be proud of, but no parent, army or nation can accept what happened to these brave sons of India . I am afraid every parent may think twice to send their child in the armed forces if we all fall short of our duty in safeguarding the PRISONERS OF WAR AND LET THEM MEET THE FATE OF LT.SAURABH KALIA.It may also send a demoralising signal to the army personnel fighting for the Nation that our POWs in Pak cannot be taken care of. It is a matter of shame and disgust that most of Indian Human Rights Organisations by and large, showed apathy in this matter.
Through this humble submission, may I appeal to all the civilized people irrespective of colour, caste, region, religion and political lineage to stir their conscience and rise to take this as a NATIONAL ISSUE !!! International Human Rights Organizations must be approached to expose and pressure Pakistan to identify, book and punish all those who perpetrated this heinous crime to our men in uniform. If Pakistan is allowed to go unpunished in this case, we can only imagine the consequences. Below is the list of 5 other soldiers who preferred todie for the country rather than open their mouths in front of enemy -
1. Sep. Arjun Ram s/o Sh. Chokka Ram; Village & PO Gudi. Teh. & Dist.Nagaur, (Rajasthan)
2. Sep. Bhanwar Lal Bagaria h/o Smt. Santosh Devi; Village Sivelara;Teh.&Dist.Sikar (Rajasthan)3. Sep. Bhikaram h/o Smt. Bhawri Devi; Village Patasar; Teh. Pachpatva;Distt.Barmer (Rajasthan)
4. Sep. Moola Ram h/o Smt. Rameshwari Devi; Village Katori; Teh. Jayal;Dist.Nagaur(Rajasthan)
5. Sep. Naresh Singh h/o Smt. Kalpana Devi; Village Chhoti Tallam;Teh.Iglab; Dist.Aligarh (UP)
Yours truly, Dr. N.K. Kalia (Lt. Saurabh Kalia's father). Saurabh Nagar,Palampur-176061Himachal Pradesh Tel: +91 (01894) 32065
Let us give a supporting hand to Dr. Kalia in his efforts to get justice. Remember, Lt. Kalia and his colleagues died on the front so that we could sleep peacefully in our homes.
JAI HIND

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Are We Cowards

Repeated terrorists attacks with impunity and out reaction in just empty words prove that we INDIANS are Coward and Unpatriotic ( See how we have allowed enemy terrorists to enter, kill and get away with impunity. If it was Israel in our place, it would have resorted to hot pursuit and the centres of terrorist camps would have been blown to pieces by now), Virile ( See our population explosion), Greedy ( See how the elected representatives have amassed wealth and despite being tainted, occupy seats of power to further engage in systematic plunder of the country), Apathetic and Indifferent ( See how we react to deaths of innocents in trains, roads, boats, railway crossings, stampede at religious places, fires in buildings, floods and earthquakes), Rude (Just call any Government Office for any information and you will wish you had never called), and suffer from Hypocrisy ( See how we make hollow claims for the dignity of women and how we accept bride burnings, sexual assaults, unequal wages and other crimes against them, the latest being the attack on women in the pub in Mangalore), Sycophancy (See how the likes of some irrelevant characters become relevant to us just because of family lineage ). We are Intolerant, ( See how soon even the smallest of the innocent reference can hurt our religious feelings), Corrupt, (See naked and open corruption everywhere that the whole world acknowledges), and believe in Fatalism, ( See how we attribute every ill in the country to the wishes of the GOD). We are Gullible, ( See how our politicians have convinced us of a ‘foreign hand’ to hide their wilful negligence, inefficiency, dereliction of duty, involvement and vested interests), accept Chaotic infrastructure ( See how our cities are being managed in terms of hygiene, cleanliness choked drains and garbage every where), and lastly we are equally Poor perhaps in every thing including economy, industrial development, education, health management, communication, discipline, traffic management, surface and rail transportation, trade, administration of justice, security, health and hygiene, and in effective, honest and efficient Governance.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Kautilya's Address

It is time that we recollect the words of Kautilya spoken to Emperor Chandragupta Maurya about 2000 years ago, and reflect on those words.

‘Arthsas’tra’



The words of Kautilya addressed to Emperor Chandragupta Maurya. :
“The day the soldier has to demand his dues will be a sad day”.

‘A country makes a sacred contract with its soldiers. A country that refuses to respect this contract with its armed forces will eventually end up getting forces that will not respect the nations
( Government).’

Speech of President Obama

President Obama gave this speech at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Convention at the Phoenix Convention Center on August 17, 2009.
10:06 A.M. MST
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Please, be seated. Thank you so much. Commander Gardner, thank you for your introduction and for your lifetime of service. I was proud to welcome Glen and your executive director, Bob Wallace, to the Oval Office just before the 4th of July, and I look forwarding to working with your next commander, Tommy Tradewell.
I want to also acknowledge Jean Gardner and Sharon Tradewell, as well as Dixie Hild and Jan Title and all the spouses and family of the Ladies Auxiliary. America honors your service as well.
Also Governor Jan Brewer is here, of Arizona; and Mayor Phil Gordon, our host here in Phoenix. I want to acknowledge President -- Dr. Joe Shirley, Jr., President of the Navajo Nation. And this wasn't on my original card, but this is just an extraordinary story and you may have already heard from her, but I just want to publicly acknowledge and thank Ms. Helen Denton the secretary to Dwight Eisenhower -- (applause) -- who typed up the orders for the Normandy invasion and is here today, and what an extraordinary story that is. (Applause.)
Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, I am honored and humbled to stand before you as Commander-in- Chief of the finest military the world has ever known. (Applause.) And we're joined by some of those who make it the finest force in world -- from Luke Air Force Base, members of the 56th Fighter Wing. (Applause.)
Whether you wear the uniform today, or wore it decades ago, you remind us of a fundamental truth. It's not the powerful weapons that make our military the strongest in the world. It's not the sophisticated systems that make us the most advanced. The true strength of our military lies in the spirit and skill of our men and women in uniform. And you know this. (Applause.)
You know this because it's the story of your lives. When fascism seemed unstoppable and our harbor was bombed, you battled across rocky Pacific islands and stormed the beaches of Europe, marching across a continent -- my own grandfather and uncle among your ranks -- liberating millions and turning enemies into allies.
When communism cast its shadow across so much of the globe, you stood vigilant in a long Cold War -- from an airlift in Berlin to the mountains of Korea to the jungles of Vietnam. When that Cold War ended and old hatreds emerged anew, you turned back aggression from Kuwait to Kosovo.
And long after you took off the uniform, you've continued to serve: supporting our troops and their families when they go to war and welcoming them when they come home; working to give our veterans the care they deserve; and when America's heroes are laid to rest, giving every one of them that final fitting tribute of a grateful nation. We can never say it enough: For your service in war and in peace, thank you VFW. Thank you. (Applause.)
Today, the story of your service is carried on by a new generation -- dedicated, courageous men and women who I have the privilege to lead and meet every day.
They're the young sailors, the midshipmen at the Naval Academy, who raised their right hand at graduation and committed themselves to a life of service. They're the soldiers I met in Baghdad who have done their duty, year after year, on a second, third or fourth tour. They're the Marines of Camp Lejeune, preparing to deploy and now serving in Afghanistan to protect Americans here at home. They're the airmen, like those here today, who provide the close air support that saves the lives of our troops on the ground. They're the wounded warriors -- at Landstuhl and Walter Reed and Bethesda and across America -- for whom the battle is not to fight, but simply to speak, to stand, to walk once more. They're the families that my wife Michelle has met at bases across the country. The spouses back home doing the parenting of two, the children who wonder when mom and dad may be coming home; the parents who watch their sons and daughters go off to war; and the families who lay a loved one to rest -- and the pain that lasts a lifetime.
To all those who have served America -- our forces, your families, our veterans -- you have done your duty. You have fulfilled your responsibilities. And now a grateful nation must fulfill ours. And that is what I want to talk about today.
First, we have a solemn responsibility to always lead our men and women in uniform wisely. And that starts with a vision of American leadership that recognizes that military power alone cannot be the first or only answer to the threats facing our nation.
In recent years, our troops have succeeded in every mission America has given them, from toppling the Taliban to deposing a dictator in Iraq to battling brutal insurgencies. At the same time, forces trained for war have been called upon to perform a whole host of missions. Like mayors, they've run local governments and delivered water and electricity. Like aid workers, they've mentored farmers and built new schools. Like diplomats, they've negotiated agreements with tribal sheikhs and local leaders.
But let us never forget we are a country of more than 300 million Americans. Less than 1 percent wears the uniform. And that 1 percent -- our soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen -- have borne the overwhelming burden of our security. In fact, perhaps never in American history have so few protected so many.
So the responsibility for our security must not be theirs alone. That is why I have made it a priority to enlist all elements of our national power in defense of our national security -- our diplomacy and development, our economic might and our moral example, because one of the best ways to lead our troops wisely is to prevent the conflicts that cost American blood and treasure tomorrow.
As President, my greatest responsibility is the security and safety of the American people. As I've said before, that is the first thing I think about when I wake up in the morning, it's the last thing that I think about when I go to sleep at night. And I will not hesitate to use force to protect the American people or our vital interests. (Applause.)
But as we protect America, our men and women in uniform must always be treated as what they are: America's most precious resource. As Commander-in- Chief, I have a solemn responsibility for their safety. And there is nothing more sobering than signing a letter of condolence to the family of servicemen or women who have given their lives for our country.
And that's why I have made this pledge to our armed forces: I will only send you into harm's way when it is absolutely necessary. And when I do, it will be based on good intelligence and guided by a sound strategy. I will give you a clear mission, defined goals, and the equipment and support you need to get the job done. That's my commitment to you. (Applause.)
Which brings me to our second responsibility to our armed forces -- giving them the resources and equipment and strategies to meet their missions. We need to keep our military the best-trained, the best-led, the best-equipped fighting force in the world. And that's why, even with our current economic challenges, my budget increases defense spending.
We will ensure that we have the force structure to meet today's missions. And that's why we've increased the size of the Army and the Marine Corps two years ahead of schedule and have approved another temporary increase in the Army. And we've halted personnel reductions in the Navy and Air Force. And this will give our troops more time home between deployments, which means less stress on families and more training for the next mission. (Applause.) And it will help us put an end, once and for all, to stop-loss for those who've done their duty. (Applause.)
We will equip our forces with the assets and technologies they need to fight and win. So my budget funds more of the Army helicopters, crews, and pilots urgently needed in Afghanistan; the intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance that gives our troops the advantage; the special operations forces that can deploy on a moment's notice; and for all those serving in Afghanistan and Iraq, including our National Guard and Reserve, more of the protective gear and armored vehicles that save lives. (Applause.)
As we fight in two wars, we will plan responsibly, budget honestly, and speak candidly about the costs and consequences of our actions. And that's why I've made sure my budget includes the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In Iraq, after more than six years, we took an important step forward in June. We transferred control of all cities and towns to Iraq's security forces. The transition to full Iraqi responsibility for their own security is now underway. This progress is a testament to all those who have served in Iraq, both uniformed and civilian. And our nation owes these Americans -- and all who have given their lives -- a profound debt of gratitude. (Applause.)
Now, as Iraqis take control of their destiny, they will be tested and targeted. Those who seek to sow sectarian division will attempt more senseless bombings and more killing of innocents. This we know.
But as we move forward, the Iraqi people must know that the United States will keep its commitments. And the American people must know that we will move forward with our strategy. We will begin removing our combat brigades from Iraq later this year. We will remove all our combat brigades by the end of next August. And we will remove all our troops from Iraq by the end of 2011. And for America, the Iraq war will end.
By moving forward in Iraq, we're able to refocus on the war against al Qaeda and its extremist allies in Afghanistan and Pakistan. That's why I announced a new, comprehensive strategy in March -- a strategy that recognizes that al Qaeda and its allies had moved their base from the remote, tribal areas -- to the remote, tribal areas of Pakistan. This strategy acknowledges that military power alone will not win this war -- that we also need diplomacy and development and good governance. And our new strategy has a clear mission and defined goals: to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda and its extremist allies.
In the months since, we have begun to put this comprehensive strategy into action. And in recent weeks, we've seen our troops do their part. They've gone into new areas -- taking the fight to the Taliban in villages and towns where residents have been terrorized for years. They're adapting new tactics, knowing that it's not enough to kill extremists and terrorists; we also need to protect the Afghan people and improve their daily lives. And today, our troops are helping to secure polling places for this week's election so that Afghans can choose the future that they want.
Now, these new efforts have not been without a price. The fighting has been fierce. More Americans have given their lives. And as always, the thoughts and prayers of every American are with those who make the ultimate sacrifice in our defense.
As I said when I announced this strategy, there will be more difficult days ahead. The insurgency in Afghanistan didn't just happen overnight and we won't defeat it overnight. This will not be quick, nor easy. But we must never forget: This is not a war of choice. This is a war of necessity. Those who attacked America on 9/11 are plotting to do so again. If left unchecked, the Taliban insurgency will mean an even larger safe haven from which al Qaeda would plot to kill more Americans. So this is not only a war worth fighting. This is a -- this is fundamental to the defense of our people.
And going forward, we will constantly adapt to new tactics to stay ahead of the enemy and give our troops the tools and equipment they need to succeed. And at every step of the way, we will assess our efforts to defeat al Qaeda and its extremist allies, and to help the Afghan and Pakistani people build the future that they seek.
Now, even as we lead and equip our troops for the missions of today, we have a third responsibility to fulfill. We must prepare our forces for the missions of tomorrow.
Our soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and Coast Guardsmen adapt to new challenges every day. But as we know, much of our defense establishment has yet to fully adapt to the post-Cold War world, with doctrine and weapons better suited to fight the Soviets on the plains of Europe than insurgents in the rugged terrain of Afghanistan. Twenty years after the Cold War ended, this is simply not unacceptable. It's irresponsible. Our troops, and our taxpayers, deserve better. (Applause.)
And that's why -- that's why our defense review is taking a top-to-bottom look at our priorities and posture, questioning conventional wisdom, rethinking old dogmas and challenging the status quo. We're asking hard questions about the forces we need and the weapons we buy. And when we're finished, we'll have a new blueprint for the 21st-century military that we need. And in fact, we're already on our way.
We're adopting new concepts -- because the full spectrum of challenges demands a full range of military capabilities -- both the conventional and the unconventional, the ability to defeat both an armored division and the lone suicide bomber; the intercontinental ballistic missile and the improvised explosive device; 18th-century- style piracy and 21st-century cyber threats. No matter the mission, we must maintain America's military dominance.
So even as we modernize our conventional forces, we're investing in the capabilities that will reorient our force to the future -- an Army that is more mobile and expeditionary and missile defenses that protect our troops in the field; a Navy that not only projects power across the oceans but operates nimbly in shallow, coastal waters; an Air Force that dominates the airspace with next-generation aircraft, both manned and unmanned; a Marine Corps that can move ashore more rapidly in more places.
And across the force, we're investing in new skills and specialties, because in the 21st century, military strength will be measured not only by the weapons our troops carry, but by the languages they speak and the cultures that they understand.
But here's the simple truth: We cannot build the 21st-century military we need, and maintain the fiscal responsibility that America demands, unless we fundamentally reform the way our defense establishment does business. It's a simple fact. Every dollar wasted in our defense budget is a dollar we can't spend to care for our troops or protect America or prepare for the future.
You've heard the stories: the indefensible no-bid contracts that cost taxpayers billions and make contractors rich; the special interests and their exotic projects that are years behind schedule and billions over budget; the entrenched lobbyists pushing weapons that even our military says it doesn't want. The impulse in Washington to protect jobs back home building things we don't need has a cost that we can't afford.
This waste would be unacceptable at any time, but at a time when we're fighting two wars and facing a serious deficit, it's inexcusable. It's an affront to the American people and to our troops. And it's time for it to stop. And this is not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue. (Applause.)
This is not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue -- it's about giving our troops the support that they need. And that's something that all Americans should be able to agree to. So I'm glad I have as a partner in this effort a great veteran, a great Arizonan, and a great American who has shown the courage to stand and fight this waste -- Senator John McCain. (Applause.) And I'm also proud to have Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who has served under eight Presidents of both parties, leading this fight at the Pentagon.
So already I've put an end to unnecessary no-bid contracts. I've signed bipartisan legislation to reform defense procurement so weapons systems don't spin out of control. And even as we increase spending on the equipment and weapons our troops do need, we've proposed cutting tens of billions of dollars in waste we don't need.
Think about it. Hundreds of millions of dollars for an alternate second engine for the Joint Strike Fighter -- when one reliable engine will do just fine. Nearly $2 billion to buy more F-22 fighter jets -- when we can move ahead with a fleet of newer, more affordable aircraft. Tens of billions of dollars to put an anti-missile laser on a fleet of vulnerable 747s.
And billions of dollars for a new presidential helicopter. Now, maybe you've heard about this. Among its other capabilities, it would let me cook a meal while under nuclear attack. (Laughter.) Now, let me tell you something, if the United States of America is under nuclear attack, the last thing on my mind will be whipping up a snack. (Laughter and applause.)
So this is pretty straightforward: Cut the waste. Save taxpayer dollars. Support the troops. That's what we should be doing. (Applause.) The special interests, contractors, and entrenched lobbyists, they're invested in the status quo. And they're putting up a fight. But make no mistake, so are we. If a project doesn't support our troops, if it does not make America safer, we will not fund it. If a system doesn't perform, we will terminate it. (Applause.) And if Congress sends me a defense bill loaded with a bunch of pork, I will veto it. We will do right by our troops and taxpayers, and we will build the 21st century military that we need. (Applause.)
Finally, we will fulfill our responsibility to those who serve by keeping our promises to our people. We will fulfill our responsibility to our forces and our families. That's why we're increasing military pay. That's why we're building better family housing and funding more childcare and counseling to help families cope with the stresses of war. And we've changed the rules so military spouses can better compete for federal jobs and pursue their careers.
We will fulfill our responsibility to our wounded warriors. For those still in uniform, we're investing billions of dollars for more treatment centers, more case managers and better medical care so our troops can recover and return where they want to be -- with their units. (Applause.)
But as the VFW well knows, for so many veterans the war rages on -- the flashbacks that won't go away, the loved ones who now seem like strangers, the heavy darkness of depression that has led to too many of our troops taking their own lives. Post-Traumatic Stress and Traumatic Brain Injury are the defining injuries of today's wars. So caring for those affected by them is a defining purpose of my budget -- billions of dollars more for treatment and mental health screenings to reach our troops on the frontier -- on the frontlines and more mobile and rural clinics to reach veterans back home. We are not going to abandon these American heroes. We are going to do right by them. (Applause.)
We will fulfill our responsibility to our veterans as they return to civilian life. I was proud to co-sponsor the Post-9/11 GI Bill as a senator. And thanks to VFW members across the country -- and leaders like Arizona's Harry Mitchell in Congress -- it is now the law of the land. (Applause.) And as President, I'm committed to seeing that it is successfully implemented.
For so many of you, like my grandfather, the original GI Bill changed your life -- helping you to realize your dreams. But it also transformed America, helping to build the largest middle class in history. We're saying the same thing to today's post-9/11 veterans: You pick the school, we'll help pick up the bill. (Applause.)
And as these veterans show -- start showing up on campuses, I'm proud that we're making this opportunity available to all those who have sacrificed, including Reservists and National Guard members and spouses and children, including kids who've lost their mom or dad. (Applause.) In an era when so many people and institutions have acted irresponsibly, we choose to reward the responsibility and service of our forces and their families.
Whether you've left the service in 2009 or 1949, we will fulfill our responsibility to deliver the benefits and care that you earned. And that's why I've pledged to build nothing less than a 21st-century VA. And I picked a lifelong soldier and wounded warrior from Vietnam to lead this fight, General Ric Shinseki. (Applause.)
We're dramatically increasing funding for veterans health care. This includes hundreds of millions of dollars to serve veterans in rural areas, as well as the unique needs of our growing number of women veterans. We're restoring access to VA health care for a half-million veterans who lost their eligibility in recent years -- our Priority 8 veterans.
And since there's been so much misinformation out there about health insurance reform, let me say this: One thing that reform won't change is veterans' health care. No one is going to take away your benefits -- that is the plain and simple truth. (Applause.) We're expanding access to your health care, not reducing it. (Applause.)
We're also keeping our promise on concurrent receipt. My budget ensures that our severely disabled veterans will receive both their military retired pay and their VA disability benefits. (Applause.) And I look forward to signing legislation on advanced appropriations for the VA so the medical care you need is never held up by budget delays. (Applause.)
I've also directed Secretary Shinseki to focus on a top priority -- reducing homelessness among veterans. (Applause.) After serving their country, no veteran should be sleeping on the streets. (Applause.) No veteran. We should have zero tolerance for that.
And we're keeping our promise to fulfill another top priority at the VA -- cutting the red tape and inefficiencies that cause backlogs and delays in the claims process. (Applause.) This spring, I directed the Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs to create one unified lifetime electronic health record for the members of the armed forces -- a single electronic record, with privacy guaranteed, that will stay with them forever. Because after fighting for America, you should not have to fight over paperwork to receive the benefits that you've earned. (Applause.)
Today, I can announce that we're taking another step. I've directed my Chief Performance Officer, my Chief Technology Officer and my Chief Information Officer to join with Secretary Shinseki in a new reform effort. We're launching a new competition to capture the very best ideas of our VA employees who work with you every day.
We're going to challenge each of our 57 regional VA offices to come up with the best ways of doing business, of harnessing the best information technologies, of cutting red tape and breaking through the bureaucracy. And then we're going to fund the best ideas and put them into action, all with a simple mission: cut those backlogs, slash those wait times, deliver your benefits sooner. (Applause.) I know you've heard this for years, but the leadership and resources we're providing this time means that we're going to be able to do it. That is our mission, and we are going to make it happen. (Applause.)
Now, taken together, these investments represent a historic increase in our commitment to America's veterans -- a 15 percent increase over last year's funding levels and the largest increase in the VA budget in more than 30 years. And over the next five years we'll invest another $25 billion to make sure that our veterans are getting what they need.
These are major investments, and these are difficult times. Fiscal discipline demands that we make hard decisions -- sacrificing certain things we can't afford. But let me be clear. America's commitment to its veterans are not just lines on a budget. They are bonds that are sacred -- a sacred trust we're honor bound to uphold.
These are commitments that we make to the patriots who serve -- from the day they enlist to the day that they are laid to rest. Patriots like you. Patriots like a man named Jim Norene.
His story is his own, but in it we see the larger story of all who serve. He's a child of the Depression who grew up to join that greatest generation; a paratrooper in the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne; jumping in a daring daylight raid into Holland to liberate captive people; rushing to Bastogne at the Battle of the Bulge where his commanding general -- surrounded by the Germans and asked to surrender -- declared, famously, "Nuts."
For his bravery, Jim was awarded the Bronze Star. But like so many others, he rarely spoke of what he did or what he saw -- reminding us that true love of country is not boisterous or loud but, rather, the "tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime."
Jim returned home and built a life. He went to school on the GI Bill. He got married. He raised a family in his small Oregon farming town. And every Veterans Day, year after year, he visited schoolchildren to speak about the meaning of service. And he did it all as a proud member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. (Applause.)
Then, this spring, Jim made a decision. He would return to Europe once more. Eighty-five years old, frail and gravely ill, he knew he might not make it back home. But like the paratrooper he always was, he was determined.
So near Bastogne, he returned to the places he knew so well. At a Dutch town liberated by our GIs, schoolchildren lined the sidewalks and sang The Star-Spangled Banner. And in the quiet clearing of an American cemetery, he walked among those perfect lines of white crosses of fellow soldiers who had fallen long ago, their names forever etched in stone.
And then, back where he had served 65 years before, Jim Norene passed away, at night, in his sleep, quietly, peacefully -- the "tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime."
The next day, I was privileged to join the commemoration at Normandy to mark the day when the beaches were stormed and a continent was freed. There were Presidents and prime ministers and veterans from the far corners of the earth. But long after the bands stopped playing and the crowds stopped cheering, it was the story of a departed VFW member that echoed in our hearts.
Veterans of Foreign Wars, you have done your duty -- to your fallen comrades, to your communities, to your country. You have always fulfilled your responsibilities to America. And so long as I am President of the United States, America will always fulfill its responsibilities to you.
God bless you. God bless all our veterans. And God bless the United States of America. Thank you very much. (Applause.)

Point to Note in the Speech
Whether you wear the uniform today, or wore it decades ago, you remind us of a fundamental truth. It's not the powerful weapons that make our military the strongest in the world. It's not the sophisticated systems that make us the most advanced. The true strength of our military lies in the spirit and skill of our men and women in uniform. And you know this.