You have to wonder just what is wrong with this world, when these things happen over and over and OVER again - China attacking India in 1962; China invading Vietnam in 1979; the U.S. invading Iraq in 2003; Russia invading Ukraine today; China poised to invade Taiwan tomorrow…
And sure, India and Pakistan aren't blameless - there was the brutal, fraternal savagery of Partition, and then Pakistan's own civil war (aka the Bangladesh Liberation War). And of course the U.S. isn't blameless either, with its wars in Vietnam and Iraq, and too-long war in Afghanistan...as well as whatever the future holds for our own increasingly-fractured country.*
And so while The Battle of Rezang La is an equally heartbreaking and inspiring story of courage, loyalty and comradeship under the most severe conditions - extreme high altitude and constant sub-zero temperatures - that certainly deserves more recognition (as of course does the battle itself)…there is just SO. MUCH. COMPETITION. You can easily fill a whole bookcase with stories of "last stand" battles in Vietnam (from both sides), the Pacific, the Middle East, the Khyber Pass, and those still to come shortly from Ukraine and elsewhere.
So...anyway, excellent book, and many thanks to my GR friend Payal for the recommendation. My only criticism is that this was obviously written for a mainly Indian audience, and so a lot was taken for granted here that might be confusing to ignorant firangi like myself. Thank God for Google, or I'd never know what an Angola shirt was, or the difference between a Kumaon and an Ahir battalion, or many other things. But even then, I would have really benefited from a larger glossary that included translations of the many Indian slogans and battle cries, as well as an explanation of the Indian military ranks (Havildar, Naib Subedar, Naik [I think those are different], Sepoy, etc).** And - though no one's fault but my own - I found the names confusing, especially with so many Singhs and Rams scattered through A, B, C and D Companies.
Solid recommend for history/war story buffs, especially those with an interest in South Asia and the Himalaya.
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* I'm pessimistically starting to wonder if the U.S. is heading towards its own "partition," with a liberal Northeast and West Coast playing the roles of East and West Pakistan, separated by a larger conservative South and Midwest filling in for India.
** The book does include a brief glossary, but it is aimed more at (I'm assuming) Indians with limited military or geographic knowledge, and so focuses on terms like battalion, drop zone, knoll, mortar, tree line, etc., which I would have thought most folks were already familiar with.