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In Pictures: Army Tanks, Helicopters Conduct Live Fire Exercise In Ladakh At An Altitude Of Over 15,000 Feet

  • Tanks, armoured personnel carriers and helicopters of the Indian Army carried out an integrated manoeuvre and live-fire exercise in Ladakh.

Swarajya StaffSep 03, 2021, 03:14 PM | Updated 04:00 PM IST
Indian Army tanks fire during an exercise in Ladakh.

Indian Army tanks fire during an exercise in Ladakh.


Indian Army tanks, armoured personnel carriers and helicopters participated in a live fire exercise on Thursday (3 September) in Ladakh.


Live fire exercise in Ladakh.

Although the Army did not reveal exactly where the exercise was held, it is likely to have taken place in eastern Ladakh. A report in the Indian Express says the exercise took place at an altitude of more than 15,000 feet.


Lieutenant General Y K Joshi interacting with troops.

After the standoff with China in eastern Ladakh began last year, tanks and armoured personnel carriers were airlifted to the region using the US-built C-17 and Soviet-origin Il-76 heavy-lift transport aircraft.


Indian Army tank fires during an exercise in Ladakh.

In the event of a war, tanks will be used to defend the flat top approaches, from Tibet towards Leh, such as those near Chushul and Demchok. The flat terrain in this region, strategists say, allows the use of mechanised forces.


Indian Army tanks participating in a live fire exercise in Ladakh.

‘With tanks, we can cross the Demchok funnel (where Indus enters India) and intercept the highway in case of hostilities,’ Major General (retd) Sheru Thapliyal, former commander of the Ladakh-based 3rd Infantry Division, said in 2016.


Indian Army tanks and helicopters participating in a live fire exercise in Ladakh.

During the 1962 war with China, the IAF had airlifted tanks to Chushul in south-eastern Ladakh right under the nose of the enemy. Antonov An-12 transport aircraft of IAF’s 44 Squadron, inducted just months ago in 1961, had moved six AMX-13 tanks of the 20 Lancers to Chushul.


“The artillery, armour, services, and the Air Force can all be proud of the Battle of Chushul, and it can be counted as one of the most fiercely fought battle of the war, and one where Indians, working in synergy blunted the Chinese attack successfully,” Cheema writes, adding that the “armour acted as a tonic in more ways than plugging the Spanggur Gap. Tanks gave the men hope”.

Indian Army tanks participating in a live fire exercise in Ladakh.

In 2020, India had deployed tanks at the Kailash Range during the standoff with China in the area. Latest satellite images show Indian and Chinese tanks were positioned less than 500 feet apart at Rezang La, one of the peaks occupied by the Indian forces to preempt China.

In the 1990s, the IAF had airlifted 30 T-72 tanks from Agra to Leh for deployment in eastern Ladakh. In the 1990s, however, local army commanders thought the tanks were of little use. They were dismantled and moved out using Il-76 aircraft of the IAF’s 25 Squadron. This was reversed in 2014, when dozens of tanks were airlifted to Ladakh from Chandigarh onboard C-17s of the IAF.


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