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Showing posts with label Junior Leaders Wing (JLW). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Junior Leaders Wing (JLW). Show all posts

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

MAKING OF A COMMANDO-5 | Survival skills to fight, to win, to live another day

                                                          By Anantha Krishnan M
                                                           Express News Service 
Bangalore: One of the tenets of a commando is 'live to fight another day.' Every soldier who arrives at the Commando Wing (CW) in Belgaum is prepared to face a worst case scenario; that is the best preparation. A commando has to ‘fight to survive’ and ‘survive to win.’ He can never afford to lose. Having learnt various commando techniques to operate behind enemy lines, skills to survive form the final piece of the commando training at CW. These skills may not overtly aid in carrying out a task but are the most essential and helpful in adverse situations. A commando has to master jungle skills to survive in inhospitable terrain and weather. He has to be in touch with his animal instincts.
During their survival skills training, commandos are taught how to build shelters, procure water, make fires, navigate, make traps and snares, track and finally obtain food from flora and fauna. “Shelters protect from weather, insects, animals and enemy observation. It helps conserve energy. We teach our students to build debris huts, swamp beds and improvisations of a poncho,” Capt V K Pandey, Instructor, CW, tells Express.
Procurement of potable water is a pivotal aspect of survival. Water obtained from a solar still or plant sources like banana or cacti can be directly consumed. Various means of purifying water like boiling, use of bleaching powder, chlorine tablets and distillation are taught to student during the course.
The ability to start a fire in adversity could make the difference between life and death. “Fire can be started using flint and steel, lighter, chemicals and a magnifying glass. For a soldier, fire can be a bane as smoke and light can alert enemies. Techniques to conceal fire and smoke are crucial lessons and are taught in detail,” says Capt Pandey.
A commando does not ask -- What’s on the menu? -- as they have no option but to survive on the flora and fauna available. “Edibility test for plants comes very handy when one is not sure about them. Skills to prepare an animal can come handy and have saved lives of non vegetarians. Taste and choice of food have no place in our lives, while on a mission,” he said.
A commando has to be an expert in building traps and snares to catch small animals and birds without losing surprise. “It takes lot more than knowledge and survival skills to live successfully through an arduous situation. While learning survival skill is important, having the will to survive is essential, without which these skills have no meaning,” adds Capt Pandey.
(Concluding part, tomorrow)
Copyright@The New Indian Express
PART-V

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Making of a Commando-4 | Shaping body & mind with endurance and confidence-building exercises | Daring 'Lido Jump' from 55-feet height a stunner!

By Anantha Krishnan M
Express News Service
Bangalore: Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgement that something else is more important than fear – so reads a prominent poster in one of the Group Offices of Indian Army’s Commando Wing (CW) in Belgaum. During the 32-day commando course, a solider has to clear the physical training (PT), battle obstacle course (BOC), endurance speed marches and confidence jump – all with excellent grading.
Major Varun Maandi, Instructor, CW, tells Express that to successfully complete the commando course it is imperative that every soldier possesses a high level of physical fitness. “As most of our students come from active employment along our borders, we have designed a progressive course that revitalises their physical prowess. After initially toning up the body, we gradually increase stress levels and training hours with three hour runs and strenuous exercises. These are then followed by other individual and group exercises. The PT sessions begin as early as 2 am in the morning as we attempt to break the body’s bio-rhythm and sleep cycle,” Major Varun said.
Next comes, the BOC which forms an important part of training. Here, a solider has to negotiate 22 obstacles in stipulated time, carrying a load of 3.5 kg and his personnel weapon. If a soldier can't complete the obstacles in 18 minutes and 30 seconds, he fails the BOC. To be fit to serve as an instructor at the wing, a student has to complete the obstacle course in 14 minutes and 30 seconds.
According to Major Varun, the endurance speed marches (forced marches) are 10 km, 20km, 30 km and 40 km which a student has to complete in a given time limit. “He has to carry a load of 17.5 kg and his personal weapon (3.5 kg) during the marches. These endurance exercises are spaced out over the complete training cycle and the course ends with the 40-km march, which has to be completed in 6 hours and 10 minutes, to avoid failing in the complete commando course,” he said.
At the CW, the most daring part of the course is the confidence exercise, called the ‘Lido Jump.’ Here, a student has to walk on a wooden plank 24 inches wide and 40 feet long, 50 feet above a water tank and negotiate two flights of stairs. “He then gets on the horizontal rope at a height of 55 feet and monkey crawls a distance of 10 feet. After that he hangs with both his hands, stabilizes his body and jumps into the water below at the crack of a rifle. This exercise is designed to help overcome vertigo and develop self confidence in a student,” says Major Varun.
In another confidence exercise, a student has to slide down from a platform at 50 feet keeping his body in a taut ‘L’ shape. To be adjudged fit to be an instructor, a student has to let go of the slide and dive into the water tank.
(To be continued)
Copyright@The New Indian Express
PART-IV

Monday, April 8, 2013

Making of a Commando-3 | CLASS ACT: Acquiring Combat Skills for Special Mission Ops



By Anantha Krishnan M
Express News Service
Bangalore: Special mission operations are the most hazardous job for the commandos. The combat skills they acquire make the difference between life and death while operating on commando missions, behind enemy lines. The outfit will have specialists in skills like tracking, survival, demolitions, communications, medicine, surveillance, rock climbing, sky diving and deep sea diving.
The Indian Army has put some of its best men in the business to train soldiers who check into the Commando Wing (CW) in Belgaum. During their stint at CW’s facilities, the soldiers are imparted with basic skills in combat shooting, unarmed combat, rock craft, demolitions, special missions and combat first aid. These skills are the bread and butter of a commando.
Combat shooting is a very challenging, yet charming part of the training at CW. While firing skills mark the foundation for any solider, it is his expertise that graduates him into being a commando. “A student at the CW is trained in ambidextrous firing (using both hands and shoulders), firing on the move, peripheral vision firing and cover fire techniques. These disciplines of firing are essential to the survival of a commando and will help him in various combat situations,” Major R K Sharma, Instructor, CW, told Express, during a recent visit to the facilities.
In unarmed combat, a commando is trained to tackle the enemy, empty handed. “We teach martial art techniques to defend against armed and unarmed enemy. A commando is made aware of sensitive and pressure points in a human body essential to injure or kill the enemy. With the Indian borders in the North and the North-East being mountainous, we also impart training in various basic and specialised rock climbing techniques like slithering, scorpion rappelling and walk down from the falls,” said Major Sharma.
With today’s war being driven by technology, the CW has upgraded its curriculum to reckon with the best in the world, even throwing some surprises to the visiting foreign armies. The use of paint ball guns, gen-next rock climbing gadgets, remote controlled targets and cameras for room intervention are some of the training gadgets being used. Remote controlled IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices) developed by CW for training is based on the experience gained by its instructors while on the job.
While undertaking training in special mission operations, a commando’s performance is validated against six different parameters. “He has to navigate undetected for long distances, reach the designated target, carryout surveillance before destroying it. Case studies and experiences of actual operations are shared with future commandos,” says Major Sharma. In addition, potential problem solving skills to meet unforeseen situations are also practised.
A soldier who passes out of CW would have mastered techniques not only in destroying targets and killing the enemy but also in combat first aid and survival that will help in saving lives behind the enemy lines.
(To be continued)
Copyright@The New Indian Express
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PART-3

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Making of a Commando-2 | Ability to hang on for a moment longer matters the most | Giving up is considered unfit to be welcomed in the brotherhood

 By Anantha Krishnan M
Express News Service
Bangalore: If you are nursing the dream of becoming a commando one day, then you need to get your body in shape right away. Inside Indian Army's Commando Wing (CW) at Belgaum, every solider who enrolls for the rigorous course, is constantly reminded of the need to be physically and psychologically fit. As the training gains momentum, a new reality dawns and the fight to survive for one more day takes hold. As days go by, the rules of the game change rapidly, with nothing known about the next moment. The psychological strain is immense, by design. Lack of sleep and fatigue begin to play havoc with your senses.
Major Raviraj Nalawade, Head of Training Team at CW, was the man marked to give Express an insight into the unknown terrains of a commando's mind. After a two day sojourn of the training facilities at the CW, the welcome handshake with the Major was a reminder to what separates boys from the men of steel. “An individual who wants to stretch his limits; who is willing to undergo physical and mental hardship; ready to block out pain and allow the body to be controlled by the mind, can take a shot at becoming a commando. The foremost quality of a commando is steadfast will power. The other defining traits in their order of importance being, moral and physical courage, psychological, emotional and physical fitness,” said Major Raviraj.
He added that a commando is a person with intense self-discipline. “Somebody who has to be supervised cannot become a commando. He has to think and then act like one. His firing skills should be second to none and the capability of handling of all kinds of weapons and explosives has to be top class. A commando also has to navigate without any technological gizmo,” the Major said.
A commando is not all brawn and no brain, as the popular opinion goes. He has to be tech-savvy and should be able use every latest gadget at his disposal to his benefit. He may have to direct laser guided bombs on to targets, that can otherwise not be destroyed by other explosives. He must be able to communicate with his headquarters and may have to send back live audio/video surveillance feeds of high-value targets.
“Another important aspect of a being a commando is the knowledge of medicine. He is trained in life saving procedures that he may have to perform on his colleagues or at times on himself during conflicts. He will have to be well read, understand foreign relations and government policies as well. A commando has to be aware of everything all the time and cannot be ignorant. He has to have the ability to win hearts and minds. A good commando also has to be compassionate too,” says Major Raviraj.
Finally, what everything boils down to is the will of a man to go on, and the capability to hang on for a moment longer. At the CW, a man who thinks of giving up is considered unfit to be welcomed in the brotherhood. “A commando is therefore a man who thinks, how he thinks and how long he keeps thinking,” signed-off the Major.
(To be continued)
Copyright@The New Indian Express
PART-2

Friday, December 7, 2012

I'm not against the Army, let them compensate me: MP


By Anantha Krishnan M
Express News Service
Bangalore: Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) MP from Belgaum, Suresh Angadi, who is locked in an eight-year-old battle with the Indian Army against the Bagdad Asmara Field Firing Range, said on Thursday that he would give up all his claims, if compensated adequately. Responding to Express' queries over his suspected role in 'arm-twisting' the Karnataka government, as alleged by the Army, Angadi said that he is being portrayed in bad light by those who are ignorant of the core issue.
“I am an Indian and I love my jawans. I am not against the Indian Army. It is not a fight between a BJP MP and the Army as being reported by the media,” Angadi said. But, the BJP MP was quick to take on the Army. “They have been firing on the road for many years. The farmers are deprived of their livelihood. The Army officers are misleading the government. I have the facts,” Angadi said.
When asked if he used his influence as an MP over the Karnataka government to get the land denotified, Angadi said: “Let the Army acquire the private lands and compensate me and others adequately. I have no issues with it. I have raised this issue in Parliament and Defence Minister Antony is aware of it. In Kerala too, there's a similar issue.”
On why he built the Angadi Institute of Technology and Management without an NOC, as being pointed out by the Army, the MP said that he went by the the provisions of the law. “The Army has given many others NOC to undertake construction activities adjacent to the firing range. Why are they harping on the fact the I don't have an NOC? We have offered another range to the Army (Ramdurga, 11 km away from Belgaum) long time back but the Army refused to go,” Angadi said.
The MP also claimed that a Karnataka Housing Board colony and an Army Welfare colony are coming up in the vicinity of the firing range. He said that in 2008, the Army had agreed to construct a baffle range (covered area to prevent stray injuries), but did nothing later. “They built a huge wall spending crores instead,” the MP said.
The government had recently denotified the land given to the Army, which was originally earmarked as a firing range till 2020.
(Copyright@The New Indian Express)

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Battle of Belgaum: Upset Army readies for a legal fight with Karnataka govt

                                             By Anantha Krishnan M
                                              Express News Service
Bangalore: Hit by the Karnataka government's decision to withdraw the land used by the Maratha Light Infantry Regimental Centre (MLIRC) as a firing range in Belgaum, the Indian Army is keeping the gun powder dry to take the battle to the court. Army sources told Express on Tuesday that the government's decision to withdraw the land that houses the Bagdad Asmara Field Firing Range was 'unilateral' and not in the 'interest of the nation.'
The government last month had issued an order withdrawing a 12-year-old communication (May 24, 2000) permitting the Army to use the land for artillery and field firing purposes (7469 acres). “We had the permission till 2020 and we are surprised by the speed at which the government acted on the matter. We are not running away and will take the battle to the court,” sources said.
The Army now says that the training sessions for its men posted to MLIRC and the commandos attached to Junior Leaders Wing (JLW), will go for a toss. “Our firing ranges have come down drastically all over India and we can't let the training sessions suffer. Belgaum unit and the JLW are on the international map, with foreign troops regularly coming to undertake joint training sessions with the Indian Army. The MoD could have acted faster and grasped the seriousness of the issue,” sources said.
The Land, Works and Environment wing at the Army HQ in Delhi will prepare a plan to counter the state government's decision, say sources. Army is of the opinion that state government came under pressure from Belgaum MP Suresh Angadi, who has wanting the firing range to be shifted out.
(Copyright@The New Indian Express)

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