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“What do you need boy?”

“Orders, sir?” the young man said as he wiped the dirt from his face and the underside of his helmet. Nath grunted amusedly.

“Did something make you think that our plans have changed? The orders stand. We will hold our ground! Help is on the way!”

EASTERN BANK OF THE LOHIT RIVER
SOUTHEAST OF WALONG
ARUNACHAL PRADESH
DAY 1 + 0825 HRS

North of Walong, the valley down from the border was more or less a straight line. The morning rays of sunlight had yet to penetrate the valley, but the tips of the snowcapped Himalayas were now glowing under the morning sun. Inside the valleys, the fog was still persistent. And where there should have been serenity, there was now manmade thunder. The first morning of the war had started in earnest after a night of chaos and confusion…

Lieutenant-Colonel Mohan jumped out of his AXE utility vehicle he had drove in on along the single lane road from Walong. He walked down to the edge of the rocky banks of the Lohit River and stared north. Behind him three Tatra Kolos launcher vehicles were rumbling over lose gravel and towards a flat patch of ground to the east. Further north, a single Weapon Locating Radar or WLR system was silently and actively monitoring the Chinese artillery and rocket fire. With each falling shell and each rocket being launched in that sector, Mohan’s WLR crew managed a better fix on the origin of those trajectories. And at the base of those trajectories had to be the Chinese field guns and MBRL vehicles.

While the WLR crew estimated and fixed the Chinese artillery units, Mohan’s battery command and control teams were at work inside several camouflaged trailers that had been placed among the thick foliage of the region south of Walong.

As the ground under his feet shook and vibrated, Mohan appreciated the sheer firepower the Chinese 13TH Group Army was throwing at the Indian defenses at the moment.

They tried to take me out too…

It had been obvious to him and the 2ND Mountain Division commander that the enemy would try to put his unit of commission as soon as any ground conflagration started. And the Chinese had indeed tried their best to try and catch the MBRL Group off guard alongside the rest of their cruise-missile targets.

But Mohan was no fool. He knew the Chinese had been monitoring the location and movement of his unit’s vehicles for weeks before the actual attack a few hours ago. They had probably been using everything down from local informers in the region to high tech satellites to get an accurate description of the disposition of his unit.

And so the simple solution had been to move the vehicles of his battery every hour to a new location. And it had delivered according to his expectations. When the cruise-missile aimed for his unit slammed into an empty patch of land, two kilometers north, Mohan and his staff had shared a brief moment of glee in an otherwise miserable night.

And now it’s our turn…

Mohan heard his radioman shout out to him from the back of his parked vehicle. He turned back to see the three Pinaka launch vehicles now dispersed and deployed out on the large field, silent and deadly. He walked over to the radioman to receive the call from his staff that had been coordinating with Lieutenant-Colonel Nath. Mohan had enough confidence in the professional ability of his men to know when he was not needed around.

But now he was needed to take the next steps…

He nodded at his signals NCO sitting inside the vehicle. The NCO switched radio frequencies until all vehicle crews in his command could listen in. When he got the all-clear from his NCO, Mohan picked up the radio speaker and brought it near his mouth.

“All Baker elements, this is Baker-Actual. A few hours ago the Chinese launched an attack on this country and this unit using massive salvoes of cruise-missiles. Now they have started the ground war along our borders! This aggression will not be allowed to stand. They failed in their attempts to eliminate this battery before the ground war started. The battle has begun, and we are still alive. Now it’s our turn to return the favor, and unlike the red bastards attacking our country, we shall not fail. No mercy is to be shown or given!

“Commence Fire!”

The three Pinaka launchers now adjusted pod elevation and azimuth based on the data coming in from the northern WLR crew. The vehicle’s own sensors had already established outside atmospheric conditions that would affect the flight of the rockets and had compensated for it. The crewmen inside the sealed front cabin of the launchers had now fixed the data within seconds of the orders coming in. They now switched the launch mode to “Ripple” for the twelve rounds on each launcher. Finally, on command from the battery C3I control, they depressed the launch button and the vehicle cabin shuddered.

Outside, the vehicle was already enveloped in a cloud of smoke. Above the smoke cloud were streaks of light that were racing across the cloudy early morning sky…

NORTH OF THE MCMAHON LINE
DAY 1 + 0850 HRS

The Indian attack was unexpected and the damage was catastrophic. The three Pinaka vehicles had each targeted one Chinese field battery and one of them had split its rockets between a field gun battery and a Chinese MBRL battery that had hit the Indian guns under Lieutenant-Colonel Nath’s command. These Chinese batteries had been well dispersed so that a general attack could not suppress all of them at once, but since an entire Pinaka launcher was now directed against them, there was sufficient concentrated firepower and sophisticated precision within the twelve rockets of each launcher to wipe out these batteries as a whole.

And they delivered as advertised.

A few hundred feet above ground the twelve rockets from each launcher dispersed the smaller sub-munitions that carpeted a large tract of ground underneath them. With ripple fire inbounds, once the first rocket appeared over the Chinese guns, it was all over in just as many seconds as it had taken between the first and last rocket release for each launcher. A massive crumbling noise echoed the valley as hundreds of sub-munitions scattered red-hot shrapnel all over the Chinese field guns and their crews. Sympathetic explosions added to the devastation. By the time the last rocket from each launcher appeared over the target, the ground below was one big cloud of smoke…

HILLS NORTH OF WALONG
ARUNACHAL PRADESH
DAY 1 + 0851 HRS

It stopped just as abruptly as it had started.

The last shells slammed into the hillside before the frightening howl of the incoming shells stopped. It took several minutes before the echoing noises receded and some more minutes before the ringing in the ears of the Indian soldiers receded.

Major Krishnan stood up from his trench and dusted off his uniform and weapon as he looked around to check the status of the other soldiers. He wasn’t taking any chances. It was possible that the halt in the attack was a feint designed to draw the victims out in the open to tend to the wounded only to be caught in a renewed round of shelling. But after several minutes of silence it was clear to Krishnan that something else had changed his fortunes for the better…

EASTERN BANK OF THE LOHIT RIVER
NORTHEAST OF WALONG
ARUNACHAL PRADESH
DAY 1 + 0855 HRS

Lt-Colonel Mohan noticed with satisfaction that the ground under his feet had stopped vibrating and the thunder from the north had died away abruptly. His WLR crews had confirmed that all assigned targets had been terminated.

But the battle had only begun.