Everything about The Bangladesh Liberation War totally explained
The
Bangladesh Liberation War(i) (
Bengali: মুক্তিযুদ্ধ
Muktijuddho), was a
war between
West Pakistan (now
Pakistan) and
East Pakistan (now
Bangladesh), from
26 March until
16 December 1971. The war started as an uprising in East Pakistan led by the
Mukti Bahini.
Indian support for the rebellion resulted in war between India and Pakistan (the
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971), during which the Indian military and East Pakistanis decisively defeated the West Pakistani forces deployed in the East. The war resulted in East Pakistan's independence as the new nation of
Bangladesh.
Background
In August 1947, the
Partition of India gave birth to a new country named Pakistan containing the
Muslim-majority areas. These were two geographically and culturally separate areas in far east and the far west of the
Indian subcontinent, separated by over a thousand miles of Indian territory. The Western zone was popularly (and for a period of time, also officially) termed West Pakistan and the Eastern zone (modern-day Bangladesh) was initially termed
East Bengal and later, East Pakistan. It was widely perceived that West Pakistan dominated politically and exploited the East economically, leading to many grievances.
On the
25 March 1971, rising political discontent and
cultural nationalism in East Pakistan was met by brutal suppressive force from the ruling elite of the West Pakistan establishment in what came to be termed
Operation Searchlight.
The violent crackdown by
West Pakistan forces led to East Pakistan declaring its independence as the state of Bangladesh and to the start of civil war. The war led to a sea of refugees (estimated at the time to be about 10 million) flooding into the
eastern provinces of India. Facing a mounting humanitarian and economic crisis, India started actively aiding and organising the Bangladeshi resistance army known as the
Mukti Bahini.
East Pakistani grievances
Economic exploitation
West Pakistan (consisting of four provinces:
Punjab,
Sindh,
Balochistan and
North-West Frontier Province) dominated the divided country politically and received more money from the common budget than the more populous East.
| Year |
Spending on West Pakistan (in crore Rupees) |
Spending on East Pakistan (in crore Rupees) |
Amount spent on East as percentage of West |
| 1950–55 |
1,129 |
524 |
46.4 |
| 1955–60 |
1,655 |
524 |
31.7 |
| 1960–65 |
3,355 |
1,404 |
41.8 |
| 1965–70 |
5,195 |
2,141 |
41.2 |
| Total |
11,334 |
4,593 |
40.5 |
| Source: Reports of the Advisory Panels for the Fourth Five Year Plan 1970-75, Vol. I, published by the planning commission of Pakistan (Quick reference: crore = 107, or 10 million) |
Political differences
Although East Pakistan accounted for a majority of the country's population, political power remained firmly in the hands of West Pakistanis, specifically the Punjabis. Since a straightforward system of representation based on population would have concentrated political power in East Pakistan, the West Pakistani establishment came up with the "
One Unit" scheme, where all of West Pakistan was considered one province. This was solely to counterbalance the East wing's votes. Ironically, after the East broke away to form Bangladesh, the Punjab province insisted that politics in West Pakistan now be decided on the basis of a straightforward vote, since Punjabis were more numerous than the other groups, such as Sindhis, Pashtuns, or Balochs.
After the assassination of
Liaquat Ali Khan, Pakistan's first prime minister, in 1951, political power began to be concentrated in the
President of Pakistan, and eventually, the military. The nominal elected chief executive, the Prime Minister, was frequently sacked by the establishment, acting through the President.
East Pakistanis noticed that whenever one of them, such as
Khawaja Nazimuddin,
Muhammad Ali Bogra, or
Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy were elected Prime Minister of Pakistan, they were swiftly deposed by the largely West Pakistani establishment. The military dictatorships of
Ayub Khan (
27 October 1958 –
25 March 1969) and
Yahya Khan (
25 March 1969 –
20 December 1971), both West Pakistanis, only heightened such feelings.
The situation reached a climax when in 1970 the
Awami League, the largest East Pakistani political party, led by
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, won a landslide victory in the national elections. The party won 167 of the 169 seats allotted to East Pakistan, and thus a majority of the 313 seats in the National Assembly. This gave the Awami League the constitutional right to form a government. However,
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (a Sindhi), the leader of the
Pakistan Peoples Party, refused to allow Rahman to become the Prime Minister of Pakistan. Instead, he proposed the idea of having two Prime Ministers, one for each wing. The proposal elicited outrage in the east wing, already chafing under the other constitutional innovation, the "one unit scheme". Bhutto also refused to accept Rahman's
Six Points. On
3 March 1971, the two leaders of the two wings along with the President General Yahya Khan met in
Dhaka to decide the fate of the country. Talks failed. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman called for a nation-wide strike.
On
7 March 1971, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman delivered a speech at the Racecourse Ground (now called the
Suhrawardy Udyan). In this speech he mentioned a further four-point condition to consider the National Assembly Meeting on
25 March:
- The immediate lifting of martial law.
- Immediate withdrawal of all military personnel to their barracks.
- An inquiry into the loss of life.
- Immediate transfer of power to the elected representative of the people before the assembly meeting 25 March.
He urged "his people" to turn every house into a fort of resistance. He closed his speech saying,
"Our struggle is for our freedom. Our struggle is for our independence." This speech is considered the main event that inspired the nation to fight for their independence. General
Tikka Khan was flown in to Dhaka to become Governor of East Bengal. East-Pakistani judges, including Justice Siddique, refused to swear him in.
Between 10 and
13 March,
Pakistan International Airlines cancelled all their international routes to urgently fly "Government Passengers" to Dhaka. These "Government Passengers" were almost all Pakistani soldiers in civilian dress. MV
Swat, a ship of the Pakistani Navy, carrying ammunition and soldiers, was harboured in
Chittagong Port and the Bengali workers and sailors at the port refused to unload the ship. A unit of
East Pakistan Rifles refused to obey commands to fire on Bengali demonstrators, beginning a mutiny of Bengali soldiers.
Military imbalance
Bengalis were under-represented in the Pakistan military. Officers of Bengali origin in the different wings of the armed forces made up just 5% of overall force by 1965; of these, only a few were in command positions, with the majority in technical or administrative posts. West Pakistanis believed that Bengalis were not "martially inclined" unlike
Pashtuns and
Punjabis; the "
martial races" notion was dismissed as ridiculous and humiliating by Bengalis.
Language controversy
In 1948,
Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Pakistan's first Governor-General, declared in Dhaka (then usually spelled Dacca in English) that "
Urdu, and only Urdu" would be the sole official language for all of Pakistan. This proved highly controversial, since Urdu was a language that was only spoken in the West by
Muhajir and in the East by
Biharis. The majority groups in West Pakistan spoke Punjabi and
Sindhi, while
Bangla was spoken by the majority of East Pakistanis. The language controversy eventually reached a point where East Pakistan revolted. Several students and civilians lost their lives in a police crackdown on
21 February 1952.
In West Pakistan, the movement was seen as a sectional uprising against Pakistani national interests and the founding ideology of Pakistan, the
Two-Nation Theory. West Pakistani politicians considered Urdu a product of Indian Islamic culture, as
Ayub Khan said, as late as in 1967, "East Bengalis... still are under considerable Hindu culture and influence." killing an estimated 300,000 to 500,000 people. Though the exact death toll isn't known, it's considered the deadliest
tropical cyclone on record. A week after the landfall, President Khan conceded that his government had made "slips" and "mistakes" in its handling of the relief efforts for a lack of understanding of the magnitude of the disaster.
A statement released by eleven political leaders in East Pakistan ten days after the cyclone hit charged the government with "gross neglect, callous indifference and utter indifference". They also accused the president of playing down the news coverage. On
19 November, students held a march in Dhaka in protest of the speed of the government response and
Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani addressed a rally of 50,000 people on
24 November, where he accused the president of inefficiency and demanded his resignation.
As the conflict between East and West Pakistan developed in March, the Dhaka offices of the two government organisations directly involved in relief efforts were closed for at least two weeks, first by a
general strike and then by a ban on government work in East Pakistan by the
Awami League. With this increase in tension, foreign personnel evacuated due to fears of violence. Relief work continued in the field, but the long-term planning was curtailed. This conflict widened into the Bangladesh Liberation War in December and concluded with the creation of Bangladesh. This is one of the first times that a natural event helped to trigger a civil war.
Operation Searchlight
A planned military pacification carried out by the
Pakistan Army — codenamed
Operation Searchlight — started on
25 March to curb the
Bengali nationalist movement by taking control of the major cities on
26 March, and then eliminating all opposition, political or military, within one month. Before the beginning of the operation, all foreign journalists were systematically deported from East Pakistan
The main phase of Operation Searchlight ended with the fall of the last major town in Bengali hands in mid May. The operation also began the
1971 Bangladesh atrocities. These systematic killings served only to enrage the Bengalis, which ultimately resulted in the secession of East Pakistan later in the same year. The international media and reference books in English have published casualty figures which vary greatly, from 5,000–35,000 in Dhaka, and 200,000–3,000,000 for Bangladesh as a whole.
According to the Asia Times,
At a meeting of the military top brass, Yahya Khan declared: "Kill 3 million of them and the rest will eat out of our hands." Accordingly, on the night of 25 March, the Pakistani Army launched Operation Searchlight to "crush" Bengali resistance in which Bengali members of military services were disarmed and killed, students and the intelligentsia systematically liquidated and able-bodied Bengali males just picked up and gunned down.
Although the violence focused on the provincial capital,
Dhaka, the process of ethnic elimination was also carried out all around Bangladesh. Residential halls of
University of Dhaka were particularly targeted. The only Hindu residential hall — the Jagannath Hall — was destroyed by the Pakistani armed forces, and an estimated 600 to 700 of its residents were murdered. The Pakistani army denies any cold blooded killings at the university, though the
Hamood-ur-Rehman commission in Pakistan states that overwhelming force was used at the university. This fact and the massacre at Jagannath Hall and nearby student dormitories of Dhaka University are corroborated by a videotape secretly filmed by Prof. Nurul Ullah of the
East Pakistan Engineering University, whose residence was directly opposite the student dormitories.
Hindu areas all over Bangladesh suffered particularly heavy blows. By midnight, Dhaka was literally burning, especially the Hindu dominated eastern part of the city.
Time magazine reported on
2 August 1971, "The Hindus, who account for three-fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead, have borne the brunt of the Pakistani military hatred."
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was arrested by the Pakistani Army. Yahya Khan appointed Brigadier
Rahimuddin Khan (later General) to preside over a special tribunal charging Mujib with multiple charges. Rahimuddin sentenced Mujib to death, but Yahya put the verdict into abeyance. Other Awami League leaders were arrested as well, while a few fled Dhaka to avoid arrest. The Awami League was banned by General Yahya Khan.
Declaration of independence
The violence unleashed by the Pakistani forces on
25 March 1971, proved the last straw to the efforts to negotiate a settlement. Following these outrages, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman signed an official declaration that read:
Today Bangladesh is a sovereign and independent country. On Thursday night, West Pakistani armed forces suddenly attacked the police barracks at Razarbagh and the EPR headquarters at Pilkhana in Dhaka. Many innocent and unarmed have been killed in Dhaka city and other places of Bangladesh. Violent clashes between E.P.R. and Police on the one hand and the armed forces of Pakistan on the other, are going on. The Bengalis are fighting the enemy with great courage for an independent Bangladesh. May Allah aid us in our fight for freedom. Joy Bangla.
Sheikh Mujib also called upon the people to resist the occupation forces through a radio message. Mujib was arrested on the night of 25–26 March 1971 at about 1:30 a.m. (as per Radio Pakistan’s news on
29 March 1971).
A telegram containing the text of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's declaration reached some students in Chittagong. The message was translated to
Bangla by Dr.
Manjula Anwar. The students failed to secure permission from higher authorities to broadcast the message from the nearby Agrabad Station of
Radio Pakistan. They crossed Kalurghat Bridge into an area controlled by an East Bengal Regiment under Major
Ziaur Rahman. Bengali soldiers guarded the station as engineers prepared for transmission. At 19:45 hrs on
27 March 1971, Major Ziaur Rahman broadcast another announcement of the declaration of independence on behalf of Sheikh Mujibur which is as follows.
This is Shadhin Bangla Betar Kendro. I, Major Ziaur Rahman, at the direction of Bangobondhu sheikh Mujibur Rahman, hereby declare that the independent People's Republic of Bangladesh has been established. At his direction, I've taken command as the temporary Head of the Republic. In the name of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, I call upon all Bengalis to rise against the attack by the West Pakistani Army. We shall fight to the last to free our Motherland. By the grace of Allah, victory is ours. Joy Bangla. Audio of Zia's announcement (interview - Belal Mohammed)
The
Kalurghat Radio Station's transmission capability was limited. The message was picked up by a Japanese ship in
Bay of Bengal. It was then re-transmitted by
Radio Australia and later by the
British Broadcasting Corporation.
M A Hannan, an Awami League leader from
Chittagong, is said to have made the first announcement of the declaration of independence over the radio on
26 March 1971. There is controversy now as to when Major Zia gave his speech. BNP sources maintain that it was
26 March, and there was no message regarding declaration of independence from Mujibur Rahman. Pakistani sources, like Siddiq Salik in
Witness to Surrender had written that he heard about Mujibor Rahman's message on the Radio while Operation Searchlight was going on, and Maj. Gen. Hakeem A. Qureshi in his book
The 1971 Indo-Pak War: A Soldier's Narrative, gives the date of Zia's speech as
27 March 1971.
26 March 1971 is considered the official
Independence Day of Bangladesh, and the name Bangladesh was in effect henceforth. In July 1971, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi openly referred to the former East Pakistan as Bangladesh. Some Pakistani and Indian officials continued to use the name "East Pakistan" until
16 December 1971.
Liberation War
March to June
At first resistance was spontaneous and disorganized, and wasn't expected to be prolonged. But when the Pakistani Army cracked down upon the population, resistance grew. The
Mukti Bahini became increasingly active. The Pakistani military sought to quell them, but increasing numbers of Bengali soldiers defected to the underground "Bangladesh army". These Bengali units slowly merged into the Mukti Bahini and bolstered their weaponry with supplies from India. Pakistan responded by airlifting in two infantry divisions and reorganizing their forces. They also raised paramilitary forces of
Razakars,
Al-Badrs and
Al-Shams (who were mostly members of
Jamaat-e-Islami and other Islamist groups), as well as other Bengalis who opposed independence, and
Bihari Muslims who had settled during the time of
partition.The Bangladesh government-in-exile was formed on
17 April at Mujib Nagar.
June – September
Bangladesh forces command was set up on
11 July, with Col.
M A G Osmani as commander in chief, Lt. Col. Abdur Rab as chief of Army Staff and Group Captain A K Khandker as Deputy Chief of Army Staff and Chief of Air Force.
Bangladesh was
divided into Eleven Sectors each with a commander chosen from defected officers of Pakistan army who joined the
Mukti Bahini to conduct guerrilla operations and train fighters. Most of their training camps were situated near the border area and were operated with assistance from India. The 10th Sector was directly placed under Commander in Chief (C-in-C) and included the Naval Commandos and C-in-C’s special force. Three brigades (11 Battalions) were raised for conventional warfare; a large guerrilla force (estimated 100,000) was trained.
Guerrilla operations, which slackened during the training phase, picked up after August. Economic and military targets in Dhaka were attacked. The major success story was
Operation Jackpot, in which naval commandos mined and blew up berthed ships in
Chittagong on
16 August 1971. Pakistani reprisals claimed lives of thousands of civilians. The Indian army took over supplying the Mukti Bahini from the BSF. They organised six sectors for supplying the Bangladesh forces.
October – December
Bangladesh conventional forces attacked border outposts. Kamalpur, Belonia and
Battle of Boyra are a few examples. 90 out of 370 BOPs fell to Bengali forces. Guerrilla attacks intensified, as did Pakistani and Razakar reprisals on civilian populations. Pakistani forces were reinforced by eight battalions from West Pakistan. The Bangladeshi independence fighters even managed to temporarily capture
airstrips at
Lalmonirhat and
Shalutikar. Both of these were used for flying in supplies and arms from India. Pakistan sent 5 battalions from West Pakistan as reinforcements.
Indian co-operation
Wary of the growing involvement of India, the
Pakistan Air Force (PAF) launched
a pre-emptive strike on India. The attack was modelled on the
Operation Focus employed by
Israel Air Force during the
Six-Day War. However, the plan failed to achieve the desired success and was seen as an open act of unprovoked aggression against the Indians.
Indian prime minister
Indira Gandhi declared war on Pakistan and in aid of the Mukti Bahini, then ordered the immediate mobilisation of troops and launched the full-scale invasion. This marked the official start of the
Indo-Pakistani War.
Three Indian
corps were involved in the invasion of East Pakistan. They were supported by nearly three
brigades of Mukti Bahini fighting alongside them, and many more fighting irregularly. This was far superior to the Pakistani army of three
divisions. The Indians quickly overran the country, bypassing heavily defended strongholds. Pakistani forces were unable to effectively counter the Indian attack, as they'd been deployed in small units around the border to counter guerrilla attacks by the Mukti Bahini. Unable to defend Dhaka, the Pakistanis surrendered on
16 December 1971.
India's external intelligence agency, the
R.A.W., played a crucial role in providing logistic support to the Mukti Bahini during the initial stages of the war. RAW's operations, in then-East Pakistan, was the largest covert mission in the history of South Asia.
Pakistani response
Pakistan launched a number of armoured thrusts along India's western front in attempts to force Indian troops away from East Pakistan. Pakistan tried to fight back and boost the sagging morale by incorporating the
Special Services Group commandos in
sabotage and rescue missions. This, however, couldn't stop the
juggernaut of the advancing columns, whose speed and power were too much to contain for the Pakistani Army.
The air and naval war
The
Indian Air Force carried out several sorties against Pakistan, and within a week, IAF aircraft dominated the skies of East Pakistan. It
achieved near-total air supremacy by the end of the first week as the entire Pakistani air contingent in the east, PAF No.14 Squadron, was grounded due to Indian airstrikes at Tejgaon, Kurmitolla, Lal Munir Hat and Shamsher Nagar.
Sea Hawks from
INS Vikrant also struck
Chittagong,
Barisal,
Cox's Bazar, destroying the eastern wing of the
Pakistan Navy and effectively blockading the East Pakistan ports, thereby cutting off any escape routes for the stranded Pakistani soldiers. The nascent
Bangladesh Navy (comprising officers and sailors who defected from Pakistani Navy) aided the Indians in the marine warfare, carrying out attacks, most notably
Operation Jackpot.
Surrender and aftermath
After Pakistan's surrender to India-Bangladesh Joint Forces, called the
Mitro Bahini (see: instrument of surrender) on
16 December 1971, people in Bangladesh rejoiced at their liberation. This was followed by a need to get international acceptance for Bangladesh, as only a few countries recognized the new nation. Bangladesh sought admission in the UN with most voting in its favor, but China vetoed this as Pakistan was its key ally. However, the United States was one of the last nations to accord Bangladesh recognition. To ensure a smooth transition, in 1972 the
Simla Agreement was signed between India and Pakistan. The treaty ensured that Pakistan recognized the independence of Bangladesh in exchange for the return of the Pakistani PoWs. India treated all the PoWs in strict accordance with the Geneva Convention, rule 1925. It released more than 90,000 Pakistani PoWs in five months.
Further, as a gesture of goodwill, nearly 200 soldiers who were sought for
war crimes by Bengalis were also pardoned by India. The accord also gave back more than 13,000 km² of land that Indian troops had seized in West Pakistan during the war, though India retained a few strategic areas; most notably
Kargil (which would in turn again be the focal point for
a war between the two nations in 1999). This was done as a measure of promoting "lasting peace" and was acknowledged by many observers as a sign of maturity by India. But some in India felt that the treaty had been too lenient to Bhutto, who had pleaded for leniency, arguing that the fragile democracy in Pakistan would crumble if the accord was perceived as being overly harsh by Pakistanis.
Reaction in West Pakistan to the war
Reaction to the defeat and dismemberment of half the nation was a shocking loss to top military and civilians alike. No one had expected that they'd lose the formal war in under a fortnight and were also very angry at what they perceived as a meek surrender of the army in East Pakistan.
Yahya Khan's dictatorship collapsed and gave way to Bhutto who took the opportunity to rise to power.
General Niazi, who surrendered along with 93,000 troops, was viewed with suspicion and hatred upon his return to Pakistan. He was shunned and branded a
traitor. The war also exposed the shortcoming of Pakistan's declared strategic doctrine that the "defence of East Pakistan lay in West Pakistan". Pakistan also failed to gather international support, and were found fighting a lone battle with only the USA providing any external help. This further embittered the Pakistanis who had faced the worst military defeat of an army in decades.
The debacle immediately prompted an enquiry headed by Justice Hamdoor Rahman. Called the
Hamoodur Rahman Commission, it was initially suppressed by Bhutto as it put the military in poor light. When it was declassified, it showed many failings from the strategic to the tactical levels. It also condemned the atrocities and the
war crimes committed by the armed forces. It confirmed the looting, rapes and the killings by the Pakistan Army and their local agents although the figures are far lower than the ones quoted by Bangladesh. According to Bangladeshi sources, 200,000 women were raped and over 3 million people were killed, while the Rahman Commission report in Pakistan claimed 26,000 died and the rapes were in the hundreds. However, the army’s role in splintering Pakistan after its greatest military debacle was largely ignored by successive Pakistani governments.
Atrocities
During the war there were widespread killings and other atrocities – including the displacement of civilians in Bangladesh (East Pakistan at the time) and widespread violations of human rights – carried out by the Pakistan Army with support from political and religious militias began with the start of
Operation Searchlight on
25 March 1971.
Bangladeshi authorities claim that three million people were killed, while the
Hamoodur Rahman Commission, an official Pakistan Government investigation, put the figure as low as 26,000 civilian casualties. The international media and reference books in English have also published figures which vary greatly from 200,000 to 3,000,000 for Bangladesh as a whole.
A large section of the intellectual community of Bangladesh were murdered, mostly by the
Al-Shams and
Al-Badr forces, at the instruction of the Pakistani Army. Just 2 days before the surrender, on
14 December 1971, Pakistan Army and Razakar militia (local collaborators) picked up at least 100 to 300 physicians, professors, writers and engineers in Dhaka, and executed them, leaving the dead bodies in a mass grave.. There are many mass graves in Bangladesh, and more are continually being discovered (such as one in an old well near a mosque in
Dhaka, located in the non-Bengali region of the city, which was discovered in August 1999). The first night of war on Bengalis, which is documented in telegrams from the American Consulate in Dhaka to the United States State Department, saw indiscriminate killings of students of Dhaka University and other civilians.
Numerous women were tortured, raped and killed during the war; the exact numbers are not known and are a subject of debate. Bangladeshi sources cite a figure of 200,000 women raped, giving birth to thousands of
war babies. The Pakistan Army also kept numerous Bengali women as sex-slaves inside the Dhaka Cantonment. Most of the girls were captured from
Dhaka University and private homes.
There was significant sectarian violence not only perpetrated and encouraged by the Pakistani army, but also by Bengali nationalists against non-Bengali minorities, especially
Biharis.
On
16 December 2002, the
George Washington University's National Security Archive published a collection of declassified documents, consisting mostly of communications between US embassy officials and
United States Information Service centers in Dhaka and India, and officials in Washington DC. These documents show that US officials working in diplomatic institutions within Bangladesh used the terms
selective genocide and
genocide (see
The Blood Telegram) to describe events they'd knowledge of at the time.
Genocide is the term that's still used to describe the event in almost every major publication and newspaper in Bangladesh., although elsewhere, particularly in Pakistan, the actual death toll, motives, extent, and destructive impact of the actions of the Pakistani forces are disputed.
Foreign reaction
USA and USSR
The United States supported Pakistan both politically and materially. U.S. President
Richard Nixon denied getting involved in the situation, saying that it was an internal matter of Pakistan. But when Pakistan's defeat seemed certain, Nixon sent the
USS Enterprise to the
Bay of Bengal, a move deemed by the Indians as a nuclear threat.
Enterprise arrived on station on
11 December 1971. On
6 December and
13 December, the
Soviet Navy dispatched two groups of ships, armed with nuclear missiles, from
Vladivostok; they trailed U.S. Task Force 74 in the
Indian Ocean from
18 December until
7 January 1972.
Nixon and
Henry Kissinger feared Soviet expansion into South and Southeast Asia. Pakistan was a close ally of the
People's Republic of China, with whom Nixon had been negotiating a
rapprochement and where he intended to visit in February 1972. Nixon feared that an Indian invasion of
West Pakistan would mean total Soviet domination of the region, and that it would seriously undermine the global position of the United States and the regional position of America's new tacit ally, China. In order to demonstrate to China the
bona fides of the United States as an ally, and in direct violation of the US Congress-imposed sanctions on Pakistan, Nixon sent military supplies to Pakistan and routed them through Jordan and Iran, while also encouraging China to increase its arms supplies to Pakistan.
The Nixon administration also ignored reports it received of the genocidal activities of the Pakistani Army in East Pakistan, most notably the
Blood telegram.
The Soviet Union had sympathized with the Bangladeshis, and supported the Indian Army and
Mukti Bahini during the war, recognizing that the independence of Bangladesh would weaken the position of its rivals - the United States and China. It gave assurances to India that if a confrontation with the United States or China developed, the USSR would take counter-measures. This was enshrined in the Indo-Soviet friendship treaty signed in August 1971. The Soviets also sent a nuclear submarine to ward off the threat posed by
USS Enterprise in the
Indian Ocean.
China
As a long-standing ally of Pakistan, the
People's Republic of China reacted with alarm to the evolving situation in East Pakistan and the prospect of India invading West Pakistan and Pakistani-controlled
Kashmir. Believing that just such an Indian attack was imminent, Nixon encouraged China to mobilize its armed forces along its border with India to discourage such an eventuality; the Chinese did not, however, respond in this manner and instead threw their weight behind demands for an immediate ceasefire. China did, however, continue to supply Pakistan with arms and aid. It is believed that had China taken action against India to protect West Pakistan then the Soviet Union would have taken military action against China. One Pakistani writer has speculated that China chose not to attack India because
Himalayan passes were snowbound in the wintry months of November and December.
United Nations
Though the United Nations condemned the human rights violations, it failed to defuse the situation politically before the start of the war. The Security Council assembled on
4 December to discuss the volatile situation in
South Asia. USSR vetoed the resolution twice. After lengthy discussions on
7 December, the General Assembly promptly adopted by a majority resolution calling for an "immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of troops." The United States on
12 December requested that the Security Council be reconvened. However, by the time it was reconvened and proposals were finalised, the war had ended, making the measures merely academic.
The inaction of the United Nations in face of the East Pakistan crisis was widely criticized. The conflict also exposed the delay in decision making that failed to address the underlying issues in time.
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