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Maj
(Retd) AGHA HUMAYUN AMIN from WASHINGTON DC does a detailed analysis of
Pakistan Army’s attempt to capture AKHNUR in 1965. INTRODUCTION The
aim of this article is to discuss “Operation Grand Slam” in the
overall context of the 1965 War, assessing its strategic significance, and
the various controversies surrounding it. The
Kashmir problem shaped the future of Indo-Pak Sub-Continental politics
from 1947 onwards and led to the militarisation of India and Pakistan. The
Poonch Valley link road connecting Jammu with Poonch Valley, the second
largest valley of Kashmir, was a hot favourite military objective of
military planners in Pakistan, right from 1947-48. One of the major
military objectives of the 1947-48 War was to harass Indian communications
around Jammu in areas Akhnur and Kathua.1 Beri Pattan Bridge over River
Tawi a few miles south-east of Nowshera on this road was the main
objective of a planned Pakistani armoured brigade and infantry brigade
attack code named “Operation
Venus” in December 1948.2 As a matter of fact one of the reasons which
motivated the Indian Government, in 1948, into requesting for a complete
ceasefire may have been its anxiety to avoid a major battle, opposite its
communications to the Poonch Valley.3 The Pakistani governments, calling
off the projected “Operation Venus”, and acceptance of this ceasefire
offer and final ceasefire with effect from night 31 December 1948 and 1st
January 1949, was later much criticised in Pakistan. Claims were made that
the Pakistani Government agreed to a ceasefire “to the army’s
horror” at a time when military victory was within Pakistan’s grasp!4
A Pakistani officer who was then commanding
the infantry brigade strike force tasked to execute “Operation Venus”,
much later in 1976 claimed that, had the operation been launched, he could
have been in Jammu within 24 hours and into Pathankot and Gurdaspur in the
next 24 hours! 5 Thus
when “Operation Grand Slam” was conceived and launched in 1965 history
was repeating itself and as later events turned out, ironically history
repeated itself, in terms of irresolution and indecisiveness on part of
Pakistan’s highest military and
political leadership. The bluff self-promoted Field Marshal from a
so-called martial area proved himself as indecisive as the Hindustani
Muslim Prime Minister of 1948 who was much criticised by many
intellectuals in Pakistan6 for indecisiveness and timidity in the 1947-48
War. History repeated itself for the second time in 1999 when a smaller
scale military operation was called off in Kargil. The man accused of
timidity on this occasion was a Punjabi (Kashmiri) Prime Minister! The
35th anniversary of the 1965 War demands that we in the Indo-Pak
Sub-Continent must re-assess the validity of the historical life scripts
into which past experiences have programmed us! It is a vain hope since
most human beings despite all advancement in civilisation are dominated by
absurd urges! OPERATION
GRAND SLAM Background 1965
was an eventful year in Indo-Pak history. The Pakistani military ruler
Ayub emerged victorious in the Presidential elections held in January 1965
amidst allegations of rigging. This factor created a desire in Ayub to
improve his political image by a limited gain in the realm of foreign
relations. He got an opportunity to do so in April 1965 over a minor
border dispute with India in the Rann of Kutch area. The Pakistan Army
dominated the skirmishes in the Rann area as a result of which a climate
of overconfidence was created in the Pakistani military and political
establishment.7 In
May 1965 following the jubilation in Pakistan because of the Rann affair
Ayub became keen to launch the proposed “Operation Gibraltar”: a
proposed plan to launch guerrillas into Indian held Kashmir with the
objective of creating a popular uprising, finally forcing India to,
abandon Kashmir. Ayub went to
Murree on 13 May 1965 to attend a briefing on the conduct of Operation
Gibraltar.8 We will not go into the controversy surrounding this plan,
which is basically an exercise in futility, and mud slinging initiated by
some self-styled experts, motivated largely by personal rivalry and
ulterior biases, since the prime aim of this article is to discuss the
military significance of Operation Grand Slam and its connection with
“Operation Gibraltar”. In this briefing Ayub “examined”
the “Operation Gibraltar” plan prepared by Major General Akhtar
Malik, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 12 Division. The 12 Division
was responsible for the defence of the entire border of Pakistan occupied
Kashmir from Ladakh in the north till Chamb near the internationally
recognised border to the south. It was during this briefing that Ayub
suggested that the 12 Division should also capture Akhnur.9 This attack
was codenamed “Operation Grand Slam”. General Musa, the then C in C
Army and Altaf Gauhar the then Information Secretary and Ayub’s
close confidant, the two principal defenders of Ayub have not given any
explanation about what exactly was the strategic rationale of “Grand
Slam” and what was its proposed timing in relation to “Operation
Gibraltar”. We will discuss this aspect in detail in the last portion of
this article. OPERATION
“GIBRALTAR” The
confusion in history writing in Pakistan may be gauged from the fact that
Shaukat Riza’s book on 1965 War, despite being Pakistan Army’s
official account does not contain the two words “Operation Gibraltar”!
It appears that the idea of launching a guerrilla war in Indian held
Kashmir was in vogue since the 1950s. Major General Mitha confirms in his
GHQ inspired book, written soon after publication of Gul Hassan Khan’s
memoirs10 that had outraged the Pakistani GHQ that he heard ideas that
such an operation should be launched since 1958.11 Mitha claims that from
1958 to 1961 he had advised that “such operations had no chance of
success and each time F.M Ayub Khan had agreed with me and vetoed the
suggestions”.12 General Gul Hassan states that the secret “Kashmir
Cell” formed by the Foreign Office on Ayub’s orders consisting of
various key officials including the DMO i.e Gul Hassan was informed by the
Foreign Secretary Aziz Ahmad that the President had ordered GHQ to prepare
two plans to encourage/provide all out support sabotage/guerrilla
operations in Indian Held Kashmir. Gul states that the decision to mount
guerrilla operations with active Pakistan Army involvement was taken after
the Rann of Katch skirmish. Altaf Gauhar who was the Information Secretary
at that time claims that the Foreign Secretary Aziz Ahmad had “convinced
himself that Pakistan was in a position to dislodge the Indians from
Kashmir” and that “Once trained Pakistani soldiers went inside Kashmir
the people of the Valley would spontaneously rise in revolt” and that
“fear of China would prevent the Indians from provoking an all out war
that would give Pakistan army the opportunity to drive the Indians out of
Kashmir just as it had done in the Rann of Kutch”. Gauhar further
claimed that the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) Directorate and the
Foreign Office drew up the plan for Operation Gibraltar.13 Pakistani
expectations, and this does not include Bhutto alone, as many self-styled
experts based on personal rivalry would much later claim; were raised to
unrealistic heights after the Rann affair and Ayub was convinced that
Gibraltar would succeed! In a written communication before the war Ayub
asserted that “As a general
rule Hindu morale would not stand more than a couple of blows delivered at
the right time and place. Such opportunities should, therefore, be sought
and exploited”.14 Gauhar
states that Mr Z.A Bhutto the Foreign Minister was so convincingly
persuasive in his advocacy of Operation Gibraltar that he convinced many
Pakistan Army officers serving in the GHQ, who in turn urged the Pakistani
C in C Musa to “bite the bullet”.15 Further Musa, the C in C much
later in 1983 claimed that Bhutto had “Brainwashed” his officers.16
These two assertions if true means that either Bhutto was a military
genius or those army officers who he convinced had no grey matter and that
the Pakistani C in C was a glorified headclerk whose function was that of
a rubber stamp rather than anything to do with higher military strategy or
operational planning. This
article is not about “Operation Gibraltar” but “Grand Slam”,
however, no discussion or analysis of Grand Slam is possible if Gibraltar
is not discussed, although in brief. Operation Gibraltar envisaged
guerrilla operations inside Indian Occupied Kashmir by a number of
guerrilla groups of roughly a battalion strength comprising of Kashmiri
Volunteers trained by Pakistan Army, Pakistan Army Special Services Group
(SSG) Commando personnel and some regular infantry troops.17 The total
strength of the “Gibraltar Force” was not more than 5,000 to 7,000 men
subdivided into five forces i.e (1) “Salahuddin Force” operating in
Srinagar Valley, (2) “Ghaznavi Force “ in Mendhar-Rajauri area, (3)
“Tariq Force” in Dras-Kargil area, (4) “Babar Force “in
Nowshera-Sundarbani area, (5) “Qasim Force” in Bandipura-Sonarwain
area, (6) “Khalid Force” in Qazinag-Naugam area, (7) “Nusrat
Force” in Tithwal-Tangdhar area, (8) “Sikandar Force” in Gurais area
and (9) “Khilji Force” in Kel-Minimarg area.18 The mission assigned to
the various Gibraltar forces was warfare in the enemy’s rear including
harassing enemy communications, destruction of bridges, logistic
installations, headquarters with a view to create conditions of an
“armed insurrection” in Kashmir finally leading to a national uprising
against Indian rule leading to liberation of Kashmir or at least parts of
it.19 The
infiltration operation of the Gibraltar Force commenced from first week of
August 1965.20 General Harbaksh Singh the C in C Indian Western Command
described the infiltration operation as “brilliant in conception”.21
The Gibraltar Forces mission was too ambitious and its achievement was
beyond its means, however, in words of Indian military writer Major K.C
Praval “Although the Gibraltar Force failed to raise a revolt, they did
succeed in creating a great deal of confusion and disorder by acts of
sabotage, violence and murder”.22 Praval
praised “Nusrat Force” which was operating in Tithwal area which in
his words “caused a great deal of damage before it could be pushed back
over the ceasefire line”.23 Indian General Harbaksh Singh in the typical
Indo-Pak style of not being intellectually honest once dealing with
assessment of enemy actions, inadvertently admitted the mental dislocation
that the Gibraltar Force had caused in the headquarters of Indian 15
Corps. Harbaksh thus stated “General Officer Commanding 15 Corps gave
the following assessment of the prevailing situation: — The maximum
success gained by the infiltrators was in the Mandi area where they had
secured local support”24 ..........
“General Officer Commanding 15 Corps in a personal signal to me
recommended the abandonment of the Hajipir offensive .....on account of
the serious tactical situation in that sector”. 25
This happened on 15th August! On 17th August 1965 General Harbaksh
Singh noted that the 15 Indian Corps Commander’s assessment of
operational situation in Kashmir was “rather too grim and gloomy”.26
Even Joginder Singh who later wrote a book to refute most of Harbaksh’s
assertions admitted in his book that “GOC XV Corps Lt Gen Katoch
appeared to be overwhelmed by the scale of infiltration”.27 The reader
may note that all this was happening despite an overwhelming Indian
numerical superiority in troops. A small example being the 25 Indian
Division area where the Indians had some 20 infantry battalions 28 at a
time when the total strength of the 12 Pakistani Division responsible for
all 400 miles of Kashmir was not more than
15 infantry battalions! 29 The
local population of Indian Held Kashmir did not co-operate with the
Gibraltar Force and by 18th August the operations of the Gibraltar Force
were considerably reduced. The Indians brought in additional troops and
the infiltration operation was checked by 20th August. As discussed
earlier the Indian 15 Corps Commander was unnerved, however, the C in C
Western Command Harbaksh Singh exhibited greater resolution and spurred
the 15 Indian Corps into launching two major counter infiltration attacks
inside Pakistan Held Kashmir to destroy the logistic bases in Hajipir
Bulge and Neelam Valley areas. Both these attacks succeeded since the 12
Division was already over stretched with single infantry battalions
holding frontages varying from 10 to 20 miles. 30 There is absolutely no
doubt that Gibraltar was an undoubted failure! The loss of Hajipir Pass,
the principal logistic base of the infiltrators on 28th August and Indian
successes in the Neelam Valley and opposite Uri on 29-31st August 1965
unnerved the Pakistani GHQ who assumed that Muzaffarabad was about to be
attacked!31 The supposed liberators of Indian Held Kashmir
were more worried now about what they had held before commencement
of hostilities! It was under these circumstances that the
Pakistani GHQ ordered execution of Grand Slam with the aim of
relieving Indian pressure against Muzaffarabad! Shaukat Riza the official
historian of the 1965 War admitted that by 31 August the Indians had
ruptured 12 Division’s defences and this was the main reason why the GHQ
decided to attack Chamb “to ease pressure on 12 Division”. Shaukat
also quoted Musa and the Chief of General Staff Sher Bahadur in stating
that the main reason why Grand Slam was launched was that “there was
danger of Indians capturing Muzaffarabad”.32 Musa in his roundabout way
of saying things did not mention Muzaffarabad but merely stated that the
main object of launching “Grand Slam” was “reducing pressure in the
north by capturing Chamb and threatening Akhnur”.33 THE
BATTLE OF Significance
of Akhnur Akhnur
Class 18 bridge 34 on the fast flowing Chenab River was the key to Indian
communications from Jammu and mainland India a group of
valleys lying south south of the Pir Panjal Range and West of
Chenab River, most prominent of which was the Poonch River Valley. The
bridge was the sole all weather lifeline of one oversized Indian infantry
division, with at least twenty infantry battalions, defending Poonch,
Rajauri, Jhangar and Nauhshera and one Independent Infantry Brigade
defending Chamb-Dewa Sector. Possession of Akhnur could enable an attacker
to threaten Jammu the key to all Indian communications from Pathankot to
Srinagar/lLadakh etc. Orientation
with the area Chamb-Jaurian
Sector is bounded by the ceasefire line from Dewa till Burjeal in the
west, the international border from Burjeal till River Chenab in the
south, various branches of River Chenab from Phulkean Salient till Akhnur
in the south and Southwest, and a range of hills between the height of
1000 to 3000 feet running in a roughly east-west direction in the north.
Some ridges run from this range of hills downwards in a north-south
direction, most prominent of which are Phagla-Sakrana Ridge located about
between a mile and two miles, eastwards from the border, followed by Tam
Ka Tilla, east of Pallanwalla and the Fatwal Ridge four miles west of
Akhnur. Average relative height of each ridge varied from 40 to 80 feet.
These ridges on the face value were minor features, however, in terms of
fields of fire and observation; their value was immense for a defender
engaged in opposing tanks. The gradient rose from north to south as well
as from west to east, and the area to the north restricted tank movement,
while the area in the south with minor boggy patches afforded excellent
manoeuvrability for tanks. Two small ridges known as Mandiala North and
South dominated Chamb village itself. The Munawar Wali Tawi running from
north to south into the Chenab River divided the sector into two halves,
was located about 7 to 8 Kilometres from the border. The Nala had a wide
bed varying from 100 yards in the north to 300 yards in the south and
steep banks, which made it a partial tank obstacle. There were various
crossing places on the Nala notably at Chamb, Mandiala, Darh and Channi
from north to south respectively. The Nala had a lot of water in summers
but maximum water depth in September was not more than four feet, thus
making it negotiable for all types of tanks. Only one partially
constructed bridge spanned the Nala near Chamb in 1965. Road
Akhnur-Jaurian Chamb to the south and Road Akhnur-Kalit-Mandiala, both
running in a east-west general alignment were two metalled roads running
almost parallel to each other connected Chamb with Akhnur. The area of
manoeuvre for tanks from the west was restricted to a 12 Kilometre gap
between Burjeal and Dewa Hills and a 7 to 8 kilometre tract from Burjeal
to the Chenab River which became relatively more boggy as one went closer
to Chenab River. Both the roads leading from Chamb to Akhnur were
intersected by Nalas running from north to south at a distance of two to
four kilometres with small ridges in between, thus reducing tank speed,
but were no obstacle for tanks. The ground all along was thus broken as
well as interspersed with dry Nalas. These Nalas restricted the
cross-country mobility of wheeled vehicles once off road. There were mango
groves and wild orchards at places, which provided adequate cover. The
area was well cultivated and in September 1965 the fields had four feet
high standing crops of millet and maize. River Chenab running from
north-east to south west in the south and the line of hills running in an
east-west direction provided natural built-in flank protection against any
tank threat, for any tank force advancing from west to east but also
restricted the movement of a tank force. In terms of tank manoeuvrability
and space for manoeuvre the area from the border in the west till Akhnur
may be described as a cylinder which is about 12 kilometres wide on the
extreme western side at its western entrance and gets progressively
narrower as one advances from west of east by virtue of a line of hills in
the north and Chenab River in the south both of which successively get
progressively closer narrowing the north-south space reducing the north
south open space gap from 12 kilometre in the west to about 3 to 4
kilometre at Akhnur. Thus in terms of tank warfare, the defenders task
became easier, as the attacker advanced from west to east since space for
manoeuvre was reduced by some one fourth.35 Indian
and Pakistani Force Composition Indian
Force Composition and Plans. Till August 1965 the Indian force defending
Chamb Jaurian consisted of the 191 Independent Infantry Brigade Group
consisting of four infantry battalions and no armour.36 In addition the
border posts were manned by two irregular battalions of Punjab Armed
Police and Jammu and Kashmir Militia Battalion. These two battalions,
however, had nominal military value like the Pakistani Rangers, by virtue
of being poorly trained/equipped. In May 1965 as part of “Operation
Ablaze” (Indian plan of mobilisation/shifting forward of forces in
Punjab in May 1965) the
Indians placed a tank
squadron of AMX-13 Light tanks under command 191 Brigade.37
Activities of the Gibraltar Force Infiltrators in Chamb-Jaurian
forced the Indians to bring in two additional infantry battalions by end
of August 1965, 38 however,
both infantry battalions reverted to their parent formations after
successfully dealing with the Gibraltar Force infiltrators by end of
August.39 In 1956, 80 Indian Infantry Brigade responsible for defence of
area Naushahra-Rajauri-Jhangar had pointed out that 191 Brigade defending
Chamb-Jaurian Sector to his left constituted a vulnerable left flank.40
The same officer as Brigadier General Staff 15 Indian Corps Kashmir
had concluded that Pakistani troops attacking from opposite Chamb could
capture Chamb and had recommended stationing of a tank regiment in the
sector, upgrading 191 Infantry Brigade to a division and construction of
an alternate bridge over the Chenab at Riasi.41 None
of these recommendations except upgradation of Akhnur Bridge to carry
AMX-13 tanks were accepted by the Indian higher headquarters! The Indian
military planners till 1965
had firmly believed that
Pakistan would not cross the international border between Chenab and
Burjeal and thus regarded the southern half of Chamb Salient as
“sacrosanct”.42 The
Indian planners had hypothesised that the most likely area of Pakistani
attack in South Kashmir was the Jhangar-Nowshera
Sector.43 The Indian defences in Chamb-Jaurian were thus not as extensive
as in other sectors of Kashmir. The Indian artillery consisted of just
one field regiment and a troop of medium guns.44 In August 1965 in
the wake of Operation Gibraltar the Indian High Command finally decided to
upgrade Chamb-Jaurian Sector to a divisional command, however, till 1st
September 196545 the area was defended by 191 Independent Infantry Brigade
directly under command 15 Indian Corps. The 10 Division headquarters staff
designated to take over the area was at this time being organised at
Bangalore in the Indian south.46 The 10 Division headquarters was assigned a time frame of
three weeks in August 1965 and ordered to take over the command of 80
Brigade and 191 Brigade by 15 September 1965 and had reached Akhnur by 28th August 1965. The headquarters had no communication
equipment and nominal staff on 1st September 1965.47 The Indian armour
consisting of a squadron of
AMX-13 Light tanks which was assigned the responsibility of anti tank
defence of the main tank approach west of Chamb. It was deployed in an
extended form two troops on a
ridge between Daur and Palla responsible for the defence of the area from
Paur in the north till a little east of Burjeal in the south, one troop in
the south in Munawar area and one troop in reserve at Barsala. On 1st
September, however, three tanks were under repair in the rear. All Indian
infantry battalion anti-tank recoilless guns were grouped under 15 Kumaon
and tasked with the anti-tank defence of the Mandiala crossing. The border
was manned by the border force irregular battalions and 3 Mahar and 6 Sikh
Light Infantry as shown on the map with 15 Kumaon and 6/5 Gurkha in depth.
15 Kumaon was deployed on the pivotal Mandiala Heights and 6/5 Gurkha was
deployed till 1st September on the Kalidhar Ridge east of River Tawi. This
Ridge it may be noted was an important feature which dominated both the
Chamb-Jaurian-Akhnur Road from the north and overlooked the
Akhnur-Naushera-Rajauri-Poonch Road from the south. Pakistani
Force Composition and Plans. Pakistan’s 12 Division Headquarters which
was also responsible for the
defence of entire Kashmir and was facing three Indian divisions and two
independent brigades was tasked to command the Grand Slam attack force.
The division was commanded by Major General Akhtar Malik described by
Shaukat Riza as a “largehearted man and a natural leader”. One whose
“subordinates never felt crowded by him, or inhibited in speaking out
their minds”.48 Another military
historian described Akhtar Malik as “an avid bridge player”.49 Akhtar
Malik was assigned two tank regiments (from 6 Armoured Division then
deployed in Gujranwala area), an independent artillery brigade (Artillery
4 Corps) consisting of three medium regiments, one field regiment, two
heavy batteries of 155 mm guns and 8 inch guns respectively, a Light
Anti-Aircraft gun battery, a corps artillery locating regiment, another
artillery brigade (Artillery 7 Division) consisting of two field regiments
and one locating regiment. His infantry component consisted of three
infantry brigades i.e Number 4 Sector (3 and a quarter infantry battalions
of the semi-regular AKRF), 10 Brigade (Two regular battalions) detached
from 7 Division and placed under command 12 Division for Grand Slam and
his own divisions, 102 Brigade (three infantry battalions).50 Akhtar Malik
moved to Kharian on 28th August with a small tactical headquarters.
Arrangements were made to exercise command of the Grand Slam force through
the communication system of the 4 Corps Artillery Brigade. The Pakistani
plan was based on three phases i.e an initial
breakthrough by two infantry brigades each supported by a tank
regiment along two points capturing the Chamb salient east of Tawi Nala,
followed by capture of Akhnur by 10 Brigade Group (including a tank
regiment) and finally a northward advance by the 102 Brigade on axis
Akhnur-Jhangar linking up with Pakistan’s 25 Brigade operating against
Indian communications in Naushera-Jhangar area with the final objective of
capturing Rajauri51 which
Pakistan had lost earlier to an Indian tank squadron on 12 April 1948.52 Comparison
of Strength. It is an unfortunate trait of Indo-Pak history to magnify
enemy strength and to omit mentioning own strength. The operational
situation in Chamb was thus later described in words like “the Indians
held the Chamb Valley strongly”53, or “Chamb was very well guarded.
Apart from its very strong fortifications, the Indians had by then
increased their forces in Chamb to seven battalions”.54
The following table comparing Indian and Pakistani strengths is
self explanatory:—
Execution
of We
will not discuss each and every detail of Grand Slam operations but stick
to the salient facts relevant to the overall context and scope of the
operation. The Pakistani attack commenced at 0500 hours 1st September 1965
supported by a terrific
pre-H-Hour artillery bombardment executed in the words of the Pakistani
official historian by “nine field, seven medium and two heavy
batteries” which had
commenced belching fire 55 at 0330 hours. The artillery was deployed so
boldly that medium and 8 inch howitzers were deployed ahead of field guns
56 thus increasing their range and ability to support operations for a
longer duration without redeployment. Pakistani armour which was divided
into squadrons did not do well on the 1st September and was effectively
engaged by Indian anti-tank guns and AMX-13 tanks. 11 Cavalry was checked
in the south by the two three tank troops of 20 Lancers while 13 Lancers
attacking in the north was also checked by the brilliant anti-tank gun
screen under 15 Kumaon and a single tank troop of 20 Lancers. The infantry
brigade commanders took greater interest in the work of battalions and the
first major tactical blunder of the day was committed once the southern
attacking infantry brigade i.e the 102 Brigade Commander wasted the entire
day by insisting that Burjeal a minor position must be captured despite
clear instructions of General Akhtar Malik to bypass it.57 Thus half of
102 Brigade and a squadron of 13 Lancers was committed to clear the Rome
that Burjeal was! Burjeal was finally captured at 1500 hours!58
Shaukat Riza states that it was defended by two infantry companies
of 6 Sikh but also adds that only 14 Indian soldiers were captured once it
(Burjeal) was finally cleared!59 Shaukat’s verdict on the operations of
1st September is accurate once he states that
“The Indians had only covering
troops on border outposts “but the Pakistanis failed to cross the
Tawi on 1st September as their “artillery fire was distributed”.60
This is only a partial explanation since the artillery fire was
distributed because armour was distributed and the 12 Division failed to
cross the Tawi on the first day because of the delay of 102 Brigade at
Burjeal. In any case by evening of 1st September the 191 Indian Infantry
Brigade despite all the Pakistani blunders was at its last gasp! Its sole
field artillery regiment i.e the 161 Field Artillery Regiment (14 Field
Regiment as per K.C Praval) had abandoned its guns61 as a result of
effective Pakistani artillery counterbombardment. Thus by afternoon the
Indians were supported by just one troop of Medium guns! By 6.30 in the
evening 13 Lancers finally reached the line of Tawi Nala but made no
attempt to cross it.62 The
Indian 10 Division which had assumed command by evening of 10th September
ordered the 191 Indian Infantry Brigade to withdraw to Akhnur the same
night. It also ordered 3 Mahar and 6/5 Gurkha to continue holding defences
in the Kalidhar area in the north. 191 Brigade was now tasked with defence
of Akhnur, while 41 Mountain Brigade which was concentrating at Akhnur was
ordered to “occupy the Jaurian-Troti position as quickly as
possible”.63 Chamb which had been captured by evening of 1st September
1965 was occupied by an infantry unit of the 102 Brigade at 0800 hours 2nd
September 1965.64 On 2nd September 1965 while General Akhtar Malik was
finalising arrangements for advance towards Jaurian the command of the C
in C General Musa arrived in the area of operations in a helicopter and
ordered change of command of Grand Slam, replacing General Akhtar by
General Yahya the GOC of 7 Division which was also in the same area of
operations since 28th August 1965. This happened around 1130 hours on the
morning of 2nd September 1965. 65 Brigadier
Gulzar who was provided
access to official records of the GHQ66
and whose book was published in
August 1968 i.e some 18 years before Shaukat Riza’s account,
states that change of command took place at 1100 hours.67
The Indians were equally surprised and their military historian
noted that because of this change of command the Pakistanis gave “24
hours to the Indians to strengthen their defences”!68 Brigadier Amjad
Chaudhry well summed up the feelings of the Grand Slam Force as
“Bitterly disappointed and completely at a loss to understand”!69
Yahya proceeded in a leisurely manner calling an orders group at
1430 hours and gave orders for crossing Tawi which was not held by any
troops, the 191 Indian Brigade having withdrawn to Akhnur the previous
night! The 10 Brigade supported by 13 Lancers crossed the Nala “without
any trouble” in Shaukat Riza’s words by 2130 hours 2nd September. Thus
the Indian defences continuity was not compromised despite the fact that
their 191 Brigade had withdrawn in a near rout situation. In polite
language the Indians were thus not routed but pushed back and given a
grace period of 24 hours to prepare a brigade strong defensive position on
line Troti-Jaurian over which more Pakistani blood was to be shed on 3rd
September 1965. The critical time span was not seized by the forelock and
what could have been accomplished with ease on 2nd September was postponed
to 3rd September! The readers may note that the Indians were still
outgunned in terms of armour and artillery by six to one and thus in no
position to resist a determined onslaught. The Pakistanis had, however,
lost the first major opportunity to impose strategic dislocation on the 10
Division by the 24 hour pause on 2nd September 1965. Thus when the
Pakistanis resumed advance on 3rd September the 41 Mountain Brigade
reported that it was in position at Troti-Jaurian “reasonably well
prepared to oppose the enemy”!70 Another tank squadron of 20 Lancers was
also in the same position. The Indians were not strong enough to stay in
this position but it was a
good bargain since they were trading space for time as their strategic
reserves were swiftly moving into position to launch a “Riposte”. On
3rd September Yahya ordered 10 Brigade (three battalions) with a tank
regiment under command to
attack and secure Jaurian by last
light of the same day.71 The
Indian 10 Division assumed command of the 191 Brigade and 80 Brigade by
the evening of 1st September.72 The Indian 15 Corps made frantic efforts
to remedy the situation and ordered 41 Mountain Brigade (Corps reserve) to
occupy an intermediate position at line Troti-Jaurian. It also ordered 20
Lancers (AMX-13) less two squadrons to move from Pathankot and occupy a
defensive position under command 41 Mountain Brigade at Troti-Jaurian.73
10 Brigade was to attack from Pallanwala area on two axis i.e an infantry
battalion and two tank
squadrons on axis Chamb-Akhnur in the north and a battalion and a tank
squadron on a southern axis heading towards Nawan Hamirpur and thereafter
advancing along the northern bank of River Chenab with a view to outflank
the Indians from the south.74 The 10 Brigade Commander issued his orders
at 1130 hours and advance
commenced at 1300 hours. The advance made very slow progress due to broken
terrain interspersed by a growing number of north to south aligned
watercourses (Nalas) and the Indian position at Troti-Jaurian was
contacted by 13 Lancers by approximately 1700 hours in the evening. The
right axis force reached Nawan Hamirpur by 1800 hours. The Indians now
brought in their third brigade i.e the 28 Brigade (two battalions)
deploying it in another position in the rear of 41 Brigade at
Fatwal Ridge about 4 kilometres west of Akhnur. On
morning (0800 hours) 4th
September Yahya ordered 6 Brigade of 7 Division to relieve
102 Brigade till then deployed at the line of Tawi Nala and 102
Brigade to move forward and concentrate at area Pahariwala. 10 Brigade
commenced its attack on 41 Brigade position from 1130 hours. 13 Lancers
attempted to outflank the Indian 41 Brigade’s defences between Kalit and
Troti, and made some progress but was delayed by two Indian AMX-13 Tank
troops till last light. The Indians realised that they could not hold the
41 Brigade position for long and ordered withdrawal of 41 Brigade to
Akhnur during the night of 4/5 September 1965.75 The 102 Brigade also
moved forward and two of its battalions attacked Sudhan Ki Dhok on the Tam
Ka Tilla Ridge on 5th September 1965. By evening 5th September 1965 the
leading elements of the 13 Lancers were in contact with the 28 Brigade
position on the Fatwal Ridge just four miles west of Akhnur. It was at
this stage that Musa sent the message about “teeth into the enemy and
should bite deeper and deeper”, in all probability drafted by a staff
officer who had read the exact text of Auchinleck’s message to the 8th
Army during the Tobruk battle! But later events proved that the Pakistani
GHQ, including the self- promoted field marshal of peace, only had
Ritchies, Cunninghams and Mclellans, but no Auchinlecks! The whole
situation changed on 6th September once India attacked all along the
international border opposite
Sialkot, Lahore and Kasur. The 7th Division was ordered to transfer 11
Cavalry, HQ 4 Corps Artillery Brigade and 39 Field Regiment to 1 Corps in
Ravi-Chenab Corridor.76 Grand Slam was over! ANALYSIS The
Origins of the Grand Slam and Gibraltar Controversy in Pakistani Military
History The
Grand Slam and Gibraltar controversy
instead of being handled like a military failure unfortunately
degenerated into a highly personalised affair. As a result instead of
dispassionate and constructive analysis, the real reasons for failure of
the 1965 war were substituted for analysis of minor tactics and in
settling personal scores. Mr Bhutto the principal leader of the pro-war
party in the Pakistani leadership was dismissed by Ayub from the post of
Foreign Minister and very soon became a major political opponent of Ayub.
Ayub tasked his Information Secretary and right hand man Mr Altaf Gauhar
to initiate a campaign of character assassination of Bhutto. Bhutto by no
definition an angel, like any politician
also indulged in personal attacks. The controversy was soon
overtaken by the 1968-69 political agitation, which resulted in the exit
of Ayub, and to a second military government in Pakistan. Since Yahya the
military dictator who succeeded Ayub was
one of the key figures in the Grand Slam drama the issue was
tactfully avoided by all politicians. The emergence of Bhutto in 1970
elections as the principal leader of the West Pakistan Wing once again
ignited the 1965 controversy, but again the issue became a low key affair
once Bhutto became the Prime Minister from 1971 to 1977. Grand
Slam once again made headlines once Brigadier Amjad Ali Chaudhry’s book
was published in 1977.77 Chaudhry raised doubts that Ayub may have been
influenced by USA into not capturing Akhnur and that the change of command
was merely a tactful way of slowing down the pace of operations. Amjad
also quoted Yahya as saying that he did not capture Akhnur, which as per
Amjad was within Yahya’s grasp, simply because he was ordered by the
then army high command not to do so! 78 Amjad’s book infuriated the then
government of the military usurper Zia who was engaged in a life and death
political confrontation with Bhutto and like all military governments of
Pakistan, including the present one, idolised the Ayub Government! Amjad
had also accused the US government of pressurising Ayub into not capturing
Akhnur and this was also regarded by the Zia regime as improper! The
readers may note that the change of command on 2nd September was an
outrageous decision that had shocked the participants of Grand Slam! As
per a participant the change of command question was “debated with so
much passion that GHQ had to issue instructions outlawing such talk”.79
There is substance in this assertion. Brigadier Riazul Karim a more
credible authority states that soon after the ceasefire “a rumour went around
that our senior officers were unnecessarily panicky and that the war had
been fought by brigadiers and below....this caused
a storm in the GHQ”.80 Later
on Musa the most affected party, cooked up another story that the
operations of 12 Division on 2nd September were delayed since artillery
was not deployed well forward to support further advance. This
false assertion was challenged by Brigadier Amjad Chaudhry who was a
direct participant and was the man on the spot.81 Systematic efforts as
part of a totally political plan of character assassination of Bhutto,
without realising that Grand Slam was Pakistan Army’s failure, were
undertaken during the 11-year old Zia government to re-write the history
of Pakistan. General Musa was actively assisted in writing two books which
were published some six years after Amjad’s book. Musa made up a story
to cover up the change of command on 02 September, stating that it was a
pre-arranged issue.82 The
same story was repeated by Shaukat Riza in his GHQ dictated trilogy on the
Pakistan Army.83 This was
1984-85. Finally in 1993 Gul Hassan the then Director Military Operations
memoirs were published. Gul exposed the cover up and dismissed the idea
that change of command had been pre-planned!84 Soon
after publication of Gul’s book another defender of Ayub came on the
scene ! He alleged that Grand Slam was a failure in any case! The learned
author is an intelligent man! But so was Bhutto, Aziz and many others! The
trouble starts when one intelligent man is at loggerheads with another!
Thus the resultant subjectiveness of this book, since
much of it is about another intelligent man, and defence of a
benefactor who was injured by this intelligent foe of the learned author!
Above all one who was the
author in questions enemy,
without doubt a terrible enemy!85 One about whom a close friend once said
that “with friends like him one does not need enemies”!86 The reasons
for failure of Grand Slam given
by this author, thus, were
emotional but not substantial! 10 Division, which
came from Bangalore consisted of just three
or four officers who organised a headquarters at a garbage dump in
Akhnur and was a still born baby on 1st September 1965. One whose GOC was
sacked for incompetence in 1965 war! 87 It was again a case of mixing
Bhutto with Akhtar Malik and the intricacies of the art of war! The net
result was thus a good
biography of a benefactor while simultaneously exposing the machinations
of a Machiavellian evil genius! It may have been
a best seller but was certainly not
good military history! The worst part about writing of history in
Pakistan is the fact that those who took part in the actual conduct of
operations either did not have the ability to express themselves in
writing, were too disgusted or disillusioned to do so, or did not have the
funds to get their accounts published! Military history has thus to date
been distorted! A
case of failure Lack
of resolution as well as military talent in Ayub was the most
serious drawback as far as Pakistan
Army’s conduct in 1965 War in general and Grand Slam in
particular was concerned. Subconsciously Ayub was the last man who wanted
war despite all the propaganda of Kashmir dispute. It is possible that
this hesitation had some link with Ayub’s poor or insignificant war
record in WW Two. On various occasions Ayub avoided military action. In
the 1947-48 period when many officers in Pakistan were volunteering for
participating in the Kashmir war Ayub did not show any inclination to
participate in the Kashmir war. Ayub
exhibited extreme timidity88 when the Chinese asked Pakistan to
take advantage of the India-China War and settle the Kashmir dispute by
exercising the military option. Seven years in power, however, somewhat
emboldened Ayub’s spirits and by 1965 he felt confident enough that the
Hindu who Ayub mistakenly thought as more timid than the Pakistani would
not dare to start a conventional war even if
Pakistan pinched the Hindu damsel at will, sometimes in the Rann
and sometimes in Kashmir! Even in 1965 Ayub was not interested in a war
which he wanted to avoid at all cost. This was a case of the desire to
gain the glory of martyrdom in battle without actually getting killed in
action! It was Ayub’s misfortune that he was surrounded by more
resolute, ruthlessly ambitious, albeit militarily relatively naive,
advisors like Bhutto and Aziz Ahmad
who did not have any of Ayub’s timidity. Musa, Ayub’s handpicked Chief
was the weakest link in the whole chain of command. The last person
to wish for a war in which he would be forced to exercise his
intellect in the actual conduct of modern war involving tanks divisions
and corps etc, about whose employment Musa had very rudimentary ideas. A
limited war i.e. a war in which fighting remained confined to Kashmir was
seen by Ayub as a political opportunity to enhance his prestige which had
suffered because of allegations of rigging in the 1965 elections. Thus
Operation Gibraltar which visualised a Guerrilla War leading to Kashmir
was seen by Ayub as a golden means of winning Kashmir without war and
getting all the glory reserved for the victor of a war without ever
starting an all out war! Ayub did not have the resolution to start an all
out war in 1965! He also did not have the long-term vision to understand
that India would retaliate militarily against the infiltrators sent into
Kashmir by Pakistan. Ayub thus unwittingly set fire to the fuse which triggered a
series of actions and counteractions which ultimately led to an all
out war. Later critics blamed Bhutto for doing the right things for the
wrong reasons! As a matter of fact all major actors were doing the right
things for the wrong reason! But that is what the game of power is all
about! Ayub was militarily naive enough to think that India would not
start an all out war if Pakistan went for what Ayub himself called
“India’s jugular vein”89 i.e. Akhnur. Critics think that Ayub lost
his nerves later and made an
attempt to halt the Pakistani advance by ordering change of command of the
force, since he suddenly realised that an all out war was likely if
Pakistan captured Akhnur. If this was Ayub’s motive then once again it
was too late and Ayub’s half measures and half hearted conduct of
military operations in Grand Slam harmed the Pakistani military cause in
two ways. Firstly, it provoked India to launch an all out war which Ayub
did not have the resolution to fight and which Musa did not have the
military genius to conduct! Secondly, as a result of this indecision
Pakistan failed to capture Akhnur whose loss would have led to a serious
operational imbalance in the Indian dispositions in Kashmir and would have
weakened India’s resolve to attack Lahore and opposite Chawinda without
first redressing the serious imbalance opposite Kashmir. Thus Pakistani
military/political leadership failed in both aims; ie to sever the jugular
and to prevent an all out war; and primarily because of irresolution on
part of their own higher leadership rather
than enemy resistance. Thus Ayub and his team were not propelled by a
burning desire to defeat the enemy by decisive conduct of operations but
by an essentially defensive attitude. Thus even after 6th September they
viewed Pakistani thrusts inside India not as actions taken to strike a
decisive blow on the enemy but merely as measures to reduce Indian
pressure on Lahore. The GHQ simply did
not have a forward
command and control set up designed to
vigorously prosecute the war but essentially a distant headquarter
modelled on colonial principles from where orders were issued for defence
of India. The war on the Pakistani side was thus conducted disinterestedly
because the higher leadership was simply irresolute and was not prepared
or interested in fighting the war which came as a rude shock to them once
the Indians attacked Lahore. Pakistani military writers like Shaukat
Riza’s claim that the Pakistan Army never wanted a war in 1965 but war
broke out in 1965 largely because of those accursed Machiavellian schemers
i.e. Bhutto and Aziz Ahmad; does not speak very highly about the standard
of resolution of Ayub or Musa.What is the aim of an army if it never
wanted to fight a war to
settle a just cause or to recover a territory which was at least as
official propaganda went some sort of
a Pakistani Alsace or Lorraine. It is an open secret that till this
day the Pakistan Army claims that it was the Foreign Office who got them
involved in 1965. So what did the army’s leadership want; to rule their
own people, in uninterrupted peace,creating large business empires which
made many far more prosperous than they were in 1958! Perhaps the only
positive impact of the 1965 war was the realisation in the otherwise
politically naive and docile Pakistani masses that their leaders were
essentially making a fool out of them and Kashmir was just a cheap slogan
to galvanise the masses! Unfortunately, that is what history is about! The
masses have always been mobilised by great actors who were great leaders!
Kashmir was never regarded as an issue by Ayub but was forced upon him by
the hawks like Bhutto and Aziz, off course again for the wrong reasons,
more subjective than objective, aided by military advice of Akhtar Malik.
It is an irony of Pakistani military history that these civilian hawks
possessed much greater resolution than the two soldiers leading the
country’s government and the army! Once a man lacks resolution his
conduct is vacillating and indecisive and all decisions that he makes are
compromises and half measures. But even worse is the case when a man in
total power lacks military talent or that animal instinct or talent that
enabled civilians like Cromwell, Hitler,
Stalin or Mao to do great things in the military sphere! It was a case of
military incompetence at the highest level combined with lack of
resolution! This essentially was the tragedy of the Pakistan Army in 1965.
A time when it was still possible to settle the so-called
Kashmir dispute by exercising the military option. It is best to
quote Clausewitz who gave guidelines about the philosophy of war at least
seventy five to ninety years before Ayub and Musa were born, but whose
ideas perhaps were not digested by both of them. Clausewitz said; “No
war is commenced, or, at least no war should be commenced, if people acted
wisely, without first seeking a reply to the question, what is to be
attained? The first is the final object; the other is the immediate aim.
By this chief consideration the whole course of the war is prescribed, the
extent of the means and the measure of energy are determined; its
influence manifests itself down to the smallest organ of action”.90 The
Pakistani leadership and the sycophants who courted them later laid the
entire blame for starting the war on one who had nothing to do with
soldiering and one who was not in any case the right authority for asking
the question whether the Indians would start an all out war even if their
jugular was severed !It was an irony that a soldier and not a naive
civilian was leading the country at this stage. One who was far more naive
than even Shaastri the
civilian who knew much less about soldiering but understood grand strategy
in a crystal clear manner.
The Indians however dumb their execution of war at least started it with
clear cut and definite rationale and did achieve their aim of putting an
end to military adventurism in Kashmir. The Pakistani leadership, and this
included the army chief turned president, was confused and as
a result conducted the war with most inexplicably. Responsibility
for Operation Gibraltar and possible motivation of various principal
characters Operation
Gibraltar conceived by the ISI91 as Gauhar has stated and perhaps by
Akhtar Hussain Malik and/or other people and were in vogue since 1958 was
approved by President Ayub in July 1965 and executed from 1st August 196592. This means that the operation was not a
conspiracy by the Pakistani Foreign Minister Bhutto alone or a pet of
General Akhtar but had the blessings of Ayub. Since 1977 many Pakistani
intellectuals have been wasting a lot of stationery in proving that Ayub
was an innocent bystander who was duped by his Machiavellian Foreign
Minister! This is an exercise in futility and it is high time that it is
stopped. Above all it proves that the intellectual calibre of the
Pakistani GHQ was so low that responsibility for conceiving military
operations had been abdicated to the Foreign Office! The idea was too
idealistic and naive but before it was launched its advocates included
almost everybody who mattered in the Pakistani military and political
hierarchy! Off course later with the benefit of hindsight almost all
participants tried to lay the entire blame on the Pakistani Foreign Office
and Mr Z.A Bhutto. After
1965 War an exercise was initiated to prove that Ayub Khan was duped by
his Foreign Minister into war with India! One opponent of Bhutto propelled
by a body chemistry of pure and unadulterated venom alleged that it was a
conspiracy on part of Bhutto, so that Pakistan may lose the 1965 War as a
result of which Bhutto would succeed Ayub as Pakistan’s next ruler!93 In
the final analysis it was Ayub who bears the ultimate responsibility for
ordering Gibraltar! Failure is no crime! Churchill one of the greatest
names in modern history has been accused of ordering the Gallipoli
landing, which turned out to be a blunder in terms of fallacious
execution! But the idea was brilliant, and this mind you is Liddell
Hart’s verdict! It was in execution that it failed! Continuing on this
line of thinking Ayub or Bhutto cannot be accused of blundering! War as
Clausewitz says is directed on assumptions and
“All action in war is directed on probable, not on certain
results. Whatever is wanting in certainty must be left to fate or chance,
call it, which you will. We may demand that what is so left should be as
little as possible, but only in relation to the particular case...”. To
thus rephrase Clausewitz with special reference to Gibraltar or
Grand Slam, initiating both operations was not a crime as many
including the Pakistani official historian Shaukat Riza were trying to
prove! It was failure to achieve success which was possible to achieve due
to various military organisational strategic and operational lapses, which
was a crime! The
aim of Gibraltar and Grand Slam was after all to internationalise or
defreeze the Kashmir issue . The positive aspect about Grand Slam was the
fact that unlike the most recent operation Kargil of 1999 Pakistan’s
means were more balanced in relation to its objectives.
A
word about the motivation of various principal characters in launching
Gibraltar and Grand Slam. Ayub viewed Gibraltar and Grand Slam as acts of
limited aggression like the Rann of Kutch skirmish which would force India
into negotiating on Kashmir at best and redeem his political position at
worst. Bhutto and Aziz also had similar ambitions on a smaller scale!
Akhtar Malik may have been motivated by the lust for glory, a perfectly
honourable aspiration as per Clausewitz . His minority status and humble
origins , having risen from the ranks may have made this urge stronger! Intelligence
Failure There
were intelligence failures on both sides. The Indians failing to discover
the move of 7 Division and heavy concentration of armour and artillery
opposite Chamb and the 6 Armoured Division’s existence. The Pakistanis
failing to discover the true extent of Indian preparations and its firm
intention to launch an all out war. The
breakdown The
breakdown of command issue has not been understood by many civilian and
military writers who have discussed Grand Slam. Confusion, uncertainty and
breakdown of information are the norms rather than the exception in war.
Breakdown of command was rationalised later by apologists of Ayub to
justify the change of command. Wireless failures, communication breakdowns
and loss of key commanders are a normal
occurrence in military history! In 1971 war an infantry unit in the same
sector went missing just before the attack despite having all the wireless
sets. In the, same sector in 1971 a brigades units were missing and a
brigade attack had to be postponed for twenty four hours. In the same
sector in 1971 despite having all the communication and divisional command
arrangements two infantry brigades kept feeding their divisional
headquarters. Anyone who has a doubt may read the 23 Divisions second
principal staff officer Lieutenant Colonel Saeed Ahmad’s book “Battle
of Chamb-1971”.94 Clausewitz
throughout his work “On War” states that “Breakdown of command”
is the most normal condition in war. It appears that a breakdown of
communication did take place on 1/2 Sept 1965. However,
some direct participants hold the view that even then, the delay of 24
hours was avoidable in case change of command had not taken place. To
conclude, it was a choice of four to six hours breakdown of command and
control and 24 to 36 hours change of command between Akhtar Malik’s
continuing as commander or Yahya’s take over as the commander. The only
serious point that can be brought against Akhtar Malik is delay in
resuming operations on 2nd September 1965. The Indians had commenced their
withdrawal from Chamb at 2050 hours on 1st September 1965. 12 Division had
nothing in print after 2400 hours 1st September, 1965 and should have
commenced its advance towards Jaurian by 0700 hours involving 2nd Sept
1965. At 1100 hours when change of command was ordered 12 Division was
still on the west bank of Tawi. Concentration
of Resources and All Arms Cooperation The
advantage of overwhelming superiority in armour was, however, not utilised
in the initial plan by distributing armour over two axes under infantry
brigades who in turn dished out squadrons to their infantry battalions for
the dirty work of close support! This meant that artillery fire could not
be concentrated and the artillery general Shaukat’s caustic but accurate
observation that artillery fire on 1st September 1965, although
initially concentrated, was naturally distributed into targets
spread over a 30,000 yards front 98 after the Pre-H-Hour bombardment.
There is a discrepancy in accounts of Shaukat Riza and Amjad Chaudhry
about utilisation of artillery .Shaukat claims that artillery fire after
the H-Hour was distributed and thus relatively ineffective, however,
Chaudhry states that even after H-Hour some Indian strongpoints were
“attacked with as many as 13 batteries of all calibre” 99. It is true
that armour was not properly employed on 1st September 1965 but the
superiority in tanks when combined with overwhelming artillery support
even then was so immense that the 191 Brigade was no longer a fighting
force by the night of 1st September 1965. Smaller
Controversies Some
participants were of the view that Yahya assessed that the Indian 41
Brigade position required a deliberate and planned attack and this delayed
the attack on 41 Brigade position at Troti by few hours. This, however, is
a matter of assessment and no
general in war is a prophet who knows the DS solution. Failure
to create The
important factor which salvaged their position was the fact that
“dislocation” was not imposed on them. This factor can only be
understood in the classic Clausewitzian scenario of diminishing force of
attack. The Pakistanis were attackers and their capability of offensive
action was fast being reduced due to casualties and successive narrowing
down of space for manoeuvre. On the other hand the Indian defensive
capability was improving. Their 191 Brigade was dislocated but the
Pakistanis had failed to “dislocate the equilibrium” of the 10
Division; something which was well within their grasp, had no change of
command taken place on the 2nd of September. Chances
of Pakistani The
Pakistani chances of success in Grand Slam were very high, had the change
of command not occurred on 2nd September 1965. The Indians described Grand
Slam as “bold and masterly” in conception.100
The Indians found the 24 hour delay on from morning of 2nd to 3rd
September inexplicable at a
time when in words of their highest operational commander “the sudden
collapse of 191 Brigade had created a critical situation”.101 The
Indians thus were confounded and one of their leading historians remarks
i.e “ There was a pause in operations (referring to Pakistan’s 12
Division) because, for
some accountable reasons, the Pakistanis relieved 12 Infantry
Division and handed over conduct of further operations to Major General
Yahya Khan”.102 Another Indian direct participant and chief of staff of
Western Command, no relative of Bhutto or Akhtar Malik noted “At 1100
hours on 2nd September an event of great significance took place. The
enemy came to our rescue. There was a change in the command of
Pakistan’s operational force in Chamb. HQ 7 Infantry Division replaced
HQ 12 Infantry Division. With the inevitable procedural delay that such
changes involves, we got a breather of 36 hours. Our forces reeling under
the impact of relentless onslaught so far regained a measure of balance.
It was a providential reprieve. Major General Mohammad Yahya Khan took
over the command of operations as
he thought it was a sure success and wanted all the glory for himself. GOC
12 Div Major General Akhtar Hussain Malik was sent back to look after the
Hill Sector.”103 The Indians were in a bad shape on the morning of 2nd
September. Contrary to Pakistani writers writing with ulterior motives of
settling personal scores assertion that “the Indians had been building
up their strength for defence of Munawar gap through which Pakistan could
attack Akhnur”.104 The reader may gauge this so-called build up from direct
quotes from Indian military historians:— “C squadron 20 Lancers (the
only Indian tank force between Tawi and Akhnur on 2nd September) had only
three tanks left”.105 The only reinforcements were at Pathankot some 80
miles from Akhnur and these consisted of another light tank squadron of 20
Lancers which had no ability to withstand Pakistan’s two tank regiments
of five Patton Squadrons. The 191 Brigade was marching to Akhnur since
2050 hours night 01 September and the 41 Brigade which later established a
position at Jaurian by morning of 3rd September was at Akhnur. The Indian
armoured corps historian described the change of command of 12 Division as
a “Godsend for 41 Mountain Brigade which improved and consolidated its
defences”.106 Employment
of Armour Armour
was not correctly employed on 1st September 1965. Regardless of all
rhetoric about Grand Slam’s brilliance, armour was under-utilised and
poorly employed. The vast numerical advantage of six to one in armour, was
partially nullified by dividing the two tank regiments between two
brigades who in turn dished out each tank squadron to one infantry
battalion. Thus instead of using the armour as a punch it was used like a
thin net, as a result of which its hitting power was vastly reduced while
the Indians were able to engage tank squadrons made to charge them in a
piecemeal manner! Thus while the Pakistani victory, thanks to tank
numerical and qualitative superiority was a foregone conclusion, the cost
in terms of equipment and loss of manpower was too high as the following
figures prove. 11 Cavalry lost 19 killed alone in Grand Slam and all 19 of
these brave men were killed on 1st September 1965!107 The readers may note that this figure exceeds killed
casualties of all regular infantry units which fought the Grand Slam
battle from 1st September till ceasefire except 9 Punjab which lost 24
killed. But then the total effective strength of an armoured regiment is
around 400 while that of infantry battalion is around 800. The reader,
however, is cautioned not to jump to false conclusions about Grand Slam
from this single example. Some units like 14 Punjab lost as few as
3 killed while the total killed of all regular infantry and tank
regiments did not exceed the figure of 104 killed.108
The reader may note that the casualties of the 10 Indian Division
were 246 killed and 240 missing most of whom were killed.109
On the other hand the fighting on 1st September was in prepared
defences and far more difficult than later. Armour’s mishandling was
affordable on 1st September 1965 and was improper but not lethal as was
the case with change of command on 2nd September. Organisational
Failures It
appears that in mid-May 1965 when Ayub attending the Murree briefing
earlier discussed the idea that 12 Division’s task was too big to defend
Kashmir as well as conduct Grand Slam did not occur to Ayub! This man
commanded the corps without ever having thought how his corps with five
divisions with one river dividing his command and with divergent and
different roles fight their battles in war.Kashmir with 400 miles of
difficult terrain was left to be commanded by one divisional
headquarters though we have seen that as early as 1948 the Indians keeping
in view the terrain requirements had subdivided the area into two
divisional commands. Raising another divisional headquarters’ was not
that much of an expensive issue so as to require US aid! Similarly it was
taken for granted that one corps headquarter with a not very
intellectually gifted commander was enough to control four divisions; two
in defence in two different areas with a
major river in between and two divisions which were supposed to
carry the war into enemy territory, one of which was an armoured
division! To say that by 1965 it was already too late, to raise
another divisional headquarters, after the plan to launch Gibraltar was
made, does not hold any substance. The Indians as late as 1st September
1965 brought in a new
divisional headquarters to command and control the operations in
Chamb-Akhnur area. Pakistan had the 8 Division Headquarters which had been
stripped of all its brigades and was doing nothing at Kharian.This
headquarter could have been tasked to take care of Grand Slam.It required
imagination and common sense
and it is not just enough to blame Mr Shoaib the Finance Minister for not
having another divisional headquarter!110 Ayub Khan did not change the
command arrangement in Kashmir after he became the C in C in 1951 and the
same situation i.e. Kashmir being entrusted to one divisional
headquarter continued till 1958. Ayub’s understanding of basic
principles of command and organisation can be gauged from the fact that he
thought that one divisional headquarter was enough to control
25 battalions of infantry organised under five sector (brigade)
headquarters spread over 400
miles of the most difficult mountainous terrain in the world! Shaukat Riza
does not find anything wrong in this arrangement. This command arrangement
contained the seeds of disaster of many failures of 1965 war as far as
Operation Grand Slam was concerned. The problem was not that of lack of US
dollars but essentially lack of perception on part of the hero of Burma
fame! Creating two or three divisional headquarters did not require US aid
but operational vision, a quality which Ayub lacked. In 1990 a British
General who knew Ayub well, having served in Indian Army in WW Two;
hit the nail in the head once he wrote without
off course mentioning the “12
Divisional Headquarters Command Organisational Fiasco” that “as C
in C Ayub was an adequate administrator but without operational
experience....and devoid of tactical flair and organisational
understanding”.111 This
statement cannot be taken lightly. Shaukat Hayat and Sher Ali as Ayub’s
opponents may be accused of being subjective in their criticism.
Lieutenant General Sir James Wilson cannot be put in this category. Wilson
also observed Ayub from close quarters while serving as General Gracey’s
Private Secretary in 1949. If Akhtar Hussain Malik broke down soon after
change of command and wept, while blaming no one it was not because he had
failed but because he was too much of a gentleman to blame anyone! God
Bless his soul! While the senior Indian generals have admitted that change
of command was crucial in saving Akhnur, we have been downgrading the
achievements of very few great generals in our history! This
self-defeating exercise was conducted by all, the military establishment
and the civilians, and for various reasons, all of which had nothing to do
with military history! These few great men who we have been unjustly
criticising, left footprints, not business empires on the sands of time!
That’s why their sons are not ministers or members of national assembly!
Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself!
Assessment
of 12 Division’s Role in 1965 It
is a tragedy of Pakistani military history that the futile mudslinging
matches between various mandarins and political opponents of Bhutto, in
the process of pursuance and as part of a
war of egos has clouded the true contribution of 12 Division at the
strategic level in the 1965 War. Grand Slam was a military operation
approved by all who mattered at the highest level in the Pakistani
decision making circles. The exercise of downplaying 12 Division’s role
in 1965 is a classic case of misinformation through verbal sophistry
but without concrete knowledge. One in which self-styled experts
well described in the English verse “Never set a squadron in the field,
Nor the division of battle knew, More than a spinster”, indulged in a
battle of words, assigning to their opponent, more Machiavellian qualities
than he could have humanly possessed! The vastness of Akhtar’s task may
be gauged from the fact that his command was spread over a 400 mile area
containing mountains between 3,000 to 28,000 feet and his 25 battalions
were facing more than 38 Indian infantry battalions. The reader may note
that the total Indian battalions in Ravi-Sutlej corridor opposite Lahore,
Barki, Bedian and Kasur never exceeded 30 while the entire Indian 1 Corps
and 26 Division’s total strength between Chenab and Ravi never exceeded
29 infantry battalions. On the other hand Kashmir, north of Chenab
observed around 38 and perhaps more infantry battalions. The following
table is self-explanatory:—111a
The
Foreign Involvement Dimension and the Change of Command Controversy Brigadier
Amjad Chaudhry raised some doubts that the change of command took place
because of US pressure. This is the realm of speculation. It is highly
improbable that this was the reason for change of command. Of all the
people Ayub had the maximum to gain from success of Grand Slam. It appears
that change of command had more to do with Ayub’s lack of military
insight than with superpower interference! Yahya as later events proved
was his hot favourite and was being groomed to take over as the next chief
as Musa’s book “From Jawan to General” proves. Musa writes in his
memoirs that Yahya was not his first choice as Army C in C but was
selected by Ayub overruling Musa’s reservations about Yahya’s
character.112 Musa’s
book prove that he did not like Akhtar Malik. So, here there was a
convergence of objectives. Musa not liking Akhtar since he was close to
Bhutto and Ayub liking Yahya having made up his mind to groom him
for higher ranks. The situation on night 1st September 1965 was excellent.
So why not let Yahya have the credit. It was ignorance and naivety of the
worse kind on part of both Ayub and Musa to decide on the change of
command! Grand
Slam-Some This
scribe interviewed certain direct participants, who for reasons in
comprehensible are still terribly afraid of being quoted. One direct
participant stated that even after 6 Brigade had replaced 10 Brigade on
6/7 September 1965 Eftikhar Khan (6 Bde Comd) told General Yahya that he
could capture Akhnur since his forward troops are at “Mahwali Khad”.
Yahya, however, told Eftikhar to stay put and to forget about Akhnur. Some
participants from 7 Division alleged that Gen Malik was not tracable on
1st & 2nd Sept 1965 and reasons for this absence according to the
participants were ones which cannot be written. This school of thought
holds the view that Amjad Chaudhry was covering Akhtar’s absence since
they were from the same community ! This scribe met a retired colonel many
years ago and discussed this question with him. The colonel who again did
not wish to be quoted stated that General Akhtar retained the same
alertness and clarity of mind even after chemical factors had produced
significant changes in the body chemistry, thus dismissing doubts that the
general was not sober on night 1/2 September 1965! The colonel was the
generals district mate and from the same battalion! Allegations of such
type have been levelled against General Grant, Mustafa Kemal etc and are
beyond the scope of this brief article. The
Rationale of Grand Slam and its timing The
million dollar question that no one including Ayub’s latest biographer
has answered is about the timing and strategic rationale of Grand
Slam! Shaukat Riza the official historian of the Pakistan Army has nothing
to say except that the aim of Grand Slam was to “force the Indian Army
to throw up its gains in 12 Division area”. If this was the aim then
Grand Slam was a miserable failure since the Indians did not evacuate an
inch of territory in Kashmir because of Grand Slam! It did so only after
Tashkent but so did Pakistan! So at the strategic level Grand Slam, in the
manner it was launched had no strategic aim but merely a mid- level
operational aim and one that provoked India into launching an all out war!
This fact proves Ayub’s lack of strategic insight! Shaukat Riza also
states in his very disjointed history that the “aim of Grand Slam was
limited (again a compliment to Ayub’s strategic acumen!) i.e to relieve
pressure against 12 Division.”113 Shaukat also notes that the army was a
part of the wishful thinking when he states that “General Sher Bahadur
admitted that it was wishful on our part to believe that Indian reaction
to Grand Slam would be restricted to Kashmir”.114 Musa does not give any
strategic rationale for Grand Slam in his book. But then Musa was not
expected to have anything to do with strategy! Gauhar admits the ambiguity
about the plans strategic rationale and timing when he writes
“the purpose of Grand Slam was never clearly defined”.115 All
this lack of strategic acumen is no compliment to Ayub! Altaf then praises Ayub at this point for selecting Akhnur as an
objective in his book but fails to note that Ayub despite being a soldier
never appreciated that there is a military term known as “Riposte”
which means “Strike a vulnerable point thus forcing the enemy to abandon
his attack”.116 War is not an isolated attack and the higher the level,
the broader is the requirement to examine a matter from all angles. Akhtar
Hussain Malik the GOC of 12 Division had to think only about his division
but Ayub as Supreme Commander had to think about the whole country. The
fact that Ayub as a soldier at least by length of service if not by virtue
of having seen much of combat, failed to realise that if one adversary
goes for another’s jugular vein as Ayub called Akhnur, speaks volumes
for Ayub’s comprehension of a strategic issue, also keeping in mind the
fact that the enemy in question had already redeployed his striking force
and reserve divisions within 10 to 50 miles of the main Indo-Pak border
since mid-1965! Ayub
approved both “Operation Gibraltar” as the infiltration campaign was
called and “Operation Grand Slam” as the thrust against Akhnur was
later to be called.117 The Army and men like Altaf Gauhar and Shaukat Riza
were to later blame the
Foreign Office for provoking India to attack Pakistan! Who
conceived the Grand Slam plan:— Altaf
Gauhar insists that it was Ayub who made the brilliant choice of Akhnur as
an objective and that everyone praised him for doing so!118
Amjad Chaudhry and many in the army state that Akhnur was Akhtar
Malik’s choice. Here Musa has come to our help although somewhat
unwittingly! Musa first states that “The push towards Akhnur was not
part of it (The original Gibraltar plan). However it was considered as one
of the likely operations that we might have to undertake, as we felt that
our activities would have an escalating effect”.119 This proves that the
attack on Akhnur was already forwarded by 12 Division as one of the
contingencies in the initial planning. Musa did not want to say it but
inadvertently admitted this reality! Musa later in the same book also
states that Ayub did say in the same meeting “Why don’t you go for
Akhnur”, but the first part of the paragraph in Musa ‘s book proves
that the Grand Slam idea i.e choice of Akhnur as an objective had
originated from the 12 Division. Grand
Slam compared with Battle of Chamb-1965
It is an ironic fact of history that Grand Slam has attracted far
more attention than the Battle of Chamb of 1971. Chamb was a far more
difficult to enter in 1971 than in 1965! Four
Indian brigades were deployed on ground to defend it unlike 1965
when the only Indian troops in 1965 holding the area consisted of one
overstretched brigade. In 1971 two Indian tank units of technically better
tanks than the two attacking Pakistani units were defending it! The
Pakistani artillery was inferior to Indian artillery in 1971 both in
technical as well as numerical terms. The Pakistani commander Eftikhar
Khan was far more dynamic than anything that
Pakistani army has seen from 1947 till to date! In 1971, keeping in
view the near parity of all types of forces/equipment even capturing Chamb
was an achievement! In 1965 not capturing Akhnur, keeping in view the
overwhelming Pakistani superiority in tanks and artillery was the worst
operational and strategic crime in Pakistani military history! Ultimate
Responsibility The
ultimate responsibility for failure in not taking Akhnur rests on Ayub.
Yahya in case he obeyed Ayub’s orders for not taking Akhnur was merely
obeying orders. Amjad Chaudhry, however, blamed Yahya alone since some
critics hold that Yahya had not considered him fit to be promoted to
general rank. The principal responsibility
for not taking Akhnur lies with Ayub. CONCLUSION Ambition,
lust for glory etc are perfectly reasonable aspirations where they are
matched with military talent pertaining to operational strategy, low
intensity operations, strategic insight or statesmanship! All these were
sadly lacking at all levels, except unit level bravery and enthusiasm!
Gibraltar failed because of pure and unadulterated military incompetence and Akhtar Malik
bears the principle responsibility for Gibraltar! The Grand Slam story was
different! It was
not a case of balanced distribution of lack of talent at all levels that
resulted in the failure of Grand Slam! The principle reason why Grand Slam
failed was delay in initial launching and change of command!
Pakistani
victory in Grand Slam keeping in view the immense superiority in armour
and artillery was a foregone conclusion, just like the Indian victory in
East Pakistan! Any divisional commander with a medium calibre could have
captured Akhnur! The fatal error was change in command! Victory despite
all the imperial blunders committed by 12 Division on 1st September was
within Pakistan’s grasp, had not Ayub and Musa ordered change of
command! The issue was not that Akhtar was brilliant or Yahya incompetent
but simply that the very act of change of command was against all sound
military axioms even if Yahya was Akhtar and Akhtar Yahya! There
is nothing that can describe “Operation Grand Slam” more accurately
and briefly than Schiller’s quotation i.e “What is lost in a moment,
is lost for eternity”! The dilemma that destroyed the Pakistani chances
of victory or at least strategic dominance were also summed up long ago by
another great philosopher Sun Tzu who described the most essential
condition for victory as a general who has the military capacity and is
not interfered with by his sovereign! This
article is not the defence of any individual but a humble attempt to see
military facts as they were! It was written because a person who I hold in
very high esteem asked me to do so. The only point that pinches a
dispassionate student of the art of war is the fact that Grand Slam was
launched some three to four days late and the change of command on 2nd
September gave the Indians 24 valuable hours to dig a position at line
Jaurian-Troti! The seeds of its failure were planted many years before
when soldiers strayed into politics and became more interested in creating
business of power, devolution of power and basic democracies, rather than
in military theory, strategy, operational strategy, doctrine and military
reorganisation! Grand Slam was Pakistan’s failure, Pakistan Army’s
failure! It was not Ayub’s
failure alone, nor Bhutto’s failure, nor Akhtar Malik’s failure!
Operation Gibraltar was an altogether different affair but this article is
about Grand Slam! All the reasons for Pakistan’s foreign policy of
appeasing USA were rendered null and void on 6th September 1965! War is a
continuation of policy but only so when those who conduct it have military
talent! This was sadly lacking in the Pakistan Army and the Pakistani
supreme commander at the strategic level! Pity the army that blames its
foreign minister for military failures! Foreign policy whatever its
quality or failures gave the Pakistan Army Pattons, locators and 8 inch
howitzers to blast a hole in the bloody valley of Munawar Tawi! The true
failure was Ayub’s and Musa’s in failure to function as army chiefs
and national leader, so as to ensure that political questions could be
settled with military effectiveness! Ayub had the maximum to gain from
Grand Slam! Ayub erred in this case not because of irresolution alone but
more because of lack of strategic, operational and organisational insight!
The change of command, as we have discussed, and delay in launching the
operation, was the main reason, if not the only reason, why Grand Slam
failed! n REFERENCES
1
Page-21-Raiders in Kashmir- Ex Major General Akbar Khan, D.S.O-First
Printed 1970-Karachi-Reprinted by Jang
Publishers-Lahore-1992.Page-214-‘The Nation that Lost its Soul’-Sardar
Shaukat Hayat Khan-Jang Publishers-Lahore-April 1995. Shaukat Hayat states
that Akhnur was an objective assigned to the 1947 irregulars tasked to
invade Kashmir from Pakistan in 1947, while Akbar Khan who is relatively
more credible states that the objective was Kathua-Jammu Road. 2
Page - 266-‘The Kashmir Campaign’-1947-48-Historical Section-General
Staff Branch-General Headquarters-Rawalpindi-1970. 3
Page-295 & 296-The Pakistan Army-1947-1949- Major General Shaukat Riza
-Printed by Wajid Ali’s (Private) Limited-Lahore and distributed by
Services Book Club-General Headquarters-Rawalpindi-1989. The signal
initiated on orders of General Bucher the Indian C in C to General Gracey
the Pakistani C in C and signed by Brigadier General Staff Manekshaw was
thus worded; “In view of political development my government thinks
continuation of moves and countermoves too often due to misunderstanding
accompanied by firesupport seems senseless and wasteful in human life
besides only tending to embitter feelings. My Government authorises me to
state I will have their full support if I order Indian troops to remain in present positions and
to ceasefire. Naturally I cannot issue any such order until I have
assurance from you that you are in a position to take immediate reciprocal
and effective action.Please reply, most immediate.If you agree I
shall send you by signal verbatim copies of any orders issued by me and I
will expect you to do the same”.This signal was dated 30th December and
the Pakistani artillery had just bombarded the Beri Pattan Bridge. 4
Page-115- ‘The Story of the Pakistan Army’- Major General Fazal Muqeem
Khan-Oxford University -Karachi- 1963. Page-120-‘The Story of Soldiering
and Politics in India and Pakistan’-Major General Nawabzada Sher Ali
Pataudi-First Published Lahore-1976-Reprinted by Syed Mobin Mahmud and
Company-Lahore-1988. Page-117-Akbar Khan-Op Cit. Page-15, 16 &
17-September ‘65-’Before and After’-Brigadier Amjad Ali Khan
Chaudhry-Ferozsons Limited -Lahore-1976. The reader may note that Fazal
Muqeems’ book was written in 1963 with the direct blessing of the ruling
military clique in Pakistan. Muqeem who was later to criticise Ayub Khan
the then Pakistani President, in this book hailed Ayub as Pakistan’s
saviour! 5
Page-120-Sher Ali-Op Cit. 6
Page-343- ‘Modern Muslim India and the Birth of Pakistan’-S.M
Ikram-Shiekh Mohammad Ashraf-Kashmiri Bazar Lahore-Second Edition-July
1965. S.M Ikram was a Punjabi Muslim civil servant whose book is a
landmark study of Indian Muslim politics and highlights the Punjabi Muslim
point of view about modern Muslim history. His book again had the blessing
of Ayub and was reprinted in a revised form at a time when Ayub was
involved in a political confrontation with his opponents led by Mr
Jinnah’s sister. As a
result Ayub enlisted the services of many paid intellectuals in order to
reduce Jinnah’s role in the Pakistani
history and projection
of Iqbal in his place as a greater leader. (Refers-Page-140-‘The
Military in Pakistan-Image and Reality’-Brigadier A.R Siddiqi-Vanguard
Books Pvt Limited-Lahore-1996). 7Pages-84
to 92-Brigadier A.R Siddiqi-Op Cit. General Gul Hassan Khan who was the
Pakistani Director of Military Operations in 1965 and later rose to the
post of Pakistan Army’s C in C also thought that in May 1965 the Indian
Army’s morale was at its lowest ebb following the Rann Skirmish
(Refers-Page-179-‘Memoirs of General Gul Hassan Khan’-Oxford
University Press-Karachi-1993). This was also the opinion of Aziz Ahmad
the then Foreign Secretary who according to Gauhar was convinced that
India could be dislodged from Kashmir by a guerrilla war in which Pakistan
Army actively participated (Refers-Page-319-’Ayub Khan-Pakistan’s
First Military Ruler’-Altaf Gauhar-Sang-E-Meel
Publications-Lahore-1993). 8
Page-321-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit. 9
Page-36-‘My Version -Indo Pakistan War-1965’-General Musa Khan-Wajid
Alis Limited-Lahore-1983-Page-322-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit-Page-183-Gul
Hassan-Op Cit. 10
The book enjoyed official patronage and was distributed
to military libraries and units by the Army Education Directorate
Edn-4 (Lib). See Note on first page bearing no number-‘Fallacies and
Realities’-Major General Aboobaker Osman Mitha-Maktaba Fikr-O-Danish (which has no future in Indo Pak!)-Lahore-1994. 11
Page-43-Ibid. This disproves the theory that the idea about Operation
Gibraltar originated from outside the army! 12
Ibid. Mitha does not explain why that angel of a man Ayub later agreed to
launch Operation Gibraltar! 13
For Gul’s statement regarding the time when the decision to launch
Gibraltar was taken, see Page-116,167 & 168-Gul Hassan Khan-Op Cit.
For Gauhar’s statement regarding Aziz Ahmad’s assessment of the
Kashmir situation see Page-319-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit. 14Annexure-G
to GHQ Letter Number 4050/5/MO-1 Dated 29 August 1965.Directive from
President Ayub Khan to General Mohammad Musa, Commander in Chief Pakistan
Army. Quoted by Stanley Wolpert -Page-91 of main text and page-338 of
Bibliographical Notes-‘Zulfi Bhutto of Pakistan-His Life and
Times’-Stanley Wolpert-Oxford University Press-Karachi-1993. 15
Page-323-Ibid. 16
Page-10-Musa Khan -Op Cit. 17Page-65-‘Pakistan
-Bharat Jang-September 1965’- Lieutenant Colonel Mukhtar Ahmad
Gillani-142 Harley Street- Rawalpindi-July 1998. 18
Pages-65 & 66-Ibid. 19
Ibid. 20Page-67-Ibid.
Colonel Gilani claims that it commenced from 15th August 1965. Musa states
that the operation was put into effect from 7th August 1965
(Refers-Page-35-Musa Khan-Op Cit. Gauhar whose authenticity of facts is
less reliable since he was a civilian states that all the forces commenced
movement from 24 July and reached their destinations (in Indian Held
Kashmir) by 28 July 1965 (Refers-Page-323-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit). Brigadier
Z.A Khan claims that movement commenced in late July and the ceasefire
line was crossed from 1st August 1965, while 7th August 1965 was the date
set for commencement of operations (Refers- Page -155-‘The Way it
Was’-Brigadier Z.A Khan-Dynavis Private Limited-Pathfinder Fountain
-Karachi-1998. The Indian account dates the beginning of infiltration from
5th August (Refers-Page-26- ‘War Despatches’- Lieutenant General
Harbaksh Singh-Lancer International-New Delhi-1991.) and larger moves from
8/9 August 1965 (refers-pages-30 & 31-Ibid). 21
Page-26-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 22Page-251-‘The
Indian Army after Independence’-Major K.C Praval-First Published in
1987-Lancer International-New Delhi-Paperback Edition Reprinted in 1993. 23
Ibid. 24
Page-41- Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 25
Page-36-Ibid 26
Page-38-Ibid. 27
Page-127-‘Behind the Scenes-An Analysis of India’s Military
Operations’-1947-71-Major General Joginder Singh-Lancer
International-New Delhi-1993. 28
Page-43-Ibid. 29
Pages-105 to 110-‘The Pakistan Army’-War 1965- Major General Shaukat
Riza -Printed for Army Education Press by M/S Wajid Alis
Limited-Lahore-1984. 30
Pages-104 to 109-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 31
Page-39-Musa Khan -Op Cit and Page-110-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 32Page-111-Shaukat
Riza-1965-Op Cit. For Shaukat’s quoting Musa
and Sher Bahadur about danger of loss of Muzaffarabad see
Page-113-Ibid. 33
Page-39-Musa Khan-Op Cit. 34Page-344-
‘The Indian Armour-History of the Indian Armoured Corps’-1941-1971-
Major General Gurcharan Singh Sandhu-Vision Books-New Delhi-1993. 35
The description of terrain is based on narratives of K.C Praval and Gurcharan Singh Sandhu op cit, Article-Battle
Lore-Breakthrough in Chamb- in Soldier Speaks-Selected Articles from
Pakistan Army Journal-1956-1981-Army Education Press-General
Headquarters-First Edition-1981.The Battle of Chamb-Lt Col Saeed-Army
Education Press-GHQ-1979. 36Page-345-Gurcharan
Singh Sandhu-Op Cit. 37Page-334
and 345-Ibid. For explanation of Code name “Operation Ablaze” see
Page-89-Joginder Singh-Op Cit. 38
Page-345-Ibid and Page-36-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 39
Page-345-Gurcharan Singh-Op Cit. 40
Page-26-Joginder Singh-Op Cit. 41
Pages-36 & 37-Ibid 42
Pages-343 & 334-Gurcharan Singh-Op Cit. 43
Page-344-Ibid. 44
Page-345-Ibid and Page-257-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 45
Page-255-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 46
Page-257-Ibid 47
Ibid. 48
Page-104-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 49
Footnote Number One-Page-46-Amjad Ali Khan Chaudhry-Op Cit. 50
Pages114 & 115-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 51
Page-117 & 118-Ibid. 52
Page -297-Gurcharan Singh -Op Cit. 53
Page-39-Musa Khan-Op Cit. 54
Page-48-Amjad Chaudhry -Op Cit.. 55
Page-116-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. 56
Ibid. This was achievement of the
indomitable gunner Amjad Chaudhry who was later not promoted for doing
well in war ! Amjad was assisted by another extremely able artillery
officer Aleem Afridi who was later famous in removing Yahya by threatening
him with a march of 6 Armoured Division to Rawalpindi immediately after
the surrender at Dacca and later in the Attock Conspiracy case to
overthrow Mr Bhutto in 1972. 57
Page-49-Amjad Chaudhry-Op Cit.Shaukat Riza , who was more interested in
the artillery aspect of all operations , does not state anything about the
delay that was caused due to Burjeal , and its overall negative effect on
the overall conduct of operations on the 1st September 1965 , but merely
states that “Burjeal had been bypassed
by 13 Punjab” and “Brigadier Zafar ordered
8 Baluch to clear the position forthwith” .
(Refers-Page-120-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit).
58
Page-121-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. 59
Ibid. 60
Page-123-Ibid. 61
Page-62-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit . Harbaksh states that this was a “blemish
on the fair name of 161 Field
Regiment as well as 10 Division” .Also seePage-50-Amjad Chaudhry-Op Cit.
It was here that Pakistani
locating regiments proved their worth by locating Indian guns through
modern US sound ranging devices .Chaudhry states that many 25 Pounders of
this Indian unit received direct Pakistani artillery shell hits .K.C
Praval says it was 14 Field Regiment ( Pages-260 & 261-Major K.C
Praval-Op Cit). 62
Page-348-Gurcaharan Singh-Op Cit. 63
Page-60 & 61-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 64
Page-121-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. 65
Ibid. 66
See page-11 of Preface-Brig Gulzar Ahmad-Op Cit. 67
Page-151-Ibid. 68
Page-261-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 69
Page-55-Amjad Chaudhry-Op Cit. 70
Page-61-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 71
Page-124-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. 72
Page-348-Gurcharan Singh-Op Cit 73
Page-60-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 74
Page-124-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. 75
Page-62-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 76
Page-131-Shaukat Riza-Op Cit. Auchinlek had passed a message saying
“During three days at your advance headquarter, I have seen and heard
enough to convince me, though I did not need convincing, that the
determination to beat the enemy of your commanders and troops could not be
greater, and I have no doubt whatever that he will be beaten . His
position is desperate , and he is trying by lashing out in all directions
to distract us from our object which is to destroy him utterly.we will not
be distracted. And he will be destroyed.You have got your teeth into
him.hang on and bite deeper and deeper and hang on till he is finished .
give him no rest .The general situation in North Africa is EXCELLENT.There
is only one order ATTACK AND PURSUE.ALL OUT EVERYONE. C. AUCHINLECK
GENERAL C IN C. (Refers-Pages-312 & 313-The Sidi Rezegh
Battles-1941-J.A.I Agar Hamilton and L.C.F Turner-Oxford University
Press-Cape Town-1957. 77
Page-64-Amjad Chaudhry-Op Cit. 78
Page-63-Ibid. 79Page-46-Letter
from a major from Lawrencepur dated 1st September 1975 to Editor Defence
Journal Karachi- Defence Journal-No 11-Decemeber 1975-Volume
Number-One-Karachi-1975. 80Pages-13
& 14-Article-Higher Conduct of 1965 War-Brigadier Riazul Karim
Khan-Defence Journal-Special Issue-Volume Ten-Numbers-1-2-1984- Karachi. 81
Page-55-Brigadier Chaudhry-Op Cit. 82
Pages-39 & 40-Musa Khan -Op Cit. 83
Page-121-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 84
Explained in detail by Gul-Page-201-Gul Hassan Khan-Op Cit. 85
Bhutto later implicated Gauhar in a trumped up case on ridiculous grounds
i.e possession of a bottle containing about 12 ounces of Scotch Whiskey
and an old “Playboy” issue. 86
Remarks of a friend of Mr Bhutto who had served in Burma Shell quoted by
Akhund (Memoirs of a Bystander) or Rafi Raza (Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and
Pakistan) published by Oxford University Press Karachi in 1997. The
inability to provide an exact reference is regretted since I lost both the
books which I had bought in 1997 and was unable to find a copy to locate
the exact page number. 87
Pages-257 & 305-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 88Page-918
to 920-‘Shahab Nama’-Qudratullah Shahab-Sang-E-Meel
Publications-Lahore-1994.Shahab who was with Ayub at that time as a
civilian staff officer has given a detailed account of this incident.
Shahab who later became very religious (as many men in their old age !!!!)
was a sycophant par excellence who competed with,but was finally surpassed
by another
in playing the sycophant courtier with Ayub. Qudrat was notorious
in sycophancy with Ayub and also wrote the notorious “The New Leaf”
that appeared in the Pakistan Times issue of 19th April 1959.
(Page-102-Pakistan-Military Rule or Peoples Power-Tariq Ali-Jonathan
Cape-London-1970 ). Shahab was also notorious in initiating a campaign
against Justice M.R Kayani (Page-4-Preface to M.R Kayani’s collected
works by Iftikhar Ahmad Khan-‘The Whole Truth’-M.R Kayani-Pakistan
Writers co-operative Society-Lahore-1988).
A case of two typical lower middle class civil servants employing
sycophancy as a tool for advancement! Herein lies the secret of success of
many Pakistani successful civil servant families who later amassed great
wealth despite being from basically humble or middle class background! 89Page-322-Altaf
Gauhar-Op Cit. 90Page-367-On
War-Edited by Anatol Rapoport-Pelican Books-London-1974. 91Page-321-Altaf
Gauhar-Op Cit. 92Page-155-Brig
Z.A Khan-Op Cit. 93Page-112-‘The
First Round-Indo Pakistan War’-1965-M. Asghar Khan-Islamic Information
Services Limited-London 1979. 94“Battle
of Chamb”-Lieutenant Colonel Ahmad Saeed-Army Education Press-GHQ
Rawalpindi-1979. 95Page-45-Letter
to the Editor Defence Journal from
Major Khursheed Ahmad (Retired) , Hyderabad-Dated 26 Otober 1975 -Defence
Journal-No 11-Decemeber 1975-Volume Number-One-Karachi-1975. 96Page-47-Letter
to Editor Defence Journal from Lieutenant Colonel M.R Hassan (Retired)
dated 06 October 1975. 97
Page-53 & 54-Amjad Chaudhry -Op Cit. 98
Page-123-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit 99
Page-48-Amjad Chaudhry-Op Cit. 100
Page-255-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 101
Page-61-Harbaksh Singh-Op Cit. 102
Page-349-Gurcharan Singh-Op Cit. 103
Page-118-Major General Joginder Singh-Op Cit. 104
Page-331-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit. 105
Page-349-Gurcharan Singh Sandhu-Op Cit. 106
Page-349-Gurcharan Singh-Op Cit. 107
Page-45-History of 11 Cavalry (FF)-Lieutenant Colonel Khalid Gujjar-Quetta Cantt-1999. 108Calculated
from total regular infantry casualties given by Lieutenant Colonel Mukhtar
Gilani (Page-109-Colonel Mukhtar Gillani -Op Cit), total casualties of 11
Cavalry (Refers- page-45 of 11 Cavalry History-Op Cit) and total
casualties of 13 Lancers i.e 16 killed (Refers-Page-160-Brig Z.A Khan -Op
Cit). 109
Pages-404, 405 and 409-Major K.C Praval-Op Cit. 110
Page-182-Shaukat Riza-1965-Op Cit. Till 18th September this Headquarters
was doing nothing sitting in Kharian and in words of Shaukat Riza
“engaged in line of communication pursuits”. 111Page-428-Article-Pakistan-
‘Memories of the Early Years’- Lieutenant General Sir James
Wilson-in-Army Quarterly and Defence Journal -Volume-120-Issue Number
Four-Tavistock Street-London-October-1990. 111aPage-230-Footnote
68-The Pakistan Army Till 1965-Major A.H Amin-P.O Box
13146-Arlington-VA-22219-USA-17 August 1999.
112
Page-187- Jawan to General-General Mohammad Musa- East and West Publishing
Company-Karachi-1984. 113
Page-113-Shauakat Riza-1965-Op Cit. 114
Page-114-Ibid. 115
Page-327-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit. 116
Page-39-‘An Introduction to Strategy’-General Andre Beaufre-Faber and
Faber-London-1965. Altaf praised Ayub in the following words; “everyone
admired Ayub for giving the operation a real edge and a new dimension”
(Page-322-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit).In the Army and Civil Service as in the
Corporate Sector the sycophants are always admiring their
bosses.Psychologists have concluded that , “Flattery”
pays and it does gets you into better places”. See Pages-321 to
328- of the Research Essay-“Flattery Will Get You Somewhere:Styles and
Uses of Ingratiation”-Edward.E.Jones-in Readings About the Social
Animal-Edited by Ariel Aronson-W.H Freeman and Company-San
Francisco-1973.It is one thing to make a plan on the map and another to
execute it.Ayub did not have the “Resolution” to capture Akhnur as we
shall discuss in greater detail later. 117
Page-322-Altaf Guahar-Ibid. 118
Page-322-Altaf Gauhar-Op Cit. 119
Page-35 and 36-Musa Khan-Op Cit. |
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