For the next month or so Capt. Anuj Nayyar and the men of 17 Jat went on various reconnaissance Paper Backsions in the boulder-strewn Drass sector where enemy troops had set up base. They fought relentlessly in a gruesome battle for two nights in July before securing the peak that was critical to the success of Operation Vijay and India's victory in Kargil. Amid heavy artillery and mortar fire they destroyed four enemy bunkers and neutralized tens of infiltrators in close combat. During the attack on the fourth bunker the twenty-three-year-old captain was hit by an enemy rocket-propelled grenade dying instantly but saving the lives of fifteen men in the process who eventually finished the Paper Backsion and hoisted the Indian flag on the peak.
For motivating his command by personal example and going beyond the call of duty Capt. Anuj Nayyar was awarded India's second-highest gallantry award the Maha Vir Chakra in 2000.
This is his story.
In May 1999 the Kargil insurgency was still being viewed as a routine affair. No one quite understood the magnitude of the situation. However it soon emerged that infiltrators had captured high-altitude posts vacated by Indian soldiers during the winter months and thus had a tactical upper hand while the Indian Army struggled with intelligence.