Research Catalog

War in high Himalaya : the Indian army in crisis, 1962

Title
War in high Himalaya : the Indian army in crisis, 1962 / D.K. Palit.
Author
Palit, D. K.
Publication
London : Hurst ; New York : St. Martin's Press, ©1991.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library DS480.85 .P27 1991Off-site

Details

Description
xv, 450 pages : maps; 23 cm
Summary
The circumstances attending the disastrous campaign that followed the Chinese invasion of India's Himalayan borders have never been clearly understood. Even today, some three decades after the ceasefire of November 1962, very little official information has been made available to the public or the press about that brief but traumatic episode. The present memoir is therefore all the more welcome, not only because it comes from the pen of one who is an established writer and commentator on military affairs but also because, as Director of Military Operations at Army Headquarters during that fateful period, he both witnessed and took part in the processes through which government policies were formulated and the decision taken to go to war against the Chinese, in circumstances that must have indicated inevitable catastrophe. General Palit describes with refreshing candour the ad hoc nature of the decision-making apparatus at prime ministerial and cabinet levels, the lack of any semblance of coordinated staff analyses, the over-reach of government into the responsibilities of the military, and the quiescence of the latter in permitting it. He is uninhibited in recording facts as he saw them and the opinions he held at the time, though always careful to distinguish between that and hind-sight rationalization. While commenting on the actions of others the author is also frankly and disarmingly self-critical. In an attempt to explain the historical causes for the almost total lack of inter-face between the government and the military, a leitmotiv that runs through the narrative, the author has made an interesting analysis of the ethos of the Indian Army as it has developed during the British-Indian period, an inheritance from the colonial past that remained unchanged despite forty-five years of independence. In a fascinating postscript the author demonstrates that this malfunctioning of the government's national security system continues to the present day.
Subjects
Genre/Form
History.
Note
  • Includes index.
ISBN
  • 1850651035
  • 9781850651031
  • 0312061471
  • 9780312061470
LCCN
91007716
OCLC
  • ocm23143847
  • 23143847
  • SCSB-14488678
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library