DESERT FIGHTER
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It's imbarassimg when you lose quarter of your airforce to an airforce you outnumber almost 4:1.
@Windjammer
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It's imbarassimg when you lose quarter of your airforce to an airforce you outnumber almost 4:1.
A BH pro will rate you negative thats how its works when no answers could justify Indian defeat.It's imbarassimg when you lose quarter of your airforce to an airforce you outnumber almost 4:1.
@Windjammer
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Down to Photoshop Image That Happens When you Don't Compile Authentic Historical Facts
Battle Burki Place Where
Major Raja Abdul-Aziz Bhatti Nishan-e-Haider Died
So you say he Died For nothing
Kargil Top were just Piece of Mountain
So you say all NLI Regiment Died For nothing
Jallo Mar
Indian troops are seen here keeping watch over the Ichhogil Canal at Jallo Mar.
Really What Happen inIt's imbarassimg when you lose quarter of your airforce to an airforce you outnumber almost 4:1.
@Windjammer
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Same Later Again And Again PropagandaAnd guess what he was martyred protecting and countersigned the invasion .. And Indian troops including the GOC were cowardly running back to India.. Burki was again captured .. While Indian GOC was recovered hiding in fields..
View attachment 319195
In case you didn't read;
1965 War, the Inside Story by R.D. Pradhan:
In Chapter 8 titled "Of Cowardice and Panic", the author describes the cowardice of Maj. Gen. Niranjan Prasad, the Indian general commanding officer in Lahore sector. When the general was fired upon by Pakistani forces, he "ran away". "On learning that, Lt. Gen. Harbakash Singh and the corps commander drove in a Jonga to the battlefront. Army commander found that the enemy (PAF) air attack had created a havoc on G.T. Road. (Indian) Vehicles were burning and several vehicles of 15 Division abandoned on the road, the drivers having run away, leaving some of the engines still running. Maj. Gen. Niranjan Prasad was hiding in a recently irrigated sugar cane field. As described by Harabakash Singh: "He (Prasad) came out to receive us, with his boots covered with wet mud. He had no head cover, nor was he wearing any badges of his rank. He had stubble on his face, not having shaved." Seeing him in such a stage, Harbakhash Singh asked him: "Whether he was the General Officer commanding a division or a coolie? Why had he removed badges of rank and not shaved? Niranjan Prasad had no answer."
Pradhan's book contains many different entries by Indian Defense Minister Y.B. Chavan. A Sept 9, 1965 entry reads: Had a very hard day on all fronts. Very fierce counter-attacks mounted and we are required to withdraw in Kasur area. COAS was somewhat uncertain of himself. I suggested to him that he should go in forward areas so that he will be in touch of realities. He said he would go next day.
In Line of Duty: A Soldier Remembers, Lt Gen Harbakhsh Singh reveals that not only did Gen Chowdhury play a very small role in the entire campaign, he was so nervous as to be on the verge of losing half of Punjab to Pakistan, including the city of Amritsar. Harbakhsh describes, in clinical detail, how our own offensive in the Lahore sector had come unhinged. The general commanding the division on Ichchogil canal fled in panic, leaving his jeep, its wireless running and the briefcase containing sensitive documents that were then routinely read on Radio Pakistan during the war. Singh wanted to court martial him, Chowdhury let him get away with resignation.
According to Shekhar Gupta, the editor of Indian Express, Harbkhash Singh recounts that a bigger disaster struck a bit to the south where the other division cracked up in assault, just as it encountered a bit of resistance. Several infantry battalions, short on battle inoculation, deserted and Singh gives a hair-raising account – and confirmation of a long-debated rumor – that Chowdhury panicked so badly he ordered him to withdraw to a new defensive line behind the Beas, thereby conceding half of Punjab to Pakistan. Singh describes the conversation with Chowdhury at Ambala where he refused to carry out the order, asking his chief to either put it down in writing or visit the front and take charge of the battle.
The London Daily Mirror reported in 1965:
"There is a smell of death in the burning Pakistan sun. For it was here that India's attacking forces came to a dead stop.
"During the night they threw in every reinforcement they could find. But wave after wave of attacks were repulsed by the Pakistanis"
Source: https://defence.pk/threads/100-indi...akh-more-to-come.439980/page-14#ixzz4ExGtUK8a
Really What Happen in
Battle of Burki
Despite Of you 10 Sarbe few Pakistani fighter jets were called in to provide air cover for Pakistani troops and to target Indian positions
The limited number of jets and the easy availability of trench and defensive structures for cover added to the ineffectiveness of Pakistani air operations. As a result, after intense fighting, Indian infantry captured Burki on 11 September and held it throughout the rest of the war despite the use of defensive structures like trenches and pillboxes as well as anti-tank weapons by Pakistani defenders during the defence of Burk
Really What Happen in
Battle of Burki
Despite Of you 10 Sarbe few Pakistani fighter jets were called in to provide air cover for Pakistani troops and to target Indian positions
The limited number of jets and the easy availability of trench and defensive structures for cover added to the ineffectiveness of Pakistani air operations. As a result, after intense fighting, Indian infantry captured Burki on 11 September and held it throughout the rest of the war despite the use of defensive structures like trenches and pillboxes as well as anti-tank weapons by Pakistani defenders during the defence of Burk
Same Later Again And Again Propaganda
This
Brigadier Niranjan Singh
Brigadier Niranjan Singh shows the false outer wall of one of the pill boxes captured in the Battle of Dograi.
He Was Captured Pakistani territory
This Reality On ground
How many times are you going to post pics from the same battle .. it's ironic.
It's imbarassimg when you lose quarter of your airforce to an airforce you outnumber almost 4:1.
@Windjammer
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Read the Date Letter And It Will call your Bluff & PropogandaAnd this is how it ended;
View attachment 319198
1965 War, the Inside Story by R.D. Pradhan:
In Chapter 8 titled "Of Cowardice and Panic", the author describes the cowardice of Maj. Gen. Niranjan Prasad, the Indian general commanding officer in Lahore sector. When the general was fired upon by Pakistani forces, he "ran away". "On learning that, Lt. Gen. Harbakash Singh and the corps commander drove in a Jonga to the battlefront. Army commander found that the enemy (PAF) air attack had created a havoc on G.T. Road. (Indian) Vehicles were burning and several vehicles of 15 Division abandoned on the road, the drivers having run away, leaving some of the engines still running. Maj. Gen. Niranjan Prasad was hiding in a recently irrigated sugar cane field. As described by Harabakash Singh: "He (Prasad) came out to receive us, with his boots covered with wet mud. He had no head cover, nor was he wearing any badges of his rank. He had stubble on his face, not having shaved." Seeing him in such a stage, Harbakhash Singh asked him: "Whether he was the General Officer commanding a division or a coolie? Why had he removed badges of rank and not shaved? Niranjan Prasad had no answer."
View attachment 319199
Fukwit Maj General Nirangan Prasad was the GOC incharge of the 15th Infantry Division commanding Lahore sector.
Read the Date Letter And It Will call your Bluff & Propoganda
"A Sept 9, 1965 entry reads: Had a very hard day on all fronts. Very fierce counter-attacks mounted and we are required to withdraw in Kasur area. COAS was somewhat uncertain of himself. I suggested to him that he should go in forward areas so that he will be in touch of realities. He said he would go next day.
After the capture of Burki, the Indian advance continued towards Dograi, a town in the immediate vicinity of Lahore. They subsequently went on to capture Dograi on 20 September, thus bringing the main city of Lahore within range of India tank fire
Capture Of Dograi is Conducted At 20 September Even after Battle chawinda 18 – 19 September So Indian advance continued
Brigadier Niranjan Singh
Brigadier Niranjan Singh shows the false outer wall of one of the pill boxes captured in the Battle of Dograi.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahore_Front
Heli copter Downed by AAA tell be How Much territory Lost@DESERT FIGHTER ,
Apart from the IAF Surrendered Gnat and the Ouragan (Above) don't forget to complete the list of air assets also surrendered by the Indian army.
Dograi captured At 20 September after Battle of ChawindaYour stupidity is blinding..
A Pakistani soldier wrote "14.2 Bloody Miles" after capture of Burki village.
Who gives two monkeys about what Bharat Ratshit writes,Heli copter Downed by AAA tell be How Much territory Lost
Hasty Retreat
Indian troops looking at a bridge, across the Ichogil Canal, that was destroyed by the Pakistani Army during their hasty retreat.(PA running )
India held about 200 square miles (518 square kilometres) of Pakistani territory in the Sialkot sector including the towns and villages of Phillora, Deoli, Bajragarhi, Suchetgarh, Pagowal, Chaprar, Muhadpur, Tilakpur south east and east of Sialkot city, which were returned to Pakistan
Dograi captured At 20 September after Battle of Chawinda
Dograi, Lahore
Concrete pill boxes in Dograi, Lahore proved to be a tough nut to crack, as they even withstood artillery shelling! These formidable defences were finally captured in hand-to-hand combat by the 3 Jat.
Even after the capture of Dograi on 20–21 September no attempt was made to capture Lahore and the main assault on Lahore was not launched because a ceasefire was to be signed in the following couple of days and it was known that the city would have been given back to even if it was captured. By choosing to attack Lahore, the Indians had managed to relieve pressure from Chumb and Akhnoor in Kashmir, forcing the Pakistan Army to defend further south
At the end of hostilities on 23 September India retained Between 140 square miles(War Despatches by Lt. Gen.Harbaksh Singh)and 360 square kilometres(official Indian History of 1965 war) of Pakistani territory in the lahore front including major villages of Bedian,Barki,Padri,Dograi,Bhasin and Ichhogil uttar along the eastern bank of the Ichhogil canal.Pakistan only gained small tract of land in Khem Karan of 52 square kilometres
Singh, Lt. Gen. Harbaksh (1991). War Despatches. Lancer International. p. 124.ISBN 81-7062-117-8.
Rakshak, Bharat. "Official History Of 1965 war chapt 11, pg 22" (PDF). Official History. Times of India. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahore_Front