Artillery
played a pivotal role in kargil war. Even it was outnumbered by the Indian artillery,
the brave gunners of Pakistan Army did more than their best to provide fire
power to those who were fighting beyond LOC.
The toughest
task was to shift the artillery in the battle field area. This was carried out
by MI-17 helicopters. All the guns were opened into parts and then were carried
by sling load in the main battle field areas of Dawod Tactical Headquarter,
Giltri, Foreign Short and Kinaar naala.
130 MM Guns
were the heaviest. One barrel of this gun weighed 2000kg, one tire weighed
450kg. It took 8 rounds of one MI-17 to shift one single 130 MM artillery gun. The
flight routine of these helicopter squadrons which were enough for 2 years,
were consumed in three months.
61 gun
positions were established, and 44 observatory posts were made to control their
fire power. This was not enough. Moreover, no arrangements were made for the
maintenance and repair of damage of these guns. Although mechanics were there
from workshop 502, but they were useless since they didn’t have necessary
tools. Once a gun went silent, it remained silent!
Pakistan didn’t
have numerical advantage on India in northern areas when it came to artillery. Despite
of that, FCNA started operation beyond LOC without asking for more artillery
support. Guns which We had, majority of which were field guns, didn’t have
enough fire power to help and support the soldiers fighting beyond LOC. After the
war started, India’s artillery absolutely bamboozled the captured posts by
Pakistan, and when the posts asked for fire from their arsenal, there was no
reply!
And here is a turn point... The Bofors
The Bofors gun gave India edge over Pakistani medium guns. With a
range of over 35 kilo meters in the high-altitude terrain, the FH77 Bofors
guns, which fired three rounds in 12 seconds proved to be better than the
medium artillery guns available with the Pakistani Army.
The guns have a Mercedes Benz engine in them and they are able to
move short distances on their own. This capability helped India during the war
also as guns would move from their location after firing a salvo to other
positions in order to avoid enemy counter fire.
Following is a comparison
of the artillery power between India and Pakistan, before and after the war
started.
Gentleman Istighfirullah by Colonel® Ishfaq Hussain
https://www.google.com/fusiontables/data?docid=1XagL2QRQNZTazufXi7QpL2pzDzhKY7VNdQwFQyFe#card:id=2