Are you sure the names
1. Lt Veer singh chauhan
2. Lt Abhimanyu ranawat
3. Sub Lt Jasmeet Singh Sohal
4. NK Gajendra Singh
5. GDR Gurmeet Singh
6. NK Rajendra Singh
you posted are from 16 GRENADIERS

Just asking
-Inder
kanwar76 wrote:Hey Madhy,
Are you sure the names
1. Lt Veer singh chauhan
2. Lt Abhimanyu ranawat
3. Sub Lt Jasmeet Singh Sohal
4. NK Gajendra Singh
5. GDR Gurmeet Singh
6. NK Rajendra Singh
you posted are from 16 GRENADIERSOut of these 6 who got shaeed?
Just asking
-Inder
17H wrote:Hi Sorry to be rude to interupt a nice discussion but I would like to ask Mr Madhy here a few questions/ objections as I feel that he is not a genuine person and all that he has written is fiction.
I would be only too happy to eat my words and apologise to Mr Madhy in case he proves me wrong.
1. You started the discussion by professing that you cannot divuge secret information then you have gone on to divulge everything.
2. What kind of promotion you are refferring to when you were made a captain? As i know that all officers are commissioned in the Rank of Captain these days and not promoted after any kind of advance training course.
3. The Only advance course an officer does immediately on joining is a 3 month Young Officer's (YO) Course at Infantry School, Mhow, which is primarily a Platoon Commanders course, and involves weapons and tactics at a platoon level. It does not deal with any advance Infantry weapons, which is covered seperately in a 'Weapons' course at the same institution.
4. CI ops troops in Kashmir are always alert and travel with full load of ammunition, whether in Civilian area or not. (Courtesy my class mate who is a major in 24 RR)
5. You mean to say that you battled the militants in the heart of Srinagar town, for full 8 hours without any support in the backyard of the mighty 15th Corps of the Indian Army.
6. RPG is not a gun, its a grenade launcher, whose full form is Rocket Propelled Grenade 7 (RPG7).
7. Every unit has an armourer who has been trained at the EME centre, Secunderabad, who handles any specailised problems in the weapons. The weapons meanwhile function beautifully with only carefull cleaning. Any infantry soldier is not worth his boots if he does not maintain his weapons cleanly.
8. All weapons are inspected periodically by the team from EME, who can make matters very difficult for a unit commander whose weapons are not maintained properly.
9. What Kind of Rank is Sub Lt, in your list of the injured persons?
10. How come you are 24 years old, have served in the Army and are now out? Even you were a SSC you would have served 5 years at least. You would have joined at least when you were 20 years if not more, with a 9 month training at OTA Madras, 5 years service..... It does not add up.
Please do clarify as I am very curious.
Regards & No Offence to those who were injured and made the ultimate sacrifice.
Madhy,dont make a spectacle of your self......though as an ex Cavalry officer I would definitely be intrested in hearing about the advanced combat course...should know a lil about the Infantry as I have attended a couple of Infantry courses...the Weapons Course in Mhow & the Commando's in JLW,Belgaum apart from a few others which were restricted to Armd Corps.17H wrote:
I think your story does not stand up to scrutiny and the age old tenets and practices of the army. This is not to question your military experience. but just that you have not presented it well and have exposed your ignorance of many points in a life of a soldier, which are substantially more improtant than the empty rhetoric of 'my blood' 'my flag' etc. I bet if you know how many flames are their in the crest of the Grenadiers., and which part of the country their troops come from. I wonder what your interactions with other units were, which have casually mentioned as 'Gud'
I request you Mr Madhy to treat all your audience as fully knowledgibe of all matters military and respect the traditions of the Army by not inventing and bluffing just like your age there.
Regards anyway, will continue this through PM's in future.
Ajit
I recenly checked out a cops revolver here. It was a Ruger service six, not the security six that I liked cause it also shot 357 mags. This one was strangely marked 380 but the bullets the guy had were strange looking 38 caliber bullets that were longer than a baby 9mm.
You missed out on the basics, TC; the police here are even more confused regarding calibers. I remember the flabbergasted look on the face of the Duty Officer of the local police station when I mentioned my air-rifle is a .22 (some a******e from my neighborhood complained about a notorious guy bringing in a gun into a peaceful area) . He was confused on whether you require a license to own one.TC wrote:To show you how confusing a police arsenal can look like I will give you the example of West Bengal
Yes, The stens were always 9 mm but they use the browning 9 mm ammo, equivalent to the .38 ACP, which is suitable only for simple blowback mechanisms due to very low pressures generated, therefore makes sten less powerfull compared to say an MP5.lazybones wrote:Hi 17H:
All "Stens" these days are chambered in 9mm. I agree with you that sidearms aren't that visible anymore in the Army. It still has a role as a backup weapon in Close Quarters even if the operator is carrying a carbine.
Ashok
I think you mean .380 ACP (9x17mm), the .38 ACP (9x23mm) has more power than the standard 9mm (9x19mm).17H wrote: they use the browning 9 mm ammo, equivalent to the .38 ACP
Ajit