Chapter 500 India security war
Eyeing Vivien Lei’s lack of interest, Allen Wilson sighed in his heart, the Great British Treasure still didn’t know that the relationship between the two had already been known by the FBI in the United States.
This is certainly not a good thing, but Allen Wilson does not feel how daunting, a hallowed intelligence department still manages the matter of male-female relationship? Just because of the matter of male-female relations, his fear of the FBI is very limited, and it is not being targeted by the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs.
The modern intelligence service, really said that the gas swallowed the mountain also has to be the Soviet Union State Security Committee, that is, later the KGB. More than a dozen general directorates each in charge of a beach, military, transportation, border defense, internal security, science and technology, civil defense and firefighting, and even cadres sanatorium.
But the KGB was only a part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs after the split, really to say that the standing there let people fear, or Beria personally managed the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR, this is the full body of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, with the right to independent judgment. The powers of the later KGB were just what the current Ministry of the Interior’s subordinate departments were doing.
During the time of the KGB there was also a Ministry of Internal Affairs present in the USSR, the reason why it doesn’t seem to be as strong as the KGB is because during the time of Khrushchev the power of the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs was decentralized to the Union Republics while the power of the KGB was still in Moscow, which is what caused the KGB’s power to come to the forefront later on.
Anyway the department that could scare the piss out of Allen Wilson was not in the United States, and he wasn’t worried about what the FBI would do to him just because of this.
Allen Wilson in Los Angeles, nothing more than nothing to touch Vivien Lei’s stomach, experience the child’s thriving. Then it is to find a few familiar friends, recently he looked for Pauline Gaudet quite hard, after all, is a consul with the talent of the prime minister, nothing to find Chaplin’s ex-wife to talk about, and then normal.
The sky over the Indian capital New Delhi is cloudy and drizzly. The rising vapor was like thick twilight amiability, enveloping the whole city. The international airport on the various colors of the signal lights, but also lost the previous day’s brilliant luster, from a distance, as if a canopy of hazy halo.
India’s Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Nehru, standing in front of the wide floor-to-ceiling windows of the VIP hall, gazing longingly out the window tarmac. He was dressed in robes, brown face embedded in a pair of black and changeable eyes, slightly open and close his lips do not know what in the self-talk. He had a steady pace and was hale and hearty, except for the flashy hair and the black-and-white beard between his lips.
“Nehru influenced the world.” So say the Indians, and so have the leaders of many a country in the world.
Nehru was committed to the cause of India’s independence and liberation since his youth, and was arrested and imprisoned five times. With perseverance and superhuman organizational skills, he, together with Mahatma Gandhi, united all Indian parties, classes and peoples of all religious faiths, and finally won India’s independence.
“The initial and almost instinctive reaction of every nascent regime is to cling to the share of territory bequeathed to it. Wherever the colonial power had ruled, the emerging state was bound to rule.”
Initially, he had ridiculed the British historian Gunnar Myrdal when he read this latter paragraph. It did not occur to him that now he himself had tasted the bitter taste of this.
However, at the moment, his state of mind is like this rainy weather, dark, gloomy, the British Empire’s domination of the subcontinent is extremely far-reaching, unlike the enthusiastic citizens of India, Nehru understood in his heart, independence is only the beginning, he has the fame does not mean that India as a country has been rid of all ills.
Nehru hoped to use his fame to push for reconciliation, but it was not to be, and still had to go as far as solving the problem by force, but then again it had to be solved.
If anything has touched Nehru in recent years, it was the process of Indonesia’s independence, when the European colonial powers joined together at the United Nations to forcibly split Indonesia, taking away the two largest islands in the archipelago, which comprised almost half of the nascent country’s territory.
What happened to Indonesia made Nehru realize that if the partition of India and Pakistan had been the reason for Ali Jinnah’s insistence. Then from the Indo-Pakistani partition, the European colonial powers had discovered the benefits that came with it and saw partition as a viable path.
Nehru certainly sympathized in his heart for what had happened to Sukarno and Indonesia as a whole, but at this stage he had his own business, the numerous internal tuktuks, especially the most powerful Hyderabad tuktuk, whose Maharaja Ali Khan had been resisting New Delhi’s exercise of power over the whole of India.
Having ended the war with Pakistan over Kashmir, Nehru dropped back and began to look at internal issues.
The Indo-Pakistani war caused by Kashmir had ended with a slight advantage for India, with Kashmiri independence gone and India occupying slightly more than half of the land, and with a much more fertile and populous population, as a way of accounting for the country.
To the ministers who wanted to continue the war, Nehru was appeased by the argument that internal problems should be solved first. The time did come for internal problems to be resolved, only this time again it did not go well.
Ali Khan, because of the presence of a supernumerary minister, Alan Wilson, who was working as a consul in the United States, could be said to have been making preparations on the premise of the British Empire’s withdrawal from the subcontinent since before the end of World War II.
Allen Wilson, the supernumerary minister, did his best to prove that he was by no means on a white-collar salary, so to speak, and to keep post-independence India struggling a bit more in the midst of the quagmire. A large number of German weapons, destined to be scrap metal only, were brought to the subcontinent in two wings.
At the same time a group of German soldiers helped Ali Khan train the Hyderabad army as instructors. Of course today, because the environment in Germany has been stabilized and supported by the Marshall Plan, there are not many German soldiers still in Hyderabad, and most of them have returned to Europe.
But the remaining German officers still play an important role, commanding Ali Khan’s army, using a large number of German land and air weapons, and then in this armed conflict, sniping against the attacking Indian army.
Hyderabad is actually larger than Kashmir, and the legacy of centuries of being a strong British ally in the landed states is still quite rich, and the huge size of the landed states gave the Germans room to maneuver.
Had it not been for the fact that in 1903, Hyderabad voluntarily gave the northern part of the land to the British Indian Dominion, Hyderabad would be a bit bigger now.
Admittedly, the Ali Khan’s army did not even have a major general as its German advisor, but a group of battle-tested lieutenants who had faced sieges all over the world were still at ease on this side of the subcontinent.
Although at first Hyderabad’s reaction was untimely in the face of the Indian army’s onslaught, the slow movement of the Indian army finally gave Hyderabad time to make a setup.
The Germans first determined that there were not many attacking Indian troops, and that is exactly what happened. Even Allen Wilson, who was far away in the United States, could see that India still lacked the experience of commanding a large regiment, and the German officers who had really fought against the Soviet Red Army were able to judge it even more easily.
Made this judgment, the German officers will be formulated to rely on the Deccan plateau to resist, and wait for an opportunity to counterattack the arrangement.
The Deccan Plateau is the largest lava plateau in the world. It is a huge Precambrian ancient land mass which forms the core of the subcontinent, and although it is not very high in elevation, not even as high as the mountains of Europe, it is very treacherous, and the not very high Deccan Plateau is very fragmented and not conducive to the attack of large regiments.
Hyderabad was the largest of the Turkish states in size, and the Ali Khan had his own army, propaganda system, railroad network, postal system, and currency, and a favorable condition noted by the German officers was that the railroads in Hyderabad were broad gauge.
This was due to the fact that Ali Khan had been interfered with by the Viceroyalty of British India while building the railroads, resulting in Hyderabad’s railroad network not being able to connect with most of the railroads in India. Now, on the other hand, it was being exploited by the German officers, and when there was a defensive war, not only was this not a disadvantage, it was an advantage.
The roads in the Deccan Plateau were winding, steep and narrow, and in some places little more than goat paths. It is not easy to spread out thinly-strength troops along such distant fronts and keep them constantly supplied with food and ammunition, or to hold them firmly against a tenacious enemy who is fighting almost exclusively from his own base.
But with Hyderabad’s self-contained railroad network, it began to take advantage of this, and Hyderabad’s army advanced in two parts. The main force pushed northward along the railroad to the north. A smaller but more refined guard was intended to follow the only narrow road across the central plateau to the Krishna River.
The two forces eventually captured one of the deepest Indian armies in Hyderabad, a regiment in size, an ace unit fresh from the battlefield in Kashmir, and coming to Hyderabad with the simple purpose of moving from one victory to another.
The fighting continued throughout the day, with occasional close combat, and was as fierce as it had ever been in previous wars.
Before night came, many of the Indian troopers found that they were almost out of ammunition.
It was not until the order to retreat was received that the Indians realized that their way of retreat had been cut off. A strong Hyderabad force had blocked the main roads before the battle. They firmly controlled the position, so that in order to drive them in order to come to reinforce the Indian army before the preparation, so that the Indian reinforcements launched a number of unsuccessful attacks.
Realizing that the situation was not favorable, the Indian troops began to retreat, but were ambushed on the main road. As a result, it was soon filled with destroyed vehicles, and the chariot crews and infantry scattered in panic.
Having lost its suddenness, the New Delhi offensive stepped into the Kashmir pattern of fighting, and the war could be described as a daily but protracted affair, becoming one of mutual shelling and raiding.
There was no such thing as vigilante warfare at this time, but in reality Indian military operations had turned into a pattern of vigilante warfare.