- - You know, you need to get yourself a new dress.
- - Mom, why do I need another dress – to walk Yuji in the field?
- - No, buy yourself a dress.
Then, as it often happens in a dream, the space shifted and we found ourselves in a dark hallway of the apartment where she died.
The door to the kitchen was ajar, Mom nodded her head and I shifted my gaze: Gukov was sitting at the table, lit with a narrow beam of light.
He was drinking tea. He didn’t see us. In a dream, I almost never remember that Mom is departed but now I did.
Gukov was not supposed to be here. He is in the Pakistani mountains now, on Latok, we are saving him. I opened my eyes with my heart thumping as if I ran a 100-meter race. A minute later, my alarm went off for a communication session with Shamyl. Gukov will later tell me he had a mental portal with Shamalo and it was also in the kitchen, only they were eating pelmeni. I popped up out of the blue and said: so you are back already? Then why are we saving you?
How many days can rescue operations last? How adequate are decisions made by the relatives who frequently know nothing or precious little about mountains?
How ethical is it to put other people’s lives in danger for rescue work or involve them in the search for bodies?
When should you stop the ramped up rescue operation?
Who should make such a decision?
It changes the lives of our nearest and dearest and those who could become these but won’t, it changes the lives of children, their opportunities, their evaluation, it changes the lives of parents and everyone around. These links are much deeper than they seem at the first sight.
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- - Okay. The Pakistani from ATP are ready to consider the option of merging the two insurances.
- - The Pakistani rule, but what will Soglasiye and Savitar Group say to that? Formally, Soglasiye may refuse to pay. A different insurance should have been procured for death and repatriation – not an accident insurance. The guys’ insurance is only good for rescue and evacuation.
- - Don’t know, but yesterday they itemized for me how much money was spent and said that they could take the rest from Sergey’s insurance. Ok for the release, we’ll publish it.
- - Great option, if Savitar plays along. Ask the Pakistani to write a formal letter to Savitar with this proposal.
- - Fine, and we also need to call Olga Moroz and find out what color the guys’ tent for the summit push was. To let the pilots know.
- - I’ve just sent it to the pilots, but here it is anyway: cloudy to 5600, weather still unstable.
Anna, ask Glazunov about his card number, let him buy the tickets. I will transfer him the money for the trip.
- - Ok. Isn’t it too early to get a ticket, though? The body hasn’t been found yet. The thing in the photo is most probably the sleeping bag.
- - As you say, but I’d rather he went. It will take three or four days to get there.
- - Evgeny said they had decided at the family meeting that if the rescue was complicated and risky, they wouldn’t insist on repatriation.
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- - I’ve just spoken to David [Gottlieb]. The weather is bad where he is, snowing all the time. It’s impossible to lift him and his mates off with any kind of aircraft. Although the military declare that they are ready. He says he has been consulting Askari pilots all day on how to lift Alexander off. He thinks that using a longline is the only possible option. It could work out tomorrow morning. As for his participation, he pronounced it to be useless, since he was not sure they would cope, considering the situation. They would only be able to get there in 3 – 5 days.
- - Vadim Viktorovich, we considered the option of lowering David to Sanya on a longline, so that David could belay him to be transported together, but we’ve done some calculations: altitude, low oxygen, high temperature – all these factors combined make this impossible, so they will throw a rope to Gukov and he would have to self-belay to it and then self-belay off from the anchor.
- Ovchinnikov: As of this moment, about 600,000 rubles. Over a hundred money transfers. I think we’ll make a million by the end of the day.
- - What wonderful, warm-hearted people we have in our country!
- - And not only in our country. Georgia, Ukraine, some transfers in euros and dollars.
- - Shall we stop the fundraising tomorrow, then, as soon as we get the required amount?
- - I think so. Abramov called. He is ready to transfer the outstanding amount if we are short of funds. And he has a pilot in Nepal who works with a longline, he is ready to fly to Pakistan.
No news from Sanya. His battery is completely drained.
The forecast promised a good day today but actually July 29 turned out to be the worst over the past five days. It snowed up to 20 cm. 20cm of fresh unstable snow. It means high danger of avalanches.
A helicopter may provoke avalanches, which are already more numerous than we would want. V. Zaytsev: What is the altitude of Victor’s camp? Can they ascend to Alexander from there?
- - Theoretically, yes, but then we would have to save three more people. The bottom is vulnerable to rockfall, it’s very dangerous up to 6,000m and now it has also snowed up. If the sun comes out, it’ll be hell.
They responded that they were warming up their engines, waiting for a forecast from Victor. Ovchinnikov
- - Maybe we should promise them a bonus? We raised about $15,000.
- - Alexey, I’ve asked about it. Pilots are getting a salary, they don’t get a single cent from these flights or the insurance or our money. They are military pilots. They will fly for the sake of duty, money doesn’t matter.
- By the way, Andrzej Bargiel advised to ask Americans for help.
- - Those from the military base? I’ll call but the international cooperation program was curtailed now for obvious reasons.
- - It would be cool but we need to solve this quickly – today. And fly tomorrow.
- - We are short of time, or we could bring our pilots. Arseny Boldyrev works with a longline. He lifted off Molodozhen in the winter, amidst avalanches, from the Koshtan-Tau crest.
- - That’s it, the flight was cancelled again :( Let’s try to work with the Americans.
- - I’ve already written to the Ministry of Defense but today is Sunday. I’ll start calling in an hour. We’ll try to call Mr. Belousov, Assistant to President. He can help. Maybe we should invite the Nepali pilot? It’s closer and cheaper.
- - Vadim Viktorovich, can we ask this question?
- - I will try.
Helicopters cannot stay at the base camp all the time to fly in the first short window. According to their instructions, pilots are not supposed to kill the engines at the base camp’s altitude – there was a case when the engines stalled. Under such circumstances there’s only enough fuel for a couple of hours of waiting.
- - Plan B: if we cannot do it with a longline I will try to contact the Slovenians. I found their inReach, they are below the route. And if they are ready to participate in the operation, we don’t need to waste time transferring David and Herve. The Slovenians can join at any time.
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- - The fueled-up helicopter will come back. It can lift some of the guys who are with Victor to the maximum possible altitude, for them to move towards Alexander on their own.
- Other international mountaineers refused to go. They are saying, your guys are sitting at the foot of the mountain and not participating, why should we? The pilots will videotape the whole situation.
- - Vadim Viktorovich, longline is actually our only chance now, but, truth be told, it’s really dangerous there and if they go, the chances are high they might not come back.
- Alexey, Channel 1, Russia, NTV and Komsomolka newspaper have found even Dmitry by now. I am snowed under with requests in the messenger, I told them to contact you – please take over the others, too.
- - Ok. Vadim Viktorovich, should I call our General Staff or the Presidential Administration? Or is the time not right yet?
- - We need to use all opportunities, act simultaneously.
- There will be no other time. Our only hope is bilateral contacts at the high level. The Ambassador has just talked to Pakistani generals and was assured that the military commanders have this situation under close surveillance.
- Anna, who is currently in the base camp together with Victor Koval and who has a broken rib? Do they need evacuation? What’s the news?
- - The one with the broken rib is Konstantin Markevich. Parfenov is also there. They don’t want to be evacuated now because they are claiming an insured event so that they get evacuated under the insurance after this rescue.
- Helicopters flew around Latok and Ogre cirques.
- - Maybe our guys will agree to go on a rescue ascent accompanied by foreign mountaineers?
- No more flights today – too late.
- - No, our guys will not go. The forecast for tomorrow is clear from the morning until one.
- But the good news is, the pilots now know where he is for sure.
- And Sanya couldn’t help hearing the hum of helicopters.
- Janez Skorjanc who coordinated Tomaz Humar’s rescue wrote that, as Tomaz said after the rescue, helicopters’ engines gave him the “saving drive””. So it wasn’t in vain, anyways.
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Arseny Boldyrev, Highly qualified helicopter pilot, Did mountain rescues multiple times, Great experience of dealing with longline Denis Provalov, Highly qualified rescuer, Multiple mountain rescues, Longline instructor. |
Ask the Pakistani military to grant Arseny a permit to fly their helicopter. 2. Request a permit to accept a Nepali helicopter with a longline. Vadim Zaytsev: Accepted, noted. Visas shouldn’t be a problem. The second thing is more difficult – the permit. But I think they’ll get it agreed.
- - The weather is bad, everything’s off, the next communication is in an hour.
- By this day, federal TV channels were broadcasting news from Latok all the time: TASS, Channel 1, Russia-1, NTV, Channel 5, leading information portals, the radio.
Ambrose Bierce has a short story called An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge. Bierce is a toxic guy, an American classic who kills off all his characters.
It’s set in Alabama during the Civil War, at the railroad bridge, on a hurriedly built gallows for a plantation owner – a rich Southern gentlemen whom Northern troops have sentenced to hanging because he wanted to burn that bridge down. And that’s exactly what they are doing at the moment.
All his senses are keened and he seems to see the sniper’s grey eyes, they say all famous marksmen had grey eyes.
He manages to loosen the ties around his wrists and struggle free of the cord, he swims downstream. Finally, he gets out of the water, delights with the sand: why has he never before noticed how beautiful these crystals were, glittering in the sun? He then walks for a long time – probably throughout the night.
By the morning he finds himself at the gate of his house, completely exhausted. He pushes open the gate and sees a flutter of female garments.
His wife, looking fresh and cool and sweet, steps down from the veranda to meet him. Peyton wants to embrace her but at this moment he feels a blow upon the back of the neck, sees a white light and then all is darkness. The first revision of the last sentence read like this: “…his body, with a broken neck, hung on a strong rope that always rewards a civilian patriot’s zest in times of war, swung gently from side to side beneath the timbers of the Owl Creek bridge.” But then Bierce had second thoughts and softened it a little. I always zone out on such endings: why did he even go on that bridge? He could have stayed at home. He would live to a ripe old age. Why did he have to live his fate through?
Each of us has a railroad bridge of our own.
And some go to burn it down while others stay at home.
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When Tommy got fed up with calls from strangers he simply threw his phone away. It was at that moment that Obama, then President of the USA, called him. I remember thinking, hell no, it would never happen with us – even a house superintendent, let alone the President would not care for some mountaineer. Three years passed.
On July 30, 2018 President Putin was briefed on the Latok rescue operation.
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Jeff watched over the rescue on Latok very closely. He sent messages, left comments, responded to people who were unhappy with our actions, protected me and cheered me up. This was the last message I received from him: “FANTASTIC! Give him [Alexander Gukov] congratulations and love. I’m so thankful for everyone’s efforts! I can’t wait to hear the whole story!” Instead of an epilogue What was supposed to be a brief report extended into four parts.
Enough time has passed for reflection.
Maybe these records will help some of you some time during the rescue. I tried to outline the way our team worked, what we thought about, what doors we knocked on. We were very lucky to have each other. No one tried to grab the biggest piece of the pie, broke into hysterics, or played the king of the hill – everyone did their job seamlessly and calmly. We went through a million options, we consulted with experienced mountaineers, we were not ashamed to ask for help.
We were dealing with conflict situations, not exasperating them. We initiated rescue a day before we received the SOS signal, we were able to get helicopters into the air on the election day, when flights over Pakistan were prohibited, we drоpped gas and food that lasted Gukov for seven days and six nights, we built good relations with the Pakistani military, pilots and mass media. Pilots deserve a special praise – they are really cool guys! There were times when we doubted them, or didn’t understand some of their actions, or didn’t really believe in them because we didn’t know what they were capable of. Every day at 4 a.m. they warmed up their engines, every day they waited for a window together with us. They flew out in bad weather upon our request. They spotted Gukov on the endless snowy face of Latok I, they lifted Sanya off, they took great risks because they had spent a long time looking for him and were hovering over him longer than they were supposed to, they used up all their fuel and landed in BC with the dashboard blinking in an emergency. They are real professionals and real heroes. Our thanks go to:
- • Lieutenant Colonel Muhammad Anjum Rafique, pilot
- • Major Abid Rafique, pilot
- • Major Fakhar-E-Abbas, pilot
- • Major Qazi Muhammad Mazhar ud Din, pilot
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The amount of 640,000 rubles that remained after the rescue was divided between Sergey Glazunov’s and Alexander Gukov’s families. 50,000 was transferred to Evgeny Glazunov’s card and 270,000 to his mothers’. Alexander Gukov transferred some money to families of mountaineers who died last summer – 160,000 rubles to Sveta Dvornichenko who was left with three children and 160,000 rubles to Anna Abrosimova – she has two babies.
- Lieutenant Colonel Muhammad Anjum Rafique, pilot
- Major Abid Rafique, pilot
- Major Fakhar-E-Abbas, pilot
- Major Qazi Muhammad Mazhar ud Din, pilot
- Naik Muhammad Nadeem, maintenance
- Naik Amir Sharif, maintenance
- General Qamar Javed Bajwa, Chief of Staff, Army of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Major General Shahid Imtiaz, Head of Administration of International Military Cooperation, Army Staff of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Brigadier Basharat Аli, Army Air Corps Unit Commander
- Lieutenant Colonel Mahammad Saim Saddiqui, Officer, Administration of International Military Cooperation, Army Staff of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Muhammad Arsallah Khan, Honorary Consul of Russia in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Major Muhammad Adeel Ahmed, Officer, Military Intelligence Department, Army Staff of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Mr. Irfan Muhammad, Head of Rescue Operations, Askar Aviation Company
- Alexey Yuryevich Dedov, Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Pakistan
- Vadim Viktorovich Zaytsev, First Secretary of the Embassy
- Vladimir Leonidovich Berezyuk, Minister Counselor
- Sergey Vladimirovich Belosludtsev, Colonel, acting Military Attache
- Natalya Nikolayevna Baranova, Deputy Director, R&D Institute of Disaster Medicine
- Alexey Yuryevich Ovchinnikov, Director, Center of Professional Education Development, Moscow Polytechnic University
- Anna Valeryevna Piunova, Editor-in-Chief, Mountain.RU web portal
- Victor Alexandrovich Koval, lawyer
- Denis Vladimirovich Provalov, Senior Teacher, Russian State University of Physical Education, Sport, Youth and Tourism
- Arseny Boldyrev, Pilot, HeliAction
- Dmitry Alexandrovich Klenov, Editor, Mountain.RU web portal
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- Mahboob Hamid, Representative of Russian Helicopters in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Colonel (retired) Irfan Hassan Malik, Head of Department, ММТ&Т Associates
- Lieutenant Colonel Mansoor Qadir, doctor
- Major Salim Akhtar, doctor
- Nasir Mufti, Chief Medical Officer, Rawalpindi Combined Military Hospital
- Colonel Muhammad Farid, Assistant to Commandant, Rawalpindi Combined Military Hospital
- Colonel (retired) Amjat Iqbal Babar, Officer of Protocol, Combined Intelligence Agency, Ministry of Defense of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Lieutenant Colonel Ziaullah, Army Staff Officer of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
- Mr. Naiknam Karim, Operator, ATP Tourist Company
- Mr. Nizam Uddin, Operator, ATP Tourist Company
- Pavel Alexandrovich Yagoda, Mayor, Assistant to Military Attach
- Dmitry Vladimirovich Chebotarev, Mayor, Assistant to Military Attach
- Vyacheslav Vyacheslavovich Sentyurin, First Secretary
- Damir Renatovich Galiulin, Third Secretary
- Anna Nikolayevna Makarenkova, Attache
- Anton Andreyevich Bernyakovich, Administrative Assistant
- Irina Mikhaylovna Lavrova, doctor
- Andrey Removich Belousov, Assistant to President of the Russian Federation
- Sergey Viktorovich Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation
- Igor Vladimirovich Morgulov, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation
- Anatoly Viktorovich Yakunov, Chief of Aviation, Ministry of Emergency Situations of the Russian Federation
- Veronika Igorevna Skvortsova, Minister of Health of the Russian Federation
- Sergey Alexanderovich Krayevoy, Deputy Minister of Health of the Russian Federation
- Sergey Fedorovich Goncharov, Director, R&D Institute of Disaster Medicine
- Amiran Shotayevich Revishvili, Director, A.V. Vishnevsky National Medical Research Center of Surgery
- Valery Afanasyevich Mitish, Head of Wounds and Wound Infections Center








