4 December 1971 — Arabian Sea
The Arabian Sea was dark enough to erase distance. Only movent mattered now, not visibility. Three Indian missile boats cut through it in silent formation—INS Nipat at the front, INS Nirghat slightly offset, and INS Veer trailing at controlled spacing. No lights, no chatter, only disciplined engine noise kept low to avoid detection.
Inside INS Nipat, Commander Babru Yadav stood over the radar repeater while the operator adjusted gain repeatedly to filter coastal interference. The screen was not stable. It flickered constantly, filled with civilian clutter and atmospheric distortion near the Karachi corridor.
"Any separation yet?" Yadav asked.
"Not clean," the operator replied. "But there's movent forming at bearing three-five-zero."
Yadav didn't respond imdiately. He waited for confirmation from another sweep.
Siddharth Negi leaned closer, watching patterns instead of raw dots. After a few seconds, two larger signatures began separating from background noise.
"Two surface contacts confird," Negi said. "Heavy displacent. Likely destroyer class."
Yadav finally nodded once.
"Identify."
Negi refined the signal carefully, adjusting gain.
"Khaibar… and Shah Jahan. Distance forty nautical miles. Bearing unchanged."
The bridge went quiet, not out of tension, but focus. Everyone had already moved ntally into execution mode.
Yadav spoke in a steady voice.
"They're still running standard patrol spacing."
Negi replied after a brief pause. "They don't know they're being mapped continuously."
Yadav gave a short nod.
"That won't last."
---
On INS Nirghat, the weapons console confird readiness. The Styx missile system was prepared, though not in perfect condition—no system this close to saltwater ever was.
"Battery ready," ca the report.
A technician added after a mont, "Fuel stability within acceptable margin."
That phrase ant adjustnts had already been made to keep the system usable in rough marine conditions.
Yadav's voice ca through over internal channel.
"Engage lead target."
No discussion followed. The order was already final.
---
On Nirghat's deck, the launcher locked into position. There was a short delay before ignition as hydraulic pressure stabilized. That delay always felt longer than it actually was.
A technician muttered, almost unconsciously, "Hold…"
Then the missile fired.
The ship shuddered slightly as the Styx left the rail and dropped into sea-skimming profile almost imdiately. It moved low over the water, close enough that wave spray occasionally blurred its silhouette.
On Nipat, Negi tracked the missile line carefully. It drifted slightly in the first seconds, then corrected itself.
"Initial instability… correcting," he said.
A faint flicker passed through the radar line.
"Stabilizing now," he added.
Yadav didn't react. He only asked, "Ti to impact?"
"Less than two minutes."
That number settled into the bridge without emotion. Two minutes was enough ti for systems to fail or succeed, but not enough ti to change anything.
---
On INS Veer, the second launch was already being prepared. No fresh order was needed; coordination doctrine had already assigned roles.
"Second missile away," ca the report.
Now two missiles moved across the Arabian Sea in low trajectories, almost invisible against sea clutter unless tracked precisely.
---
Inside Nipat, the radar operator noticed a shift in Pakistani emissions.
"They're adjusting radar sweep patterns," he said.
Negi checked imdiately. "They've detected sothing is wrong."
Yadav responded calmly. "Too late."
---
On the Pakistani destroyer Khaibar, the radar operator frowned at persistent clutter.
"Contact bearing three-five-zero… still unstable," he said.
A junior technician leaned closer. "Could be civilian traffic. Coastal interference is heavy tonight."
The captain didn't even look up.
"Filter it."
That instruction stayed normal for exactly twenty seconds.
Then the radar operator stiffened.
"Speed change detected—rapid acceleration—this is not a ship—"
Before he could finish, the alert escalated.
"MISSILE INBOUND—PORT SIDE!"
The bridge changed instantly from routine to survival.
But survival requires ti. They didn't have enough of it.
---
The missile hit Khaibar without visual warning. There was no dramatic arc of defense, no coordinated interception. The first impact broke structural continuity instantly. Steel compartnts ruptured under sudden force, and internal systems failed in cascading sequence.
Fire followed almost imdiately, but the real damage had already happened in the first fraction of impact. The ship stopped behaving as a single vessel and beca fragnted sections reacting independently.
---
Back on INS Nirghat, Negi watched the radar return collapse into static.
He didn't announce it imdiately. He verified once more across a second sweep.
Then a third.
Only after that did he speak.
"Lead target destroyed."
No celebration followed. The bridge remained operationally focused.
Yadav nodded once. "Second target?"
Negi checked.
"Still active. But maneuvering now. They've shifted into evasive pattern."
That changed the engagent state. Now it was no longer a surprise strike; it was controlled pursuit.
---
Above the sea, at thirty thousand feet, the S-27 Pinaka formation maintained silent overwatch. No active radar emission. Only passive tracking.
Wing Commander Vikram Rathore monitored naval confirmation through data link while Squadron Leader Tyagi reported air movent.
"Enemy scramble from Mauripur," Tyagi said. "Multiple contacts climbing fast."
Sawant followed. "Sabres. Uncoordinated climb pattern."
Rathore didn't respond imdiately. He studied the spacing.
The enemy wasn't organized. That mattered more than numbers.
"Hold position," Rathore said.
A pause followed.
"They're entering intercept range," Sawant warned.
Rathore's response was imdiate. "Let them commit fully."
Another short silence passed.
Then he added, "Now."
---
The S-27 formation shifted without visible drama. Astra missiles detached silently from hardpoints and ignited in sequence.
There was no visual spectacle beyond separation and acceleration. The missiles entered tracking phase almost imdiately.
On Pakistani radio channels, communication broke into fragnts.
"We have radar contact but no visual—repeat no visual—"
Another voice cut in, overlapping. "Where are they firing from?"
Then interference spread through the channel, not complete jamming, but enough disruption to make coordination unreliable.
And in air combat, unreliable communication is already defeat forming.
---
Rathore watched his HUD carefully.
First target disappeared from tracking.
Then second.
Tyagi exhaled once. "Two confird down."
Sawant tracked the third aircraft.
"It's breaking formation," he said.
Rathore adjusted slightly. "It's not breaking for attack. It's retreating."
There was a difference, and everyone understood it.
---
Below them, the naval engagent had already shifted into aftermath. Burning reflections spread across water where Khaibar had been, and Shah Jahan's movents were no longer coordinated, only survival attempts.
The sea no longer held formation logic. It held consequences.
---
On INS Nipat, silence continued longer than expected after confirmation. No imdiate reaction followed because verification cycles had to complete fully.
Negi finally spoke. "Enemy formation disrupted. One confird destroyed. Remaining units retreating or disabled."
Yadav nodded once. "Withdraw to regroup position."
No extra words were needed.
The ships turned away from Karachi waters in the sa disciplined silence they had entered with.
---
As dawn approached Mumbai harbor, the return remained quiet at first. The ships crossed into harbor limits without ceremony, only then allowing normal human reaction to begin forming on the dock.
Commander Yadav stepped onto the pier first, followed by his crew. Fatigue was visible not in movent but in stillness—the kind that cos after sustained tension releases.
Nobody spoke imdiately.
The sea behind them was still dark, but it no longer represented uncertainty.
It represented outco.
---
END OF CHAPTER 41
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