This
bit of news really floored me. I do not know whether to call it a
bloomer or a case of ignorant vigilance. Perhaps it is like the
proverbial glass that is half empty to the host and half full to the
guest. Skeptics may think it to be a case of utter foolishness, but
let us first see what happened and then give judgment.
Lance
Naik Sheminderpal Singh of Indian army was posted at point 4715 near
Thakung in Eastern Ladakh as a sentry/observer, overlooking the Line
of Control between India and China at a height of about 4,715 metres
above sea level (more than 13000 feet), near Pangong Tso, a
high-altitude lake shared by India and Tibet.
In
August 2012, lance Naik Singh sighted a strange and bright object
crossing over the Line of control from the east around 6PM and
remained visible throughout the night up to 5AM. He saw another
object crossing the LAC around 4AM and remained visible till 11AM.
There are simmering concerns within India army about cross-border
transgressions and the use of unmanned aerial vehicles by the Chinese
to look into Indian territory and all the soldiers have been asked to
watch carefully for any cross border transgression by the Chinese.
The soldier promptly reported the sighting to his senior holding a
rank of Subedar major, a junior commissioned officer, who must have
asked him to continue his observation.
In
all, army personnel documented 329 sightings of the unidentified
objects, until February 2013, seen over Thakung. Eventually, Lance
Naik Singh's prompt observation reports, slowly reached the upper
echelons of Indian army winding its way through a series of officers
of various ranks. The army headquarters, already gripped with issues
concerning Chinese incursions in sensitive Eastern Ladakh, took note
of the reports and decided to call the Indian Institute of
Astrophysics, Bangalore, who promptly deputed two astronomers to
Ladakh earlier this year to resolve the mystery of the two objects
that the army had been observing in the sensitive border zone since
August 2012.
One of
the two astronomers, Tushar Prabhu says: "Our task was to
determine whether these unidentified objects were celestial or
terrestrial." The two astronomers interviewed army Lance Naik
Singh. Who told them that he had noticed a delay of four minutes in
the appearance of one of the objects each consecutive day. He also
told them that the object seemed to be the brightest light in the sky
and always appeared to move with respect to the stars. Astronomers
then asked the army to use a theodolite to record the horizontal
angle and vertical elevation of the two objects. Army personnel
performed these observations between February 17 and 22, 2013 and
submitted the data to the astronomers.
After
analysis, the astronomers came to the conclusion that the first
object observed from Point 4715 has to be planet Jupiter as
observations exactly matched with the planet’s diurnal motion and
the apparent motion of the object due to the rotation of the Earth.
The second unidentified object that appeared early in the morning is
planet Venus, which is currently moving behind the Sun and will in
the coming months appear as an evening object. The army observers
were erroneously considering these two celestial objects as unmanned
aerial vehicles.
As I
read this story, I instantly remembered that one night in July, which
I had spent in a tent just on the shores of the lake “Pangong Tso”
near Line of Actual control in eastern Ladakh. After dinner, as I was
returning to my tent, in almost freezing conditions, I just happened
to look above at the sky. The sky was clear and was just sparkling
and dazzling with brilliance of starlight coming from billions of
stars above in the heavens. Much more significant from this was the
fact that the stars appeared to be hanging so low that I imagined
that they could be reached easily by an aircraft. In fact I clearly
remember the Big Dipper constellation stars hanging very low and of
big size.
After
returning from Ladakh, I found out that this deception of seeing the
stars big, bright and very low is due to increased atmospheric
transparency observed at the high altitudes. So, there was nothing
foolish, when Lance Naik Singh, mistook the two planets for UAV's
moving in from east, across line of actual control. Both Indian and
Chinese armies have been increasingly using pilotless aircraft with
sensors and high-resolution cameras to watch each other across the
border. In the last three years, the number of such transgressions
are reported to be spiraling. Transgressions are not only over land
but also in airspace. Against this background, sensitivities of the
two sides and their armies/border police are extremely high.
I
would therefore consider Lance Naik Singh's watchful observations as
something for which he should be commended and not laughed at. I
have many a times mistaken a distant aircraft at night to be a planet
first, only to realize later that it is moving much faster and must
be an aircraft. Therefor there is nothing silly in Lance Naik Singh's
sharp observations. It is far better to be being over cautious and
over react and be on guard on the line of control in Ladakh, than
showing carelessness and casual approach. Lance Naik Singh and his
superiors deserve a pat on their backs.
29
July 2013
I agree, I have already seen some derilious comments on this episode in the online news.
ReplyDeleteThe job of the sentry is to report anything which is suspicious and he did do that in right earnest.
Lance Naik Singh is a typical Punjabi moron.
ReplyDeleteFor starters, the object he noticed in August 2012 was visible from 6PM to 5AM ▬ 11 HOURS!
How could such a hovering object be a UAV? Yes, unmanned vehicles may travel in a strange pattern when observed from far away, but c'mon! You have to be a moron to at least not question the identity of an object travelling on such a trajectory. If he merely raised the issue as a flag warning for the higher ups, it's understandable. But this episode went on for some time, so I doubt that was the case. He just genuinely appears quite thick. Not to mention the command-and-control structure of the IA.
♣ Also note ▬ UAVs are unlikely to travel through the air with the headlights on... you know, to helpfully give away their position. Just for future reference.
What a tool.