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Why it's important to remember the 1965 war between India and Pakistan

Manas

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Why it's important to remember the 1965 war between India and Pakistan | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis



Although the period of June-July every year is normally regarded as the time when the 1999 Kargil conflict between India and Pakistan is remembered and discussed, 2015 is perhaps the right time to understand the genesis of the war that Pakistan initiated and lost half a century ago.

Several factors, not the least the belief among some of Ayub Khan’s hawkish advisers that the general population in Kashmir valley was ready to rise in revolt against India, led Ayub to go along with, what later turned out to be a militarily unsound operational plan. Pakistan’s Military Intelligence and the Foreign Ministry (headed by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto) were of the view that from late 1964 onwards, there was a surge in anti-India feelings in the Kashmir valley and the people would be more than willing to welcome Pakistani intervention.

Newspaper reports of the time suggest that the shelling and firing across the CFL (Ceasefire Line, as the Line of Control or LoC was then known), intrusions and other provocative activities increased manifold between January and July 1965. The Army recorded some 1800 such activities in that period as compared to just about 522 in the same period in 1964. In June and July 1965, there were at least half a dozen firing incidents daily across the CFL. The ceasefire violations preceded what was to be one of the largest infiltrations planned and executed by Pakistan — much larger in scope than that in Kargil in 1999.

There is consensus among various personal accounts of the 1965 war and newspaper reports of that period that the scheme of infiltration was planned in Pak-Occupied Kashmir (Azad Kashmir) under the overall command of Major General Akhtar Hussain Malik, the then GoC of Pakistan’s 12 Division. All the four sector commanders under Major General Malik were made responsible for organising, training and launching of infiltrators groups from their areas of responsibility. These groups, numbering some 30,000 men, were named the Gibraltar Force. The aim of Operation Gibraltar was clearly laid down - to ‘create large-scale disturbances in Indian-held Kashmir which would force India to take major political and military steps to meet the situation..’

However, the Pakistan army’s Commander-in-Chief Mohammad Musa was not entirely convinced about Operation Gibraltar. In a telling comment, General Musa wrote: “The policy-makers thwarted the professional assessment and advice on matters having grave military implications because of their miscalculation of the politico-strategic situation and the over-ambitiousness of a few individuals involved in decision-making who were prompted by their desire to achieve some quick and spectacular results in Kashmir by clandestine operations.” Musa was mainly talking about Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who had prevailed upon President Mohammad Ayub, that the time was ripe to wrest Kashmir from India once and for all. Fifty years on, it is difficult to believe that the Pakistani Army — currently considered as the ‘deep state’ and perhaps the final arbiter of the nation’s destiny — could have been overruled by a politician like Bhutto.

There were other factors too that contributed to Pakistan’s swagger that time. One, Pakistan was confident that China, its new found ally and friend would make a threatening move against India, if only to keep some of its newly raised formations in the East from being moved into Kashmir. Two, Pakistan’s army was convinced that the modern arms and platforms supplied by the United States were far superior to the Indian army’s World War II vintage armoury, giving it a distinct advantage in any possible conflict.

In 1954, America agreed to arm up to five divisions of the Pakistani Army with the latest weapons and supply modern fighter jets. A Pakistani author has cited how the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) received a massive boost from America. According to one estimate, between 1956 and 1964 Pakistan was supplied with 100 F-86 Sabre jets, one squadron of F-104 Star Fighters, 30 B-57 bombers and four C-130 transport aircrafts, allowing it to narrow the gap with India. In 1965, the Pakistani Army’s armour strength was superior to that of the Indian Army.

The London-based IISS handbook on Military Balance (1965) revealed that Pakistan had 765 tanks in all, against India’s 720 in 1965. Pakistan had nine regiments of the latest Patton tanks supplied by the US, nine regiments of Shermans and three Regiments of Chaffees. India, on the other hand was saddled with right regiments of Shermans, four regiments of Centurians and two regiments of AMX-XIIIs. Pakistan’s artillery too was far superior in quality compared to India’s. While it had one heavy regiment of 155 mm guns and eight-inch Howitzers, India was mostly doing with 120 mm mortars and one heavy regiment of 7.2 inch guns.

Meanwhile, even as China-Pakistan ties were growing stronger, the American military aid continued unabated. Alarmed at the developments, India under Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and his defence minister YB Chavan (appointed by Jawaharlal Nehru in November 1962) took counter-measures to re-arm, expand and modernise the Indian military. Arms assistance from the Soviet Union was gratefully accepted. Yet, India was in no position to wage another war in 1965, having suffered a morale-shattering defeat in 1962. The three services were in the middle of a modernisation and expansion phase and therefore not fully trained or battle ready.

This was indeed one of the reasons why Ayub Khan and his ambitious Foreign Minister Bhutto were keen to press home the advantage that Pakistan seemed to enjoy in that particular period by launching an action that would free Kashmir from India’s ‘clutches.’

Moreover, the Pakistani leadership was not overly impressed by Nehru’s successor, Shastri and assessed that he was a pushover.

Economically too, Pakistan in that period was doing better than India. Politically, Sheikh Abdullah’s falling out with India was seen as an opportune moment by Pakistan, who felt that the Kashmiri population would support an instigated rebellion against India.

That Bhutto and Ayub were proved wrong, both in their assessment about the ‘loyalties’ of the Kashmiris and underestimating the strength and resilience of the Indian military, is a matter of history. After initial setbacks, the Indian Army not only thwarted the Pakistani offensive but also in September 1965, marched right into the heart of Pakistan: Lahore.

Only an UN intervention saved Pakistan the blushes. As India gears up to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the 1965 victory a couple of months from now, it is important to remember Pakistan’s perfidy half a century ago.

The author is currently writing a book on the 1965 war between India and Pakistan.
 
always remember , never forget

1965-India-Pakistan-War-Memorabilia-The-Australian-newspaper-14-September-1965-edition-Photos-and-Mementos-of-1965-Indo-Pak-War.jpg
 
1965 win was great win for India. But do India need to celebrate it?
 
Wars are nothing to celebrate. Thousands of people would have lost their life. What is it going to achieve apart from needling our western neighbor? Seems childish.
Not celebrating war, but victory.
 
1965 war did not end up exactly the way India would have wanted to. India was caught on its backfoot and just managed to hold its own against a surprise Pakistani attack. To recover from 1965 so quickly and launch the successful 1971 campaign was sheer genius.
 
And to survive and recover from the 1962 debacle
AND yet put up quite a credible fight in 1965 was very impressive

Be sensible. 1962 was due to Indian carelessness. IAF was never mobilised and the war reports are still classified. But at least the excuse was there that China had the world's largest army.

Pakistan is a smaller country than India and yet India had to struggle against Pakistan. Why is that? India being the larger country should have a natural dominance over Pakistan. 1965 did not turn out a favorable war for India.
 
Indo Sino war 20 Oct – 21 Nov 1962 resulted in the annexation of Kashmir land by the Chinese. but Pakistan and China engaged in negotiations on October 13, 1962 and after that only war started against India. India was not expecting that any war will take place and by March 1963 Pakistan ceded Kashmir land to China and accepted Soveriginity over the Kashmir land which belongs to India.

Then by October 1964 , China conducted Nuclear Test and then again Pakistan started the war August – 23 September 1965 in which Pakistan was backed by Chinese.
 
Indo Sino war 20 Oct – 21 Nov 1962 resulted in the annexation of Kashmir land by the Chinese. but Pakistan and China engaged in negotiations on October 13, 1962 and after that only war started against India. India was not expecting that any war will take place and by March 1963 Pakistan ceded Kashmir land to China and accepted Soveriginity over the Kashmir land which belongs to India.

That's hogwash. The Pakistanis were just as nervous of China. They were scared that a successful Panchsheel agreement with India would secure India's eastern border and allow them to focus exclusively on their western frontier.

And the war of 1962 was not unexpected. There were warning signs of Chinese build-up but for some reason Nehru did not pay heed. It was a mess in 1962 and the Brooks Henderson report is still classified.
 
That's hogwash. The Pakistanis were just as nervous of China. They were scared that a successful Panchsheel agreement with India would secure India's eastern border and allow them to focus exclusively on their western frontier.

And the war of 1962 was not unexpected. There were warning signs of Chinese build-up but for some reason Nehru did not pay heed. It was a mess in 1962 and the Brooks Henderson report is still classified.

The Panchsheel met its end just three months after its signing, when the Chinese were found violating Indian borders in Ladakh in late-1954.

PRC was fighting with the Tibetans before 1951 and by 1954 Uighurs refugees crossed into Tajakistan SSR , Tibetans refugees started to pour in India from 1959 as the Dalai Lama fled to India and took refugee along with 100,000 Tibetan refugees. PRC used heavy handed policy in the region and during the 1962 war, Indian forces were hardly 12,000 stationed .



Pakistan even during that time played the Kashmir card and engaged with Chinese and accepted Chinese soverignity over the territory which was dispute between India and China and shortly after the Chinese Nuclear test in 1964, Pakistan was fully armed by the Chinese in 1965 war but Indians were prepared during that time.
 
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