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Operation Grand Slam

Operation Grand Slam was a key military operation of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. It refers to a plan drawn up by the Pakistan Army in May 1965 that consisted of an attack on the vital Akhnoor Bridge in Jammu and Kashmir, India. The bridge was not only the lifeline of an entire infantry division of the Indian Army, but could also be used to threaten the city of Jammu, an important logistical point for Indian forces. The operation saw initial success, but was aborted when the Indian Army opened a new front in the Pakistani province of Punjab in order to relieve pressure in Kashmir. This forced Pakistan to abandon Grand Slam and fight in Punjab, thus the operation ended in failure and the stated objectives were not achieved.

Operation Grand Slam
Part of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965

Captured Indian AMX-13 tanks being used by the Pakistan Army after the Battle of Chumb
Date1 September - 6 September 1965[1]
Location32°52′N 74°44′E / 32.87°N 74.73°E / 32.87; 74.73
Result

Aborted

Territorial
changes
Pakistan captures 190 square miles (492 square kilometers) of territory
Belligerents
 Pakistan  India
Commanders and leaders
Unknown
Strength
  • 4 infantry battalions
  • 1 tank squadrons
  • 3 artillery batteries
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown
class=notpageimage|
Location of Akhnoor within Jammu and Kashmir (present-day borders)

Planning edit

 
 
 
8km
5miles
 
Manawar Tawi
 
Dawara
 
 
Dawara
 
Chenab
 
Jourian
 
Kaleeth
 
Pallanwala
 
Chhamb
 
Moel
Chhamb-Jourian-Akhnoor sector shown on a contemporary map. (The cease-fire line in effect in 1965 ran roughly along the Dawara stream to the west of Moel.)

The Operation Grand Slam was designed as a twin of the Operation Gibraltar, both of which were meant to jeopardise India's control of Kashmir and bring it to the negotiating table without risking a general war across the international border.[3][4] The idea for Grand Slam came from President Ayub Khan. When he reviewed the plans for Gibraltar in May 1965, he pointed to Akhnur on the map and called it a "jugular" for India. By seizing Akhnur, India's overland supply route to Kashmir would be cut off.[5]

Ayub Khan was mistaken. India's supply route to Kashmir did not pass through Akhnur. (The National Highway 1A passed through Udhampur and Ramban, not Akhnur.) General Akhtar Malik, who was in charge of both Gibraltar and Grand Slam, however understood the President's demand for a "jugular". He developed secret plans to proceed to Jammu after taking Akhnur, where he could cut off the highway. These plans were not revealed to the President, who would have apprehended the possibility of a general war.[6][7][8]

Also mired in confusion were the conditions under which Grand Slam was to be launched. According to some sources Grand Slam was to be launched only after Gibraltar had succeeded. A failure of Gibraltar should have necessitated a rethink.[9] According to others, Grand Slam itself was needed in order to "encash" Gibraltar.[10][11] Neither Gibraltar nor Grand Slam had the full support of the Army Headquarters.[12]

In addition to these confusions, there was also a technical issue. In order to avoid the possibility of a general war, Pakistan needed to make the operation appear to be a "localised conflict" in Kashmir. This meant launching its attack across the cease-fire line in Kashmir.[b] But the operational plans for Grand Slam required the Pakistani forces to cross a "small section" of the border between Pakistani Punjab and Kashmir, which India regarded as an international border.[13][14][c] In the event, it made no difference to India which border the Pakistani forces crossed.

Indian weaknesses edit

Even though Akhnur was not the "jugular" that President Ayub Khan imagined, it was still a key choke point. It had the only bridge across the Chenab River in this area, on which ran the supply route to the western districts of Rajouri and Poonch. The bridge was capable of carrying only light tanks. It had not been strengthened over the years, despite warnings from various local commanders.[d] In addition, the cease-fire line was defended only lightly, as per the UN-mediated cease-fire agreement at the end of the First Kashmir War. It would be quickly overrun in the event of a full scale invasion.[16]

At the time of the opening attack of Operation Grand Slam, the Chhamb Jaurian sector was defended on the Indian side by the 191st (Independent) Infantry Brigade, comprising three battalions, and supported by a squadron of 20 Lancers , which was equipped with AMX-13 light tanks.[17]

Decision to launch edit

 
Pakistani President Ayub Khan, said to have had "loss of nerve and second thoughts" on ordering the Operation Grand Slam[18]

The Operation Gibraltar went badly. The plan was to infiltrate thousands of troops into Jammu and Kashmir, India in the guise of 'mujahideen', who would carry out sabotage to demoralise the Indian forces and incite the local population to revolt. But the local population did not rise, the infiltrators were quickly identified and the Indian Army began to hunt them down.[19] In addition, the Indian Army moved across the cease-fire line to cut off the Pakistani infiltration routes and captured the Haji Pir pass (in (POJK) Pakistan Occupied Jammu and Kashmir) and some heights in the Kargil sector.[20]

On 24 August, General Akhtar Malik started pressing the Army Headquarters for permission to launch the Operation Grand Slam. In his view, unless it was launched, it was only a matter of time before all the Gibraltar forces in Jammu and Kashmir, India would be captured or killed, and nothing would have been achieved from the whole operation.[18] The Army referred the issue to the President, but Ayub Khan withheld approval. He went away to Swat to reflect on options. On 28 August, after the fall of the Haji Pir Pass, Malik briefed the Army chief. It was believed that India would take more territory unless something was done. The Army chief approached the foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (later prime minister) to obtain the President's approval. Bhutto is cited by the Army officers as having been the main driving force behind the entire military operation, and he was also said to be close enough to Ayub Khan to obtain his approval.[21]

Bhutto returned from Swat the next day with the President's order to

take such action that will defreeze the Kashmir problem, weaken Indian resolve, and bring her to the conference table without provoking a general war.

Ayub Khan also ordered the army to be prepared for Indian retaliation. He also warned the army that it would be a long struggle.[22]

General Malik seemingly had his permission for the operation. But perhaps he didn't, because he knew fully well that he was provoking a general war contrary to the President's directive.[23][e]

Execution edit

The Pakistani Army commenced Operation Grand Slam at 0500 hours on 1 September 1965.

The Akhnoor sector was lightly defended by four Indian infantry battalions and a squadron of tanks. The infantry was stretched thin along the border and the AMX-13 tanks were no match for the Pakistani M47 Patton and M48 Patton tanks. Against a militarily stronger and larger Pakistani thrust, the Indian forces retreated from their defensive positions. According to Pakistani military historian Major (retd.) A. H. Amin, the Pakistani forces in Operation Grand Slam had a 6 to 1 advantage over Indian AMX-13 tanks, which were like 'matchboxes' in front of the Pakistani Pattons. In terms of artillery, Pakistan's 8 inch guns were superior to anything that Indians had at that time and had an overall superiority of 6 to 1.[25] The Battle of Chumb was a major battle during the early stages of the operation.

On the second day of the attack, the GOC of the 12th Infantry Division Major General Akhtar Hussain Malik, commanding the overall forces in the area, was replaced by Major General Yahya Khan, the GOC of the 7th Infantry Division, which delayed the attack by one day. Not only did this decision cause confusion among the Pakistani officer cadre, the delay also permitted the Indians to rush reinforcements to the sector. When the attack recommenced on 3 September, the Indian forces in the sector were sufficiently reinforced to hold out for a few more days, but they did not have the strength to launch a counterattack. As the attack carried on for two more days without any significant gains in territory, the Indian Army opened up a new front, on 6 September, across the sensitive state of Punjab in Pakistan. The advance of the Indian Army also threatened to cut across the right flank of the Pakistani attack. Realising the gravity of the threat, the Pakistani Army stopped its thrust into Kashmir and diverted forces to counter the Indian incursion.

See also edit

Battle of Chumb (1965)

Battle of Kasur (1965)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Chamb is now located in Pakistani-administered Azad Jammu and Kashmir following Pakistan's seizure of the town in the Battle of Chamb in 1971; Jourian and Akhnoor remain under Indian control.
  2. ^ This was a hang-over from 1947. At that time, India refrained from retaliating against Pakistan's attacks in Kashmir by crossing the international border. But India and Pakistan were British Dominion at that time with their militaries under the command of British officers. No such constraints operated in 1965.
  3. ^ In Pakistani theory, the border between Pakistani Punjab and Indian-administered Kashmir was a "working boundary", not an international border. India did not such recognise such a distinction. (Nawaz, Crossed Swords (2008, p. 207))
  4. ^ Brigadier Joginder Singh states that the commander of the 26 Division had assessed that the Akhnur bridge would be a target in a Pakistani operation and recommended strengthening it. He was reportedly asked to "proceed on pension".[15]
  5. ^ The rest of the Army top brass would also seem to have ignored other aspects of the President's order because absolutely no preparations were made for facing Indian retaliation. Nor were supplies stockpiled for a long war. "General Ayub was told on the second day of the war by the Army Chief, General Musa Khan, that the Army had even run out of ammunition."[24]

References edit

  1. ^ GILLANI, M. A. (2013). "Tawi to Chak Kirpal September 1965 War". Defence Journal. 17 (2): 64 – via EBSCO.
  2. ^ Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 159: "Despite its bold objectives and initial success, Grand Slam failed in both its military and its political objectives. Militarily, Grand Slam was to result in the capture of the vital town of Akhnur which was a clear and stated objective of the operation, the only question mark being what troops of the 12 Division would do next...Politically, too, Grand Slam failed in its primary objective; the application of military force inside ICK had failed to convince either the Indian government or the international community that it was time for India to accept arbitration or a plebiscite in Kashmir to resolve the issue once and for all.'"
  3. ^ Nawaz, Crossed Swords (2008), p. 207.
  4. ^ Roy & Gates, Unconventional Warfare in South Asia (2014): "By late 1964, Pakistan had developed two interrelated plans known as Operation GIBRALTAR and Operation GRANDSLAM to 'liberate' Kashmir."
  5. ^ Sirrs, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (2016), p. 52.
  6. ^ Nawaz, Crossed Swords (2008), p. 208: "Akhtar Malik, while reluctant to fully tie himself down to that objective, acceded to the request in his meeting with Ayub and others. But, in his operational instructions to his commanders, he kept the option open once he had broken through the Indian defences [at Akhnur]."
  7. ^ Nawaz, Crossed Swords (2008), p. 213: "He wanted to keep the attack on Jammu his secret weapon, since that would have effectively cut off all Indian troops in Kashmir from India proper by commanding a choke point that would cut off the road from Pathankot through Jammu via Udhampur and Srinagar. Jammu was not on the official list of targets for that very reason; Pakistan did not want to provoke a wider war." (emphasis added)
  8. ^ Van Praagh, The Greater Game (2003), p. 293: "By slicing the road between Delhi and Srinagar, Islamic Pakistan sought finally to cut off the treasured Vale of Kashmir and its defenders from hated Hindu India."
  9. ^ Sirrs, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (2016), p. 52: "The result of this second plan was Operation GRAND SLAM, which would only be implemented if GIBRALTAR had succeeded in liberating Srinagar."
  10. ^ Abbas, Pakistan's Drift into Extremism (2015), p. 44: In order to be able to retrieve the situation in case this operation got into trouble, to give it a new lease on life, or to fully exploit the advantage gained in the event of its success, Operation Grand Slam was planned... According to some Pakistani Army officers, it was foreseen then that the value of Operation Gibraltar would be fully encashed after Grand Slam succeeded in wresting control of Akhnur.
  11. ^ Jamal, Shadow War (2009), p. 83: "The operation, which aimed at capturing Akhnur, was not a clearly defined military plan.... The more likely goal was for the operation to build pressure on the Indian army while the Gibraltar forces carried on their work."
  12. ^ Nawaz, Crossed Swords (2008), p. 207: "The Chief [Musa] and the CGS, General Sher Bahadur, had from its inception viewed Gibraltar as a bastard child, born of the liaison between the Foreign Minister [Bhutto] and General Malik."
  13. ^ Jamal, Shadow War (2009), p. 83: "Operation Grand Slam required Pakistani troops to cross a small section of the international border between Jammu in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir and the Pakistani city of Sialkot."
  14. ^ Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 130: "Not only did it mean that the Pakistan Army would have to cross a small section of the international border between Sialkot and Jammu, it also made the prospect of an all-out war very real."
  15. ^ Agha Humayun Amin, Behind The Scenes (Review), Defence Journal, 2000.
  16. ^ Pradhan, R. D. (2007), 1965 War, the Inside Story: Defence Minister Y.B. Chavan's Diary of India-Pakistan War, Atlantic Publishers & Dist, p. 12, ISBN 978-81-269-0762-5
  17. ^ Lt Gen Satish Nambiar (retd) (23 September 2015). "Operations in the Chhamb and Sialkot Sectors" (PDF). IndiaStrategic (September 2015 issue). pp. 54–56.
  18. ^ a b Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 130.
  19. ^ Jamal, Shadow War 2009, p. 83.
  20. ^ Haidar Imtiaz, 1965: How Pakistan won the war of propaganda, The Nation, 12 September 2015.
  21. ^ Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 130–132.
  22. ^ Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 132.
  23. ^ Bajwa, From Kutch to Tashkent (2013), p. 133: "Whatever Ayub's hope of a short war and Bhutto's hope of India confining the war to Kashmir, there was little doubt in the minds of 12 Division and its commander [General Malik] that the launch of Grand Slam would lead to general war with India. In a briefing to his senior officers before its launch, Malik was told by an obviously startled brigadier that 'This would mean war with India'. Malik replied sarcastically, 'You've been paid long enough to make a war.'"
  24. ^ Hiranandani, Vice Admiral GM (2013), Transition to Guardianship: The Indian Navy 1991–2000, Lancer Publishers LLC, ISBN 978-1-935501-66-4
  25. ^ Amin, Major A. H. . defence analyst. pg 41. Archived from the original on 4 January 2012. Retrieved 27 September 2011.

Bibliography edit

  • Abbas, Hassan (2015), Pakistan's Drift into Extremism: Allah, the Army, and America's War on Terror: Allah, the Army, and America's War on Terror, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-317-46328-3
  • Bajwa, Farooq (2013), From Kutch to Tashkent: The Indo-Pakistan War of 1965, London: C. Hurst & Co, ISBN 978-1-84904-230-7
  • Jamal, Arif (2009), Shadow War: The Untold Story of Jihad in Kashmir, Melville House, ISBN 978-1-933633-59-6
  • Nawaz, Shuja (2008), Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army, and the Wars Within, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-547660-6
  • Roy, Kaushik; Gates, Scott (2014), Unconventional Warfare in South Asia: Shadow Warriors and Counterinsurgency, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., ISBN 978-1-4724-0579-1
  • Sirrs, Owen L. (2016), Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate: Covert Action and Internal Operations, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-317-19609-9
  • Van Praagh, David (2003), The Greater Game: India's Race with Destiny and China, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, ISBN 978-0-7735-2639-6

External links edit

  • Official Indian Account can be found here.
  • Defence Journal A Pakistani Account of 1965.
  • Battle of Chhamb Pakistan Army War Diary of 1965 War.
  • operation, grand, slam, other, uses, disambiguation, military, operation, indo, pakistani, 1965, refers, plan, drawn, pakistan, army, 1965, that, consisted, attack, vital, akhnoor, bridge, jammu, kashmir, india, bridge, only, lifeline, entire, infantry, divisi. For other uses see Operation Grand Slam disambiguation Operation Grand Slam was a key military operation of the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 It refers to a plan drawn up by the Pakistan Army in May 1965 that consisted of an attack on the vital Akhnoor Bridge in Jammu and Kashmir India The bridge was not only the lifeline of an entire infantry division of the Indian Army but could also be used to threaten the city of Jammu an important logistical point for Indian forces The operation saw initial success but was aborted when the Indian Army opened a new front in the Pakistani province of Punjab in order to relieve pressure in Kashmir This forced Pakistan to abandon Grand Slam and fight in Punjab thus the operation ended in failure and the stated objectives were not achieved Operation Grand SlamPart of the Indo Pakistani War of 1965Captured Indian AMX 13 tanks being used by the Pakistan Army after the Battle of ChumbDate1 September 6 September 1965 1 LocationChamb Jourian Akhnoor sector Jammu and Kashmir a 32 52 N 74 44 E 32 87 N 74 73 E 32 87 74 73ResultAborted Rapid progress made by Pakistan initially see Battle of Chumb Operational failure aborted after launch of Lahore Front 2 TerritorialchangesPakistan captures 190 square miles 492 square kilometers of territoryBelligerents Pakistan IndiaCommanders and leadersMaj Gen Akhtar Hussain Malik removed after 2 days Maj Gen Yahya KhanUnknownStrength8 infantry battalions 6 tank squadrons 18 artillery batteries4 infantry battalions 1 tank squadrons 3 artillery batteriesCasualties and lossesUnknownUnknownclass notpageimage Location of Akhnoor within Jammu and Kashmir present day borders Contents 1 Planning 1 1 Indian weaknesses 1 2 Decision to launch 2 Execution 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksPlanning edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8km5miles nbsp Manawar Tawi nbsp nbsp Dawara nbsp nbsp Dawara nbsp Chenab nbsp nbsp Jourian nbsp nbsp Kaleeth nbsp nbsp Pallanwala nbsp Chhamb nbsp nbsp Moel Chhamb Jourian Akhnoor sector shown on a contemporary map The cease fire line in effect in 1965 ran roughly along the Dawara stream to the west of Moel The Operation Grand Slam was designed as a twin of the Operation Gibraltar both of which were meant to jeopardise India s control of Kashmir and bring it to the negotiating table without risking a general war across the international border 3 4 The idea for Grand Slam came from President Ayub Khan When he reviewed the plans for Gibraltar in May 1965 he pointed to Akhnur on the map and called it a jugular for India By seizing Akhnur India s overland supply route to Kashmir would be cut off 5 Ayub Khan was mistaken India s supply route to Kashmir did not pass through Akhnur The National Highway 1A passed through Udhampur and Ramban not Akhnur General Akhtar Malik who was in charge of both Gibraltar and Grand Slam however understood the President s demand for a jugular He developed secret plans to proceed to Jammu after taking Akhnur where he could cut off the highway These plans were not revealed to the President who would have apprehended the possibility of a general war 6 7 8 Also mired in confusion were the conditions under which Grand Slam was to be launched According to some sources Grand Slam was to be launched only after Gibraltar had succeeded A failure of Gibraltar should have necessitated a rethink 9 According to others Grand Slam itself was needed in order to encash Gibraltar 10 11 Neither Gibraltar nor Grand Slam had the full support of the Army Headquarters 12 In addition to these confusions there was also a technical issue In order to avoid the possibility of a general war Pakistan needed to make the operation appear to be a localised conflict in Kashmir This meant launching its attack across the cease fire line in Kashmir b But the operational plans for Grand Slam required the Pakistani forces to cross a small section of the border between Pakistani Punjab and Kashmir which India regarded as an international border 13 14 c In the event it made no difference to India which border the Pakistani forces crossed Indian weaknesses edit Even though Akhnur was not the jugular that President Ayub Khan imagined it was still a key choke point It had the only bridge across the Chenab River in this area on which ran the supply route to the western districts of Rajouri and Poonch The bridge was capable of carrying only light tanks It had not been strengthened over the years despite warnings from various local commanders d In addition the cease fire line was defended only lightly as per the UN mediated cease fire agreement at the end of the First Kashmir War It would be quickly overrun in the event of a full scale invasion 16 At the time of the opening attack of Operation Grand Slam the Chhamb Jaurian sector was defended on the Indian side by the 191st Independent Infantry Brigade comprising three battalions and supported by a squadron of 20 Lancers which was equipped with AMX 13 light tanks 17 Decision to launch edit nbsp Pakistani President Ayub Khan said to have had loss of nerve and second thoughts on ordering the Operation Grand Slam 18 The Operation Gibraltar went badly The plan was to infiltrate thousands of troops into Jammu and Kashmir India in the guise of mujahideen who would carry out sabotage to demoralise the Indian forces and incite the local population to revolt But the local population did not rise the infiltrators were quickly identified and the Indian Army began to hunt them down 19 In addition the Indian Army moved across the cease fire line to cut off the Pakistani infiltration routes and captured the Haji Pir pass in POJK Pakistan Occupied Jammu and Kashmir and some heights in the Kargil sector 20 On 24 August General Akhtar Malik started pressing the Army Headquarters for permission to launch the Operation Grand Slam In his view unless it was launched it was only a matter of time before all the Gibraltar forces in Jammu and Kashmir India would be captured or killed and nothing would have been achieved from the whole operation 18 The Army referred the issue to the President but Ayub Khan withheld approval He went away to Swat to reflect on options On 28 August after the fall of the Haji Pir Pass Malik briefed the Army chief It was believed that India would take more territory unless something was done The Army chief approached the foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto later prime minister to obtain the President s approval Bhutto is cited by the Army officers as having been the main driving force behind the entire military operation and he was also said to be close enough to Ayub Khan to obtain his approval 21 Bhutto returned from Swat the next day with the President s order to take such action that will defreeze the Kashmir problem weaken Indian resolve and bring her to the conference table without provoking a general war Ayub Khan also ordered the army to be prepared for Indian retaliation He also warned the army that it would be a long struggle 22 General Malik seemingly had his permission for the operation But perhaps he didn t because he knew fully well that he was provoking a general war contrary to the President s directive 23 e Execution editThe Pakistani Army commenced Operation Grand Slam at 0500 hours on 1 September 1965 The Akhnoor sector was lightly defended by four Indian infantry battalions and a squadron of tanks The infantry was stretched thin along the border and the AMX 13 tanks were no match for the Pakistani M47 Patton and M48 Patton tanks Against a militarily stronger and larger Pakistani thrust the Indian forces retreated from their defensive positions According to Pakistani military historian Major retd A H Amin the Pakistani forces in Operation Grand Slam had a 6 to 1 advantage over Indian AMX 13 tanks which were like matchboxes in front of the Pakistani Pattons In terms of artillery Pakistan s 8 inch guns were superior to anything that Indians had at that time and had an overall superiority of 6 to 1 25 The Battle of Chumb was a major battle during the early stages of the operation On the second day of the attack the GOC of the 12th Infantry Division Major General Akhtar Hussain Malik commanding the overall forces in the area was replaced by Major General Yahya Khan the GOC of the 7th Infantry Division which delayed the attack by one day Not only did this decision cause confusion among the Pakistani officer cadre the delay also permitted the Indians to rush reinforcements to the sector When the attack recommenced on 3 September the Indian forces in the sector were sufficiently reinforced to hold out for a few more days but they did not have the strength to launch a counterattack As the attack carried on for two more days without any significant gains in territory the Indian Army opened up a new front on 6 September across the sensitive state of Punjab in Pakistan The advance of the Indian Army also threatened to cut across the right flank of the Pakistani attack Realising the gravity of the threat the Pakistani Army stopped its thrust into Kashmir and diverted forces to counter the Indian incursion See also editBattle of Chumb 1965 Battle of Kasur 1965 Notes edit Chamb is now located in Pakistani administered Azad Jammu and Kashmir following Pakistan s seizure of the town in the Battle of Chamb in 1971 Jourian and Akhnoor remain under Indian control This was a hang over from 1947 At that time India refrained from retaliating against Pakistan s attacks in Kashmir by crossing the international border But India and Pakistan were British Dominion at that time with their militaries under the command of British officers No such constraints operated in 1965 In Pakistani theory the border between Pakistani Punjab and Indian administered Kashmir was a working boundary not an international border India did not such recognise such a distinction Nawaz Crossed Swords 2008 p 207 Brigadier Joginder Singh states that the commander of the 26 Division had assessed that the Akhnur bridge would be a target in a Pakistani operation and recommended strengthening it He was reportedly asked to proceed on pension 15 The rest of the Army top brass would also seem to have ignored other aspects of the President s order because absolutely no preparations were made for facing Indian retaliation Nor were supplies stockpiled for a long war General Ayub was told on the second day of the war by the Army Chief General Musa Khan that the Army had even run out of ammunition 24 References edit GILLANI M A 2013 Tawi to Chak Kirpal September 1965 War Defence Journal 17 2 64 via EBSCO Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 159 Despite its bold objectives and initial success Grand Slam failed in both its military and its political objectives Militarily Grand Slam was to result in the capture of the vital town of Akhnur which was a clear and stated objective of the operation the only question mark being what troops of the 12 Division would do next Politically too Grand Slam failed in its primary objective the application of military force inside ICK had failed to convince either the Indian government or the international community that it was time for India to accept arbitration or a plebiscite in Kashmir to resolve the issue once and for all Nawaz Crossed Swords 2008 p 207 Roy amp Gates Unconventional Warfare in South Asia 2014 By late 1964 Pakistan had developed two interrelated plans known as Operation GIBRALTAR and Operation GRANDSLAM to liberate Kashmir Sirrs Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence Directorate 2016 p 52 Nawaz Crossed Swords 2008 p 208 Akhtar Malik while reluctant to fully tie himself down to that objective acceded to the request in his meeting with Ayub and others But in his operational instructions to his commanders he kept the option open once he had broken through the Indian defences at Akhnur Nawaz Crossed Swords 2008 p 213 He wanted to keep the attack on Jammu his secret weapon since that would have effectively cut off all Indian troops in Kashmir from India proper by commanding a choke point that would cut off the road from Pathankot through Jammu via Udhampur and Srinagar Jammu was not on the official list of targets for that very reason Pakistan did not want to provoke a wider war emphasis added Van Praagh The Greater Game 2003 p 293 By slicing the road between Delhi and Srinagar Islamic Pakistan sought finally to cut off the treasured Vale of Kashmir and its defenders from hated Hindu India Sirrs Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence Directorate 2016 p 52 The result of this second plan was Operation GRAND SLAM which would only be implemented if GIBRALTAR had succeeded in liberating Srinagar Abbas Pakistan s Drift into Extremism 2015 p 44 In order to be able to retrieve the situation in case this operation got into trouble to give it a new lease on life or to fully exploit the advantage gained in the event of its success Operation Grand Slam was planned According to some Pakistani Army officers it was foreseen then that the value of Operation Gibraltar would be fully encashed after Grand Slam succeeded in wresting control of Akhnur Jamal Shadow War 2009 p 83 The operation which aimed at capturing Akhnur was not a clearly defined military plan The more likely goal was for the operation to build pressure on the Indian army while the Gibraltar forces carried on their work Nawaz Crossed Swords 2008 p 207 The Chief Musa and the CGS General Sher Bahadur had from its inception viewed Gibraltar as a bastard child born of the liaison between the Foreign Minister Bhutto and General Malik Jamal Shadow War 2009 p 83 Operation Grand Slam required Pakistani troops to cross a small section of the international border between Jammu in Indian controlled Jammu and Kashmir and the Pakistani city of Sialkot Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 130 Not only did it mean that the Pakistan Army would have to cross a small section of the international border between Sialkot and Jammu it also made the prospect of an all out war very real Agha Humayun Amin Behind The Scenes Review Defence Journal 2000 Pradhan R D 2007 1965 War the Inside Story Defence Minister Y B Chavan s Diary of India Pakistan War Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 12 ISBN 978 81 269 0762 5 Lt Gen Satish Nambiar retd 23 September 2015 Operations in the Chhamb and Sialkot Sectors PDF IndiaStrategic September 2015 issue pp 54 56 a b Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 130 Jamal Shadow War 2009 p 83 Haidar Imtiaz 1965 How Pakistan won the war of propaganda The Nation 12 September 2015 Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 130 132 Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 132 Bajwa From Kutch to Tashkent 2013 p 133 Whatever Ayub s hope of a short war and Bhutto s hope of India confining the war to Kashmir there was little doubt in the minds of 12 Division and its commander General Malik that the launch of Grand Slam would lead to general war with India In a briefing to his senior officers before its launch Malik was told by an obviously startled brigadier that This would mean war with India Malik replied sarcastically You ve been paid long enough to make a war Hiranandani Vice Admiral GM 2013 Transition to Guardianship The Indian Navy 1991 2000 Lancer Publishers LLC ISBN 978 1 935501 66 4 Amin Major A H Pakistan army till 1965 defence analyst pg 41 Archived from the original on 4 January 2012 Retrieved 27 September 2011 Bibliography editAbbas Hassan 2015 Pakistan s Drift into Extremism Allah the Army and America s War on Terror Allah the Army and America s War on Terror Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 46328 3 Bajwa Farooq 2013 From Kutch to Tashkent The Indo Pakistan War of 1965 London C Hurst amp Co ISBN 978 1 84904 230 7 Jamal Arif 2009 Shadow War The Untold Story of Jihad in Kashmir Melville House ISBN 978 1 933633 59 6 Nawaz Shuja 2008 Crossed Swords Pakistan Its Army and the Wars Within Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 547660 6 Roy Kaushik Gates Scott 2014 Unconventional Warfare in South Asia Shadow Warriors and Counterinsurgency Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 4724 0579 1 Sirrs Owen L 2016 Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence Directorate Covert Action and Internal Operations Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 19609 9 Van Praagh David 2003 The Greater Game India s Race with Destiny and China McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 2639 6External links editBharat Rakshak Official Indian Account can be found here Defence Journal A Pakistani Account of 1965 Air Commodore Syed Sajjad Haider on 1965 war and surrounding events Battle of Chhamb Pakistan Army War Diary of 1965 War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Grand Slam amp oldid 1214141848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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