Well written book - complete account of all the wars right from 1947, 570 pages, If you get an opportunity you must read. ( In any case we know all facts, brilliantly written logically, well summarized below.) But then also read Operation Blue Star by KS Brar, a detailed account of the fiasco in June, 1984. Same leaders, and similar military command structure sitting in Amritsar. Similar bureaucracy, same Prime Minister, and also the other ministers. The only difference - General Shubeg was on the other side. The critical decisions were taken by the entire military command sitting in Amritsar. Then go and read books on the sikh riots in Delhi in the next few months- the only difference - PM was different with very little experience. All other players were the same, when we killed, or allowed to be killed 3000 sikhs - a race that had protected Hindus over centuries - particularly its Gurus. Another fiasco. We should not also forget a similar 'operation' perhaps conducted by KPS Gill in the golden temple, with no damages. Someone should write a book on the first and last brilliant operation, with two intermediate fiascos, and examine the structures and the men in command, who made these possible. If no one does, I will attempt - an absolute layman on these issues. Air Vice Marshal Arjun Subramaniam's new book India's Wars: A Military History, 1947-1971, which was released in New Delhi on Monday, May 16, gives the reader deep insights into the sharp military minds that shaped battlefield tactics and the precision with which they were executed. Here, Air Vice Marshal Subramaniam describes how the 1971 war reaffirmed the importance of inspirational senior leadership in battle and heralded the emergence of a new fighting class amongst younger officers and men of India's armed forces. IMAGE: 'There are no good troops or bad troops, only good or bad leaders.' Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw and other Indian military commanders proved that adage right in 1971. Photograph: Kind Courtesy Major General B N B M Prasad and DPR Photo Division Archives Deception was executed successfully as a mission of war by concealing the presence of the aircraft carrier INS Vikrant as it lay in wait in the Andamans. With the Indian Navy's Carrier Battle Group performing well in the Bay of Bengal, concepts of 'sea control' took seed in the Indian Navy as it sought to build significant asymmetry vis-a-vis the Pakistan navy. One of the biggest strategic and operational 'ifs' of the 1971 war would have been: 'If' Manekshaw had acquiesced in Indira Gandhi's compulsions of wanting to go into East Pakistan in April 1971, would there have been a different end result? This would have meant that India's field commanders would have operated in an intelligence vacuum similar to the one that existed on the western front. The second reason for a different outcome would have been the absence of an 'enveloping strategy' that Manekshaw had envisaged. Manekshaw's staff had candidly told him that in the option for an operation in April/May, it was only the 'western option' with an entry into East Pakistan from Bengal that could be supported logistically. Considering the larger distance from the west to Dacca and the more than formidable river obstacles, whether Dacca could have been threatened in the time frame that it eventually was would be well next to impossible to predict. In the desert sector too, 'if' the commander of the Southern Army Command, Lieutenant General Bewoor, had had a backup force, he could have been more aggressive; if' Major General Khambatta, the divisional commander of 12 Infantry Division, had cut off the Pakistan army's 18 Division as it retreated after getting a bloody nose at Longewala despite all his logistics and terrain constraints; 'if' the IAF had been less ecstatic about its exploits at Longewala and pursued the retreating Pakistani brigade in close coordination with 12 Infantry Division; the Indian forces could have scored a major victory in the desert and even contemplated threatening the town of Rahim Yar Khan. The immense pressure exerted on him by a 'manoeuvrist' commander in the form of Sagat Singh, who used the third dimension of aerial pressure effectively in tandem with the Tangail paradrop, effectively broke his will to resist. Commenting on the contribution of operational commanders and staff at headquarters, Shammi Mehta says: In Krishnan, Kohli and Swaraj Prakash, (Chief of the Naval Staff) Admiral (S M) Nanda had chosen an excellent team to execute the naval campaigns on the eastern and western seaboards. What then were the leadership traits of the successful field commanders of the Indian armed forces in the 1971 war? However, it was not too difficult to single out the one operational leader who stood head and shoulders over the rest -- Sagat Singh. What of the younger lot? They were represented by officers and men like Hoshiar Singh, Arun Khetrapal, Albert Ekka, Don Lazarus, Nirmaljit Sekhon, Arun Prakash, and Bahadur Nariman Kavina, who commanded INS Nipat, the missile boat during the Karachi attack. The 1971 war further demolished the martial race proposition, with troops from the southern part of India and the tribal belt of central India acquitting themselves with honour in various battles, foremost amongst them being in the battles of Akhaura, Basantar and Shakargarh. Brilliant commanders and brave men won India the 1971 War
May 17, 2016 12:27 IST
Published with the author's kind and gracious permission.
Lieutenant General A A K Niazi, the Pakistan army commander in East Pakistan, signs the Instrument of Surrender, before Lieutenant General Jagjit Singh Aurora, General Officer Commanding in Chief, Eastern Command, December 16, 1971. Photograph: DPR Photo Division Archives Identifying talent and nurturing it for operational effect seemed to be the forte of all the three chiefs. While Manekshaw placed all the talented officers who had worked with him at Eastern Command, Defence Services Staff College and Infantry School, like Lieutenant General Aurora, Major General Jacob, Lieutenant General Sagat Singh and Major General Inder Gill, in key positions prior to the 1971 war, (Air Chief Marshal P C) Lal too had his men like Malse, Wollen and Chandan Singh as his point men at key places. www.keralites.net
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