At the crack of dawn, December 15, 2003, King Jigme Singye Wangchuck unleashed his smallmilitary machine, comprising the Royal Bhutan Army (RBA) and the Royal Bhutan Guards (RBG), to expel an excessof 3,000 heavily armed Indian separatist rebels belonging to three different groups - the United LiberationFront of Asom (ULFA), the National Democratic Front of Boroland (NDFB) and the Kamatapur LiberationOrganization (KLO). These rebels had made the Himalayan kingdom their home for the past 12 years, and fromhere they launched murderous hit-and-run strikes on security forces, other symbols of Governmental authority,as well as civilians, on Indian soil, in an armed campaign to secure their demands for independent homelands.
Buddhist Bhutan had last gone to war against any foreign force 138 years ago, when they fought the British.That was the Anglo-Bhutanese war of 1865 in which the Crown's Army defeated Bhutan's then Deb Raja or temporalhead, Sonam Lhendup, and came to exercise much influence on Bhutan's affairs. That victory also gave theBritish unhindered trans-Himalayan access for trade with Tibet. The Royal Government's latest decision to goto 'war' by using its military, comprising a strike force of just about 6,000 men, came after six years offailed talks with the ULFA, NDFB and the KLO in a bid to persuade them to peacefully pull their armed cadresout from the Himalayan kingdom.
This was a difficult decision, indeed, for King Wangchuck. Firstly because, the battle capabilities of the RBAand the RBG (the RBG is a force actually meant exclusively for protection of the royal family) were entirelyuntested, and could reasonably be expected to be rather rusty, since these forces had no occasion to fire asingle shot, except during training sessions by the Indian Army that runs a military training centre insideBhutan. Secondly, it has long been feared that a military crackdown could turn the rebels against theBhutanese state machinery or its citizens. This, in turn, would make access into the landlocked kingdomdifficult as most of the roads into southern Bhutan, the rebels' stronghold, passes through Indian territory,via the northeastern State of Assam and the eastern State of West Bengal. But, King Wangchuck could wait nomore.
"The military crackdown was our ultimate option. The last round of talks were held in October-November,2003, where the KLO went unrepresented as it did not respond to our invitation. Middle-level ULFA and NDFBleaders who came for the meetings said they were unable to leave the kingdom immediately," Aum NetenZangmo, Bhutan's Foreign Secretary, told this writer from Thimphu, the nation's capital.