Indus Pakistan
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^^^
Agreed. Any Indian jokers from Cheenai, Bagalaru or whatever needing elemantary lesson on IVC read on. The two defining sites of the IVC are Mohenjo Daro and Harrapa.Yes, I know there are a few bread crumbs in adjacent areas of Afghanistan and India but the epicentres are in Pakistan. Click and confirm.
Mohenjo Daro is in Sindh .............Mohenjo-daro - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harrapa is in Punjab, Pakistan ......Harappa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And we all know like Pakistan Nationalist said what Nile is to Eygpt, Indus is to Pakistan. No Indus and Pakistan would wither and die. IVC was a gift of the Indus and modern Pakistan is a gift of the Indus.
Going back to the British Indian Army - It is important to append it with the word British because the title Indian Army gives the impression that this was same as the modern Indian Army. The British Indian Army was a British force at the service of the crown and accordingly was officered by the British and took orders from London. Its enlisted men were recruited from todays Pakistan, India, Nepal, and Bangladesh which was then a British enslaved colony known as British India.
Having said this valour is valour. I would like to list men from what is now Pakistan who won the highest British award for bravery.
Victoria Cross holders.
1. Haider Ali - Italy,1945 - Frontier Force Rifles
2. Abdul Hafiz - Imphal, 1944 - Jat Infantry.
3. Fazal Din - Burma, 1945 - Baloch Regiment.
4. Khudad Khan - Belguim, 1914 - 129th Balochi Regiment.
5. Mir Dast - Belguim, 1915 - 55th Coke's Rifles.
6. Shahamd Khan - Iraq, 1916. - Punjab Regiment.
7. Sher Shah - Burma, 1945 - 16th Punjab Regiment.
List of Victoria Cross recipients by nationality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Again let me reiterate the above list comes under, British Indian because present day Pakistan, India and Bangladesh had not yet become independant. But I base my list from whence they actually came from. For example Haider Ali was from Hangu which isin K-P, Pakistan today. Most of these men's regiments were allocated to Pakistan Army in 1947 and continue to exist. This list is not bad far a small area of South Asia. I accept that these men fought [many died ] for a foreign master the British but I just want to recognize bravery here.
Most of these men were from poor villages who just joined up to make a living - I don't think they thought through or reflected on this profoundly. The were simple, poor probably illiterate men. Sadly Shahamd Khan in all probably fought and was killed against his ownbrother Turks because his regiment, the punjab fought in Iraq in Iraq 1916 which was part of Ottoman Empire than. I did read though that some units of the regiment refused or deserted when they found out who they were fighting against.
Finally on the other side of the coin no place in British India gave the British more grief than the frontier area of what is now Pakistan. Tribes here fought regular pitched battles against the British which is why the largest combat military bases of the British Army were based in what is now Pakistan. Indeed the future Prime Minister of Britain Winston Churchill almost was killed here.
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Voldemort Can you give a link that confirms that most of what is now Pakistan came under Maratta rule? I don't think they even stepped a foot in what is now Pakistan.
Agreed. Any Indian jokers from Cheenai, Bagalaru or whatever needing elemantary lesson on IVC read on. The two defining sites of the IVC are Mohenjo Daro and Harrapa.Yes, I know there are a few bread crumbs in adjacent areas of Afghanistan and India but the epicentres are in Pakistan. Click and confirm.
Mohenjo Daro is in Sindh .............Mohenjo-daro - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harrapa is in Punjab, Pakistan ......Harappa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And we all know like Pakistan Nationalist said what Nile is to Eygpt, Indus is to Pakistan. No Indus and Pakistan would wither and die. IVC was a gift of the Indus and modern Pakistan is a gift of the Indus.
Going back to the British Indian Army - It is important to append it with the word British because the title Indian Army gives the impression that this was same as the modern Indian Army. The British Indian Army was a British force at the service of the crown and accordingly was officered by the British and took orders from London. Its enlisted men were recruited from todays Pakistan, India, Nepal, and Bangladesh which was then a British enslaved colony known as British India.
Having said this valour is valour. I would like to list men from what is now Pakistan who won the highest British award for bravery.
Victoria Cross holders.
1. Haider Ali - Italy,1945 - Frontier Force Rifles
2. Abdul Hafiz - Imphal, 1944 - Jat Infantry.
3. Fazal Din - Burma, 1945 - Baloch Regiment.
4. Khudad Khan - Belguim, 1914 - 129th Balochi Regiment.
5. Mir Dast - Belguim, 1915 - 55th Coke's Rifles.
6. Shahamd Khan - Iraq, 1916. - Punjab Regiment.
7. Sher Shah - Burma, 1945 - 16th Punjab Regiment.
List of Victoria Cross recipients by nationality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Again let me reiterate the above list comes under, British Indian because present day Pakistan, India and Bangladesh had not yet become independant. But I base my list from whence they actually came from. For example Haider Ali was from Hangu which isin K-P, Pakistan today. Most of these men's regiments were allocated to Pakistan Army in 1947 and continue to exist. This list is not bad far a small area of South Asia. I accept that these men fought [many died ] for a foreign master the British but I just want to recognize bravery here.
Most of these men were from poor villages who just joined up to make a living - I don't think they thought through or reflected on this profoundly. The were simple, poor probably illiterate men. Sadly Shahamd Khan in all probably fought and was killed against his ownbrother Turks because his regiment, the punjab fought in Iraq in Iraq 1916 which was part of Ottoman Empire than. I did read though that some units of the regiment refused or deserted when they found out who they were fighting against.
Finally on the other side of the coin no place in British India gave the British more grief than the frontier area of what is now Pakistan. Tribes here fought regular pitched battles against the British which is why the largest combat military bases of the British Army were based in what is now Pakistan. Indeed the future Prime Minister of Britain Winston Churchill almost was killed here.
***
Voldemort Can you give a link that confirms that most of what is now Pakistan came under Maratta rule? I don't think they even stepped a foot in what is now Pakistan.