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The
Independence War 1971
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The
Liberation War In the fall of 1970, a powerful opposition
movement emerged in East Pakistan. During the 1971 civil
war, a number of factional paramilitary bands, which included
communist forces dedicated to a rural-based revolution
along Maoist lines, fought against each other and engaged
in
terrorism. The strongest of the new paramilitary bands,
and the one that would have the greatest impact on future
events, was organized under the Awami League's military
committee headed by Colonel M.A.G. Osmany, a retired Pakistan
Army officer. This band was raised as Mujib's action arm
and security force. As the political struggle between
East Pakistan and West Pakistan intensified, the Awami
League's military arm assumed the character of a conventional,
albeit illegal, armed force.
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| Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman |
At
first, Osmany recruited his force from three main sources:
the East Pakistan Students League (the Awami League's
youth branch); the security militia called Ansars (ansar
is Arabic for helper) and Mujahids (mujahid is Arabic
for holy warrior), who were trained, respectively, by
the police and the army; and urban toughs known throughout
the subcontinent as goondas. Osmany's group collected
arms and ammunition and conspired with Bengali-origin
officers and troops in the regular Pakistani forces and
the East Pakistan Rifles. Initially, Osmany's band was
called Sevak Bahini (Service Force); after its expansion,
it became known as the Mukti Fauj (Liberation Force; more
loosely, freedom fighters), a name that evolved into Mukti
Bahini, a term of more common Bengali usage having the
same meaning as Mukti Fauj. The very existence of an underground
army responsive to Awami League directives convinced West
Pakistani leaders that Mujib was intent on leading the
secession of East Pakistan.
On
March 25, 1971, the Pakistan armed forces launched a campaign
to suppress the resistance movement. During the ensuing
month, military operations spread throughout East Pakistan.
The East Bengal Regiment, the East Pakistan Rifles, and
most of the East Pakistani police and their auxiliaries
joined the revolt. They seized West Pakistani officers
serving with these units and killed some of them. The
wholesale, planned defection of the Bengalis from the
Pakistan Army in the early weeks of the war came as a
surprise to the Pakistani command and was of supreme importance
to the Bangladesh cause. The Bengali units, after fighting
numerous actions against West Pakistani regulars, gradually
withdrew and merged with the Mukti Bahini, providing the
essential core of leadership and organizational basis
for the rest of the war.
Gradually
this amalgamation of forces grew into a unified military
as it confronted the Pakistanis. Retired officers and
troops helped train the revolutionary forces. On April
14, Osmany officially became the commander in chief of
the Mukti Bahini. Although most of this force, estimated
at over 100,000 strong at the height of the conflict,
maintained unswerving allegiance to Mujib and the Awami
League, many partisan bands operated independently. East
Pakistani civilian members of the resistance operated
out of Calcutta. The high command divided the country
into eight military sectors, each commanded by a Pakistan
Army major who had defected. India granted sanctuary to
the Mukti Bahini and provided bases and substantial matériel
and training. The initial operations by the Pakistan Army
failed to destroy the Mukti Bahini or to prevent its expansion
and development, but by late May 1971 Pakistani authority
had been widely reasserted. Rebel forces were largely
confined to the areas near the Indian border states of
West Bengal, Assam, and Tripura. Pakistani forces received
reinforcements and the assistance of an internal security
force called Razakars (Keepers of Public Order) and other
collaborators that had been raised in East Pakistan by
the Pakistani administration. Denounced by the resistance
for collaborating with Pakistani authorities, most Razakars
were Urdu-speaking Muslims who had emigrated from the
Indian state of Bihar at the time of partition. The weary
Pakistani regulars, however, were able to contain a July
monsoon offensive by the Mukti Bahini.
Despite the setback, the Mukti Bahini had gained valuable
experience and shown increased capability. Back in their
border base area, they regrouped. Recruitment was never
a serious problem, and numerical losses were easily replaced.
Indian aid and participation materially increased, and
the tempo of fighting again picked up by October, when
Pakistan had raised its army troop strength to about 80,000.
Border clashes between the Indian and Pakistani armies
became frequent.
In response to Indian military incursions into East Pakistan
in late November, Pakistan launched a series of preemptive
air strikes against Indian airfields on December 3, 1971.
Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi then ordered national
mobilization, and Indian forces launched a full-scale
invasion of East Pakistan the next day. The initial Pakistani
air strikes had been ineffective, and the Indian Air Force
attained air superiority within the next twenty-four hours
and held it. The Pakistan Air Force detachment in East
Pakistan was destroyed, and supply and escape routes were
cut off; in West Pakistan the Indian Air Force systematically
struck aircraft and airfields, base installations, communication
centers, and troop concentrations. At sea an Indian Navy
task force immobilized East Pakistani port facilities
and landed an amphibious force to cut off escape routes
to Burma. At the same time, an Indian task force contained
Pakistan's fleet and bombarded port installations at Karachi,
West Pakistan.
On
the ground the Indian strategic plan was aimed at East
Pakistan as first priority, while simultaneously containing
West Pakistan. The Indian force that invaded East Pakistan
consisted of nine infantry divisions with attached armor
units and supporting arms. Separated into five invasion
columns, Indian forces advanced rapidly, bypassing intermediate
cities and obstacles and pressing relentlessly toward
the capital at Dhaka. At the same time, guerrilla attacks
intensified, and at least three brigades
of the Mukti Bahini fought in conventional formations
with the Indian forces. Overwhelmed by the speed and power
of the Indian advance, Pakistan's four divisions and smaller
separate units fought a number of hard actions but soon
had their escape routes cut off and were without air support.
|
| Birth
of Bangladesh |
On
December 16 Dhaka fell, and Pakistan's commander, Lieutenant
General A.A.K. Niazi, with about 75,000 troops, surrendered
to Lieutenant General J.S. Aurora, the Indian commander
of the combined Indian and Mukti Bahini forces. On the
western front, India's forces had effectively contained
Pakistani attacks and had made limited advances into West
Pakistan.