V.K. Singh
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Courage and Conviction: An Autobiography
by
7 editions
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published
2013
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India's External Intelligence: Secrets of Research and Analysis Wing
7 editions
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published
2007
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Leadership in the Indian Army: Biographies of Twelve Soldiers
6 editions
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published
2005
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A Letter to Manmohan Singh
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Marketing is a Contact Sport: make contact through Blogs, SEO, Search, Social & Internet Marketing (May2008)
2 editions
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published
2008
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Recent Progress in Medicinal Plants: Ethnomedicine and Pharmacognosy
by
2 editions
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published
2002
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RECENT PROGRESS IN MEDICINAL PLANTS: VOL.7 ETHNOMEDICINE & PHARMACOGNOSY II
by
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published
2004
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Effective Management Workout - A Case Study
by
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published
2010
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Recent Progress In Medicinal Plants, 44 Volumes Set
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published
2002
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Recent Progress In Medicinal Plants, Vol. 25
2 editions
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published
2009
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“a nation that forgets its martyrs and soldiers will never attain greatness.”
― Courage and Conviction
― Courage and Conviction
“At the Platoon Weapons Division, I got to serve with Major (later Lieutenant General) Milan Naidu. Extremely soft-spoken, Milan was married to Neeharika, who was the daughter of Lieutenant Colonel B Awasthy who had been killed by the Chinese in 1962 at the Lagyala Gompa. Originally from 2 Rajput, Awasthy was moving to Mathura to take over the unit which had finished its NEFA tour of duty in Walong. Unfortunately, that was not to be. Neeharika was an extremely talented singer and was quite the star at most social gatherings.”
― Courage and Conviction
― Courage and Conviction
“The next morning, elements of 23 Punjab who had survived the Dogra ambush were captured. The prisoners were herded on to a bridge and I saw a captain who was their adjutant. He was older than me and I asked him if he had eaten anything. ‘No, we’ve been on the run for the last two days.’ ‘Here,’ I reached into my bag and gave the captain a fistful of shakarpara. ‘Have some,’ I said, ‘these are our emergency rations.’ He stood there looking most uncertain, almost frightened, but he made no move to eat the shakarpara. He was just staring at them. The realization hit me suddenly: he thinks they are coated with poison! I reached out and took a couple of pieces from his hand and popped them into my mouth. The captain burst into tears. The other prisoners and my men had all been watching this little drama unfold. Almost to a man, our boys dug into their kit bags and gave the Pakistanis whatever they could find, a few men even sharing their water canteens. Their adjutant looked at me and said, ‘Thank you.’ I turned to walk away, but he put his hand on my shoulder. ‘You know, I was brought up to believe Indians were the biggest bastards—demons who were cruel and would torture us before killing us. Here you people are giving us your food and water.’ Tears were still streaming down his face. There was nothing to be said, so I moved away, leaving at least one Pakistani soldier to ponder the folly of it all.”
― Courage and Conviction
― Courage and Conviction
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