Joe, if you read about Tikka Khan from his contemporaries.. the man was a complete "Jeeves". He was a good tactician.. but also an order follower.. who gave the orders?
Truthfully speaking, no, I had not got this side of Tikka Khan at all. That is a very interesting input, albeit, in the light of your further remarks, a blood-curdling one. Who gave the orders? Was it the clique at Dhaka, Rao Farman Ali and others? Or was it direct from West Pakistan, from Yahya himself. Strangely, most accounts of Yahya
before he became CMLA talk of him as a soldiers' soldier, although a self-indulgent one. I find it hard to believe that he would give such brutal orders. But then, on the other hand, he was desperate.
What do
you think happened? Someone panicked, and ordered this frightfulness, but who was it? Or was it a committee decision? All I know for sure is that a general who later became an extremely successful diplomat withdrew from the situation as soon as he was able to.
I have to confess that I know little about the Pakistani side of things, for several reasons.
For one, it was too close a thing for me to read about in an objective way; all of us were in tears of frustration and anger at Mrs. G. having betrayed the Bengalis and the Bangladeshis. We really hated her for a few months. The preparations were kept very quiet.
For another, after the surrender at Dhaka, there was total disbelief. Thirteen days! That was wizard. The swiftness and completeness was overwhelming. This, against an enemy that had fought hard and very well in 65.
For a third, my uncle the DNI opened up, and gave us snippets of information when he came home (he was operating out of Delhi, but camped frequently in Calcutta, where he had nothing to do with the family). It was hair-raising stuff, and kept us from asking other questions.
Did I mention the celebrations? There is a picture which I have kept away from PDF, because it would be irritating for some to see, a picture of the dinner guests some time in December 71, with the Aroras, Col. Osmani, Jake, Siddhartha Ray, the chief of the refugee camps, and three of us children, posing with my parents, the hosts.
All said and done, it was only Z. A. Khan's The Way It Was which first gave me a flavour of the Pakistani side of the whole thing. Fortunately, it was a brilliant book, written in a laconic, disillusioned style which is quite inimitable. Deadpan, if words can be deadpan, also unsparing.
I said this at length because your comment was quite startling, and completely contrary to impressions one had of Tikka Khan. There is so much to learn.
As I said.. "Jeeves". Dont rock the boat.. help out.
Oh my God. I get it now. Of course.
Then how on earth did Gen.Tikka Khan get elevated to Generalship? And did he not also become COAS?
That apart, Tikka Khan was the man who let loose the "reign of terror" in East Pakistan and also earned the title of "Butcher of Balochistan". On whose orders did he do all of that?
The one officer who came out creditably in East Pakistan at the levels of Higher Command was Lt.Gen.Sahibzada Yakub Khan; who went to make a sterling career as a diplomat. Even Adm.S.M.Ahsan comes off well out of that episode in History.
I was referring to Sahibzada Yaqub Khan too, in the mention I made in my post.