The
"nature of the UK’s assistance was purely advisory, limited and provided
to the Indian government at an early stage in their planning", Secretary
of State William Hague said
The
United Kingdom’s role in Operation Blue Star in June 1984 was limited to
military advice, sought by the Indian government in February of that year, on
Indian contingency plans for an operation against militants who were in
occupation of the Sri Harmandir Sahib, Secretary of State William Hague said in
a statement before the House of Commons on Tuesday.
But
for this advice there was no other UK military assistance, such as training or
equipment supply to India for Operation Bluestar, nor did the UK government
link the provision of this advice to arms sales, he said.
Further,
the military advice had “limited impact” on the ground as the Indian Army took
the lead in the actual operation, which “differed significantly” from the
approach that had been outlined by the UK military officer, the House heard.
The
“nature of the UK’s assistance was purely advisory, limited and provided to the
Indian government at an early stage in their planning” Mr. Hague said.
These
are the conclusions from a home-office inquiry conducted by the Cabinet
Secretary on the order of Prime Minister David Cameron following disclosures in
the British media of documents that suggested ongoing British involvement in
Operation Blue Star, in which it was also claimed that the British Parliament
had been misled on the issue. The documents were obtained when official British
documents were made public under the 30-year rule.
The
inquiry looked into why the UK government agreed to a request from India to
provide military advice on their plans for an operation at Harmandir Sahib; the
nature of the assistance provided; the impact of that assistance on the
operation; and whether Parliament was misled at the time on the issue.
The
Inquiry into the “tragic events at Amritsar”, Mr Hague said, was based on a
scrutiny of 23,000 documents, out of which only a “limited number” related to
Operation Blue Star. One file on the provision of military advice to India was
destroyed along with other military files in 2009. However, some of these
documents were preserved in other departments and together “provide a
consistent picture of what happened.”
A
UK military adviser did indeed visit India between 8-17 February,and made a
recce of the temple complex with the Indian Special Group. On February 13, he
reported to the Indian authorities, telling them that armed invention should be
the “last resort.” He recommended a “surprise” attack with helicopters to drop
troops in as a critical part of the plan.
In
the event, the Inquiry notes, “there were significant differences between the
actual June operation, and the advice from the UK military officer in
February.”The actual strategy, as made public by India on 13 June 1984, “was a
ground assault, preceded by a warning, without a helicopter-borne element,
which became a step-by-step clearance supported by armour and light artillery.”
The
influential though politically divided Sikh community has responded in diverse
voices to Mr. Hague’s statement.
Ajit
Sat-Bhambra, writer and publisher of Asian Affairs, Panjabilok and Urdu
Tahzeeb.net said, “This is a storm in a tea cup. If Sinn Fein armed terrorists
had stormed St Peter’s Cathedral in Falls Street, Befast, holding people
hostage, Mrs Thatcher would have responded in the same way, and quicker.”
No comments:
Post a Comment