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Yahya Khan

Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan[a] (4 February 1917 – 10 August 1980) was a Pakistani military officer, who served as the third president of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971. He also served as the Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army from 1966 to 1971. Along with Tikka Khan, he was considered the chief architect of the 1971 Bangladesh genocide.[1][2]

Yahya Khan
یحییٰ خان
Official military portrait, c. 1966
3rd President of Pakistan
Chief Martial Law Administrator
In office
25 March 1969 – 20 December 1971
Prime MinisterNurul Amin
Preceded byMuhammad Ayub Khan
Succeeded byZulfikar Ali Bhutto
5th Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army
In office
18 September 1966 – 20 December 1971
PresidentMuhammad Ayub Khan
Himself
Prime MinisterNurul Amin
Preceded byMuhammad Musa
Succeeded byGul Hassan
Personal details
Born
Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan

(1917-02-04)4 February 1917
Chakwal, Punjab, British India
Died10 August 1980(1980-08-10) (aged 63)
Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Resting placePeshawar, Pakistan
NationalityBritish Indian (1917–1947)
Pakistani (1947–1980)
Political partyNone (martial law)
EducationColonel Brown Cambridge School, Dehradun
Alma mater
Military service
Allegiance British India (1939-47)
Pakistan (1947-71)
Branch/service British Indian Army
Pakistan Army
Years of service1939–1971
Rank General
Unit4th Battalion/10th Baluch Regiment Now 11th Baloch Regiment (S/No. PA–98)
Commands
Battles/wars
AwardsHilal-e-Jurat

Hilal-e-Pakistan

Sitara-e-Pakistan

Order of Pahlavi

Khan was commissioned to the British Indian Army in 1939. He fought in the Second World War in the Mediterranean theatre and was promoted to major (acting lieutenant-colonel). Following the creation of Pakistan in 1947, he advanced in the Pakistan Army. During the Second India–Pakistan War of 1965, Khan helped in executing the covert infiltration in Indian-administered Kashmir. After being controversially appointed to assume the army command in 1966, Khan succeeded to the presidency from Ayub Khan, who resigned in March 1969.

Yahya Khan's presidency oversaw martial law by suspending the constitution in 1969. Holding the country's first general election in 1970, he blocked the power transition to the victorious Sheikh Mujibur Rahman from East Pakistan. In March 1971, Khan ordered Operation Searchlight in an effort to suppress Bengali nationalism. This led to the Bangladesh Liberation War in March 1971. Yahya Khan was central to the perpetration of Bangladesh genocide, in which around 300,000–3,000,000 Bengalis were killed, and between 200,000 to 400,000 women were raped.[3][4] In December 1971, Pakistan carried out pre-emptive strikes against the Bengali-allied Indian Army, culminating in the start of the Third India–Pakistan War. The wars resulted in the surrender of the Pakistani armed forces in East Pakistan, and East Pakistan seceded as Bangladesh. After the surrender, Khan resigned from the military command and transferred the presidency to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Khan remained under house surveillance prior to 1979 when he was released by Fazle Haq. Khan died the following year in Rawalpindi and was buried in Peshawar.

Khan's short regime was regarded as the leading cause of the breakup of Pakistan. He is viewed negatively in both Bangladesh, being considered the chief-architect of the genocide, and in Pakistan.

Early life and education edit

Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan was born in Chakwal, Punjab, British India,[5] in a Qizilbash family on 4 February 1917, according to the references written by Russian sources.[6][7] His family descended from the elite soldier class of Iranian conqueror Nader Shah.[8] He and his family were of Pashtun origin.[9][10][11][12][13][14]

Few Pakistanis knew anything about Yahya Khan when he was vaulted into the presidency two years ago. The stocky, bushy–browed Pathan had been the army chief of staff since 1966...

— Editorial, Time, 2 August 1971[15]

According to Indian journalist Dewan Barindranath's book Private Life of Yahya Khan (published in 1974), Yahya's father, Saadat Ali Khan, worked in the Indian Imperial Police, in the Punjab province. He joined as a head constable and retired as a deputy superintendent. He was posted in Chakwal, Punjab, British India, when Yahya Khan was born. He was rewarded with the title of Khan Sahib for having removed the bodies of many freedom fighters, including Bhaghat Singh, as they were executed in secrecy and the British needed to get rid of the corpses without attracting much attention, operations Saadat Ali Khan carried out "efficiently and faithfully."[16]

Yahya's father was originally from Peshawar.[17]

Yahya studied in the prestigious Colonel Brown Cambridge School in Dehradun and later enrolled at the University of the Punjab in Lahore, from where he graduated with a B.A. degree, finishing first in his class.[8][16]

Military service edit

Career before Pakistan's separation edit

Yahya Khan was commissioned into the British Indian Army from the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun on 15 July 1939, his date of commission was later antedated to 28 August 1938.[8][5] An infantry officer from the 4th/10th Baluch Regiment (4th Battalion of 10th Baluch Regiment, later amalgamated with the modern and current form of Baloch Regiment, 'Baloch' was spelled as 'Baluch' in Yahya's time), Yahya saw action during World War II in North Africa where he was captured by the Axis Forces in June 1942 and interned in a prisoner of war camp in Italy from where he escaped in the third attempt.[5]

Yahya Khan served in World War II as a lieutenant and later captain in the 4th Infantry Division (India). He served in Iraq, Italy and North Africa. He was a POW in Italy before returning to India.[8]

After the birth of Pakistan edit

 
Lt. Col. Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan presents the crest of the Baloch Regiment to the Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan watches, March 1950

After the partition of India, he decided to join the Pakistan Army in 1947, he had already reached to the rank of major (acting lieutenant-colonel). In this year he was instrumental in not letting the Indian officers shift books from the famous library of the Pakistan Army Staff College (now Command and Staff College) at Quetta,[8] where Yahya was posted as an instructor at the time of the partition of India. He renamed the 'Command and Staff College' from 'Army Staff College'.[5] At the age of 34, he was promoted to Brigadier.[8] And then he was appointed as commander of the 105th Independent Brigade that was deployed in LoC ceasefire region in Jammu and Kashmir in 1951–1952.[18]

Later Yahya Khan, as Vice Chief of General Staff, was selected to head of the army's planning board set up by Ayub Khan to modernize the Pakistan Army in 1954–57. Yahya also performed the duties of Chief of General Staff from 1958 to 1962 from where he went on to command two infantry divisions from 1962 to 1965. He played a pivotal role in sustaining the support for President Ayub Khan's campaign in the 1965 presidential elections against Fatima Jinnah.[6] He was made GOC of the 7th Infantry Division of the Pakistan Army, which he commanded during the 1965 war with India and in the same war he also commanded the 12th Infantry Division.

During these years, Yahya was also tasked in civil and administrative matters, including being the Administrator of the Islamabad Capital Project, "the job for major execution" being given to him.[19]

The C-in-C edit

After the '65 war, Maj. Gen. Yahya Khan was appointed in the GHQ, Pakistan as the chief of staff of the army (at that time this appointment was the deputy to the commander-in-chief of the army) and was promoted to lieutenant general. Soon he was appointed as the commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army in March 1966[20] and took command on the 18th day of September when President Ayub promoted him to full general. At promotion, Yahya Khan superseded two of his seniors: Lieutenant-General Altaf Qadir and Lieutenant-General Bakhtiar Rana.[8][21]

After becoming the commander-in-chief of the army, Yahya energetically started reorganizing the Pakistan Army in 1966.[8] The post-1965 situation saw major organizational and technical changes in the Pakistan Army. Until 1965, it was thought that army divisions could function effectively while getting orders directly from the army's GHQ. This idea failed miserably in the 1965 war, and the need to have intermediate corps headquarters in between the GHQ and the fighting combat divisions was recognized as a foremost operational necessity after the 1965 war. In the 1965 war, the Pakistan Army had only one corps headquarters (the 1 Corps).[21]

Soon after the war had started, the United States had imposed an embargo on military aid to both India and Pakistan. This embargo did not affect the Indian Army but produced major changes in the Pakistan Army's technical composition. US Secretary of State Dean Rusk well summed it up when he said, "Well if you are going to fight, go ahead and fight, but we're not going to pay for it".[22]

Pakistan now turned to China for military aid, and the Chinese tank T-59 started replacing the US M-47/48 tanks as the Pakistan Army's MBT (Main Battle Tank) from 1966. 80 tanks, the first batch of T-59s, a low-grade version of the Russian T-54/55 series were delivered to Pakistan in 1965–66. The first batch was displayed in the Joint Services Day Parade on 23 March 1966. The 1965 War had proved that Pakistan Army's tank-infantry ratio was lopsided and more infantry was required. Three more infantry divisions (9, 16 and 17 Divisions) largely equipped with Chinese equipment and popularly referred to by the rank and file as "The China Divisions" were raised by the beginning of 1968. Two more corps headquarters: the 2 Corps Headquarters (Jhelum-Ravi Corridor) and the 4 Corps Headquarters (Ravi-Sutlej Corridor) were raised, also in East Pakistan a corps-sized formation (which was titled as the Eastern Command) was created.

Presidency (1969–1971) edit

 
President Yahya Khan with United States President Richard Nixon in October 1970

A sustained anti-regime mass movement began in the fall of 1968 in West Pakistan. The uprising spread to East Pakistan and gathered strength. President Ayub Khan tried to quell the revolt by making concessions to the opposition, but demonstrations continued.[23] Rather than resigning and allowing a constitutional transfer of power, Ayub Khan requested that Yahya Khan, Commander-in-Chief of the Army, utilize the military's supra-constitutional authority to declare martial law and take power.[24] On 25 March 1969, Yahya did so.[25][26]

When Yahya Khan assumed the office on 25 March 1969, he inherited a two-decade constitutional problem of inter-provincial ethnic rivalry between the Punjabi-Pashtun-Mohajir-dominated and almost-exclusively-Muslim West Pakistan, and the ethnically-Bengali-dominated East Pakistan, where non-Muslims constituted one-fourth of the population. In addition, Yahya also inherited an 11-year problem of transforming a country essentially ruled by one man to a democratic country, which was the ideological basis of the anti-Ayub movement of 1968–69. As an army chief, Yahya had all the capabilities, qualifications and potential, but he inherited an extremely-complex problem and was forced to perform the multiple roles of caretaker head of the country, drafter of a provisional constitution, resolving the One Unit question, satisfying the frustrations and the sense of exploitation and discrimination successively created in the East Wing by a series of government policies since 1948.[8][18]

The American political scientist Lawrence Ziring observed :

Yahya Khan has been widely portrayed as a ruthless uncompromising insensitive and grossly inept leader.... While Yahya cannot escape responsibility for these tragic events, it is also on the record that he did not act alone.... All the major actors of the period were creatures of a historic legacy and a psycho-political milieu which did not lend itself to accommodation and compromise, to bargaining and a reasoned settlement. Nurtured on conspiracy theories, they were all conditioned to act in a manner that neglected agreeable solutions and promoted violent judgments.[27]

Yahya Khan attempted to solve Pakistan's constitutional and inter-provincial/regional rivalry problems once he took over power from Ayub Khan in March 1969. The tragedy of the whole affair was the fact that all of the actions that Yahya took were correct in principle but too late and served only to further intensify the political polarization between the East and West wings:

  • He dissolved the One Unit and restored the pre-1955 provinces of West Pakistan.[18]
  • He promised free fair direct one-man one-vote,[18] elections on adult franchise, a basic human right that had been denied to the Pakistani people since the pre-independence 1946 elections by political inefficiency, double games and intrigue, by civilian governments from 1947 to 1958 and by Ayub's one-man rule from 1958 to 1969.

However, the dissolution of One Unit did not lead to the positive results that it might have occurred earlier.[18] Yahya also made an attempt to accommodate the East Pakistanis by abolishing the principle of parity in the hope that a greater share in the assembly would redress their wounded ethnic regional pride and ensure the integrity of Pakistan. Instead of satisfying the Bengalis, it intensified their separatism since they felt that the west wing had politically suppressed them since 1958, which caused the rise of anti-West Wing sentiment in the East Wing.

In 1968, the political pressure exerted by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had weakened President Ayub Khan, who had sacked Bhutto for disagreeing with Ayub's decision to implement on Tashkent Agreement, facilitated by the Soviet Union to end the hostilities with India.[28] To ease the situation, Ayub had tried reaching out to terms with the major parties, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the Awami League (AL), but remained unsuccessful.[28] In poor health, President Ayub abrogated his own constitution and suddenly resigned from the presidency.[29]

On 24 March 1969, President Ayub directed a letter to General Yahya Khan, inviting him to deal with the situation, as it was "beyond the capacity of (civil) government to deal with the... Complex situation."[30] On 26 March 1969, General Yahya appeared in national television and announced to enforce martial law in all over the country. The 1962 constitution was abrogated, the parliament was dissolved, and Ayub's civilian officials were dismissed.[30] In his first nationwide address, Yahya maintained, "I will not tolerate disorder. Let everyone remain at his post."[8][31]

With immediate effect, he installed a military government and featured active duty military officials:

National Security Council and Legal Frame Order edit

Yahya was well aware of this explosive situation and decided to bring changes all over the country. His earlier initiatives directed towards establishing the National Security Council (NSC), with Major-General Ghulam Omar being its first advisor.[33][34] It was formed to analyse and prepare assessments towards issues relating the political and national security.[33]

In 1969, President Yahya also promulgated the Legal Framework Order No. 1970, which disestablished the One Unit programme, which had formed West Pakistan.[35] Instead, it removed the prefix West but instead added Pakistan.[35] The decree had no effect on East Pakistan.[35] Then, Yahya announced general elections to be held in 1970 and appointed Judge Abdus Sattar as Chief Election Commissioner of the Election Commission of Pakistan.[28] The changes were carried out by President Yahya Khan to return the country towards parliamentary democracy.[28]

1970 general election edit

 
Gen. Yahya Khan in East Pakistan, 20 November 1970, Gen. Abdul Hamid Khan is seen beside him, they had visited East Pakistan for 1970 Bhola cyclone

By 28 July 1969, President Yahya Khan had set a framework for elections that were to be held in December 1970.[18][34] Finally, the general elections were held all over the country. In East Pakistan, the Awami League, led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, held almost all seats but no seat in any of four provinces of West Pakistan. The socialist Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) had won the exclusive mandate in the four provinces of Pakistan but none in East Pakistan. The Pakistan Muslim League (PML), led by Nurul Amin, was the only party to have representation from all over the country, but it had failed to gain the mandate to run the government. The Awami League had 160 seats, all won from East Pakistan, the socialist PPP 81, and the conservative PML 10 in the National Assembly. The general elections's results truly reflected the ugly political reality: the division of the Pakistani electorate along regional lines and political polarisation of the country between East Pakistan and West Pakistan.[34][36]

In political terms, therefore, Pakistan as a nation stood divided as a result. A series of bilateral talks between the PPP and Mujibur Rahman produced no results and were unable to come to an agreement of a transfer of power from West Pakistan to East Pakistan's representatives on the basis of the six-point programme. In Pakistan, the people had felt that the six-point programme was a step towards the secession from Pakistan.[34]

Bangladesh Liberation War and genocide edit

While the political deadlock remained between the Awami League, PPP and the military government after the general elections in 1970, Yahya Khan began coordinating several meetings with his military strategists over the issue in East Pakistan. On 25 March 1971,[8][5] Yahya initiated Operation Searchlight, a genocidal crackdown to suppress Bengali dissent.[34] The situation in East Pakistan worsened, and the gulf between the two wings had become too wide to be bridged. As a result of Operation Searchlight, agitation was now transformed into civil war as Bengali members of Pakistan armed forces and Police mutinied and formed the Mukti Bahini along with common people of all classes to launch unconventional and hit-and-run operations.[37][38] Violent disorder and chaos followed after the Pakistan Army continued its systematic and deliberate campaign of killing and mass rape of the populace of East Pakistan.

Both Yahya Khan and Bhutto flew to Dhaka and tried negotiations one more time, but they did not succeed and reached a deadlock.[34]

Operation Searchlight was a genocidal military operation carried out by the Pakistan Armed Forces to curb the Bengali nationalist movement in erstwhile East Pakistan in March 1971.[8][39] Ordered by the government in Pakistan, it was seen as the sequel to Operation Blitz, which had been launched in November 1970. The Pakistani government's view was that it had to launch a campaign to neutralise a rebellion in East Pakistan to save the unity of Pakistan. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman proclaimed the independent state of Bangladesh and a government-in-exile.[34]

The original plan envisioned taking control of the major cities on 26 March 1971 and then eliminating all opposition, political or military[40] within one month. The prolonged Bengali resistance had not been anticipated by Pakistani planners.[41] The main phase of Operation Searchlight ended with the fall of the last major town in Bengali hands in mid-May.

The total number of people killed in East Pakistan is not known with any degree of accuracy.[42] Bangladeshi authorities claim that 3 million people were killed,[43] while the Hamoodur Rahman Commission, an official Pakistani Government investigation, put the figure as low as 26,000 civilian casualties.[44] In her widely discredited book Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War, Sarmila Bose said between 50,000 and 100,000 combatants and civilians were killed by both sides during the war.[38] A 2008 British Medical Journal study by Ziad Obermeyer, Christopher J. L. Murray, and Emmanuela Gakidou estimated that up to 269,000 civilians died as a result of the conflict; the authors note that this is far higher than a previous estimate of 58,000 from Uppsala University and the Peace Research Institute, Oslo.[45]

General Yahya Khan arrested Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on charges of sedition and appointed Brigadier Rahimuddin Khan (later General) to preside over a special tribunal dealing with Mujib's case. Rahimuddin awarded Mujib the death sentence,[46] and President Yahya put the verdict into abeyance. Yahya's crackdown, however, had led to the Bangladesh Liberation War within Pakistan, with India being drawn into the war, India fighting on behalf of the Bangladeshis against Pakistan, a war which would later extend into the Indo-Pak war of 1971.[36][34][37]

The aftermaths of this war were mainly that East Pakistan became independent as Bangladesh and India captured approximately 15,000+ square kilometres (5,000+ square miles) of land of West Pakistan (now Pakistan). However, the captured territory of West Pakistan was given back to Pakistan in the Simla Agreement signed later on 2 July 1972 between Indira Gandhi and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.[47]

The 1971 war led to increased tensions between the countries but nonetheless Pakistan recognised the independence of Bangladesh after severe pressure from the OIC. But this event led to high tensions between Pakistan and India.

US role edit

The United States had been a major sponsor of President Yahya's military government. American journalist Gary Bass notes in The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide, "Nixon liked very few people, but he did like General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan."[48] Personal initiatives of President Yahya had helped to establish the communication channel between the United States and China, which would be used to set up the Nixon's trip in 1972.[49]

Since 1960, Pakistan was perceived in the United States as an integral bulwark against global Communism in the Cold War. The United States cautiously supported Pakistan during 1971 although Congress kept in place an arms embargo.[50] In 1970, India with a heavily socialist economy entered in a formal alliance with the Soviet Union in August 1971.

Nixon urged President Yahya Khan multiple times to exercise restraint.[51] His objective was to prevent a war and safeguard Pakistan's interests, though he feared an Indian invasion of Pakistan that would lead to Indian domination of the subcontinent and strengthen the position of the Soviet Union.[52] Similarly, President Yahya feared that an independent Bangladesh could lead to the disintegration of Pakistan. Indian military support for Bengali guerrillas led to war between India and Pakistan.[53]

In November 1971, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi met Nixon in Washington. She assured him that she didn't want war with Pakistan, but he did not believe her.[54] Witness accounts presented by Kissinger pointed out that Nixon made specific proposals to Prime Minister Gandhi on a solution for the crisis, some of which she heard for the first time, including a mutual withdrawal of troops from the Indo-East Pakistan borders. Nixon also expressed a wish to fix a time limit with Yahya for political accommodation in East Pakistan. Nixon asserted that India could count on US endeavors to ease the crisis within a short time. But, both Kissinger and Gandhi's aide Jayakar maintained, Gandhi did not respond to these proposals. Kissinger noted that she "listened to what was, in fact, one of Nixon's better presentations with aloof indifference" but "took up none of the points." Jayakar pointed out that Gandhi listened to Nixon "without a single comment, creating an impregnable space so that no real contact was possible." She also refrained from assuring that India would follow Pakistan's suit if it withdrew from India's borders. As a result, the main agenda was "dropped altogether."[55]

On 3 December 1971, Yahya preemptively attacked the Indian Air Force and Gandhi retaliated, pushing into East Pakistan. Nixon issued a statement blaming Pakistan for starting the conflict and blaming India for escalating it.[56] He favored a cease-fire.[57] The United States was secretly encouraging the shipment of military equipment from Iran, Turkey, and Jordan to Pakistan, offering to later replenish those countries' weapons stocks[58] despite Congressional objections.[36] The US used the threat of an aid cut-off to force Pakistan to back down, while its continued military aid to Islamabad prevented India from launching incursions deeper into the country. Pakistan forces in East Pakistan surrendered on 16 December 1971, leading to the creation of the independent state of Bangladesh.[8][34][59]

Fall from power edit

When the news of the surrender of Pakistan reached through the national television, the spontaneous and overwhelming public anger over Pakistan's defeat by Bangladeshi rebels and the Indian Army, followed by the division of Pakistan into two parts boiled into street demonstrations throughout Pakistan. Rumors of an impending coup d'état by junior military officers against President Yahya Khan swept the country. Yahya became the highest-ranking casualty of the war: to forestall further unrest, on 20 December 1971 he handed over the presidency and government to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto— the ambitious leader of Pakistan's powerful and popular (at that time) People's Party.[8]

Within hours of Yahya stepping down, President Bhutto reversed Judge Advocate General Branch (Pakistan)'s verdict against Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and instead released him to see him off to London. President Bhutto also signed orders for Yahya's house confinement, the man who imprisoned Mujib in the first place. Both actions produced headlines around the world.[8]

Personal life edit

Religion edit

He was nominally a Shia Muslim,[60] but was non-practising and was known to have indulged in activities prohibited in Islam such as womanizing and the consumption of alcohol.[61][62] Indian journalist Dewan Berindranath argued that Yahya turned to alcohol and womanizing when he gained power, as a coping mechanism to deal with stress, and that when he was a soldier he was known for being morally upright, abstaining from partying unlike other officers and instead preferring to spend time with his family and also practicing Islamic rituals such as the fast of Ramadan, eventually quoting Ayub Khan who said that "Give me half a dozen officers of the calibre and moral standards of Yahya Khan and I can show you what can Pakistan do as a great nation of the Islamic world."[63]

During his rule from 1969 to 1971, Mian Tufail Mohammad, a prominent leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami, the country's main Islamist party, hailed Yahya as "the champion of Islam", as there was a general view among Islamists that he would fight leftist elements of the country (the Pakistan People's Party in West Pakistan and the Awami League in what was East Pakistan and now Bangladesh) and also push for the Islamization of the Constitution.[64] More generally, Yahya used the intelligence services (the ISI and the IB) "to keep secular political parties under check", mobilizing the Information Ministry for propaganda and pushing the idea that they put "Islam and Pakistan in danger."[65]

Towards the end of his life, during and following his imprisonment, Yahya slowly abandoned drinking altogether as he "turned extremely religious."[66]

Relationships edit

Yahya is said to have had a relationship with Akleem Akhtar, nicknamed General Rani, but he was never married.[67] His name was linked with the singer and actress Noor Jehan as well.[68] He also had a brief relationship with a Bengali woman called Mrs Shamim K. Hussain, also known as Black Beauty.[69] The wife of a police officer, Yahya appreciated her company not so much for her looks but mainly because she was fluent in English and could talk about Shakespeare and Lord Byron, among his favourite poets, and she eventually became influential enough to shape the decisions of the foreign office.[70]

Family edit

Yahya had a son named Ali Yahya and a daughter named Yasmin Yahya.[71]

His elder brother Agha Muhammad Ali Khan worked in the police, among other postings being the Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Lahore from 1948 to 1951[72] and later retired as Inspector General West Pakistan.

His nephew Ahmed Ali was also in the Pakistan Army, as a captain and then as a major serving as Yahya's aide-de-camp from 1966 to 1969[73] and later was elevated to the rank of major general in the Pakistan Army.

Death edit

Yahya remained under house arrest until 1979, when he was released from custody by martial law administrator General Fazle Haq. He stayed out from public events and wrote down his memoirs in the form of notes that remain unpublished.[73] He died on 10 August 1980 in Rawalpindi, Punjab and was interred at Circle road graveyard, Peshawar, Pakistan.[8][5]

Legacy edit

In Pakistan edit

Yahya Khan was awarded HPk, HJ, SPk, NePl but then stripped of his service honours by Pakistan.[8][5] Khan is viewed largely negatively by Pakistani historians and is considered among the worst of the country's leaders.[5] His rule is widely regarded as the leading cause of the breakup of Pakistan.[74]

In the United States edit

In the United States, he has been appreciated for facilitating the American opening to China, President Richard Nixon sending a handwritten letter to him, stating that "without your personal assistance the profound breakthrough in relations between the USA and the [Peoples Republic of China] would never have been accomplished... Those who want a more peaceful world in the generations to come will be forever in your debt."[75]

In popular culture edit

In the 2023 film Sam Bahadur, Khan is portrayed by Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub.

Book edit

  • The Breaking of Pakistan: Yahya Speaks about the Bhutto-Mujib Interaction which Broke Pakistan, Lahore: Liberty Publishers, 1997, 184 p.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Urdu: آغا محمد یحیٰی خان

References edit

  1. ^ Totten, Samuel; Parsons, William S.; Charny, Israel W. (2004). Century of Genocide: Critical Essays and Eyewitness Accounts. Psychology Press. pp. 295–303. ISBN 978-0-415-94430-4. The Pakistani government (the Yahya regime) was primarily responsible for the genocide. Not only did it prevent the Awami League and Rahman from forming the federal government, but it opted for a military solution to a constitutional crisis. In doing so, it decided to unleash a brutal military operation in order to terrorize the Bengalis. Yahya's decision to put General Tikka Khan (who had earned the name of "Butcher of Baluchistan" for his earlier brutal suppression of Baluchi nationals in the 1960s) in charge of the military operation in Bangladesh was an overt signal of the regime's intention to launch a genocide.
  2. ^ Mishra, Pankaj (16 September 2013). "Unholy Alliances". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 3 September 2023. The military junta—led by General Yahya Khan, who had assumed power in 1969—was reluctant to accept the election results, and Khan postponed convening Pakistan's National Assembly... On March 25, 1971, the Pakistani Army launched a full-scale campaign, known as Operation Searchlight. After arresting Mujib and abducting him to West Pakistan and banning his party, it set about massacring his supporters, with American weapons. Firing squads spread out across East Pakistan, sometimes assisted by local collaborators from Islamist groups that had been humiliated in the elections. In the countryside, where the armed resistance was strongest, the Pakistani military burned and strafed villages, killing thousands and turning many more into refugees. Hindus, who composed more than ten per cent of the population, were targeted, their un-Muslimness ascertained by a quick inspection underneath their lungis. Tens of thousands of women were raped in a campaign of terror.
  3. ^ "The Past has yet to Leave the Present: Genocide in Bangladesh". Harvard International Review. 1 February 2023. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  4. ^ "House Resolution1430 - Recognizing the Bangladesh Genocide of 1971". United States Congress.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "General Yahya Khan | Former Army Chief of Pakistan enforcing Martial Law in 1969". Story of Pakistan website. 26 October 2013. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b Mikaberidze, Alexander, ed. (2011). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World a Historical Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIOm 2011. ISBN 978-1598843378.
  7. ^ Democracy, security, and development in India. By Raju G. C. Thomas.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Yahya Khan: president of Pakistan on Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 July 2020
  9. ^ Raghavan, Srinath (2013). 1971: A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-674-72864-6. The promotion was all the more remarkable given that Yahya was a Shia in the predominantly Sunni officer corps.
  10. ^ Tinker, Hugh (1990). South Asia: A Short History. University of Hawaii Press. p. 248. ISBN 978-0824812874.
  11. ^ Wolper, Stanley (2010). India and Pakistan: Continued Conflict or Cooperation?. University of California Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0520948006.
  12. ^ Jaffrelot, Christophe (2015). The Pakistan Paradox: Instability and Resilience. Oxford University Press. pp. 226–227. ISBN 978-0-19023-518-5. Pashtuns (the community from which hailed the country's first four commanders-in-chief from Ayub Khan to Yahya Khan and Gul Hassan Khan, with the exception of Mohammad Musa)
  13. ^ Hiro, Dilip (2015). The Longest August: The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan. Nation Books. p. 183. ISBN 978-1568585031. A burly, double chinned, bushy-browed slothful Yahya Khan was, like Ayub Khan, an ethnic Pashtun.
  14. ^ Payne, Robert (1973). Massacre: The tragedy at Bangla Desh and the phenomenon of mass slaughter throughout history. Macmillan Publishers. p. 13. ISBN 9780025952409.
  15. ^ . Time. 2 August 1971. p. 32. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  16. ^ a b Berindranath, Dewan (2006). Private Life of Yahya Khan. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers. p. 20.
  17. ^ Kassim, Husain (2006). "Yahya Khan, Aga Muhammad". In Leonard, Thomas M. (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Developing World. Vol. 3. Routledge. p. 1745. ISBN 978-0-415-97664-0. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Shaikh Aziz (25 December 2011). "A chapter from history: Yahya Khan's quick action". Dawn. Pakistan. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  19. ^ Berindranath, Dewan (2006). Private Life of Yahya Khan. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers. pp. 22–24.
  20. ^ "Khan, Aga Mohammad Yahya". Banglapedia. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  21. ^ a b A.R. Siddiqi (25 April 2004). "Army's top slot: the seniority factor (scroll down to read this section and title)". Dawn. Pakistan. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  22. ^ Dennis Kux, India and the United States: Estranged Democracies (Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1992), 239.
  23. ^ Sisson, Richard; Rose, Leo E. (1990). War and secession : Pakistan, India, and the creation of Bangladesh. University of California Press. pp. 21–22. ISBN 0-520-07665-6.
  24. ^ Haqqani, Husain (2005). Between Mosque and Military. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-670-08856-0.
  25. ^ Jaffrelot, Christophe (2015). The Pakistan paradox : instability and resilience. Translated by Schoch, Cynthia. Oxford University Press. pp. 320–321. ISBN 978-0-19023-518-5.
  26. ^ "Martial Law Proclaimed, President Ayub Resigns". Pakistan Affairs. 22 (4). Washington D.C.: Information Division, Embassy of Pakistan. 1969.
  27. ^ Ziring, Lawrence (1980). Pakistan: The Enigma of Political Development. Dawson. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-7129-0954-9.
  28. ^ a b c d Akbar, M.K. (1997). Pakistan from Jinnah to Sharif. New Delhi: Mittal Publications. ISBN 978-8170996743.
  29. ^ Peter R. Blood (1996). Pakistan: A Country Study. United States: Diane Publication Co. ISBN 978-0788136313.
  30. ^ a b Omar, Imtiaz (2002). Emergency powers and the courts in India and Pakistan. England: Kluwer Law International. ISBN 978-9041117755.
  31. ^ KrishnaRao, K.V. (1991). Prepare or perish : a study of national security. New Delhi: Lancer Publ. ISBN 978-8172120016.
  32. ^ a b c d Dr. GN. Kazi (21 May 2008). "Pakistan's Smallest Cabinet". Dr. GN. Kazi. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  33. ^ a b PILDT. "The Evolution of National Security Council in Pakistan". Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency. PILDT. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i From disunion through the Zia al-Huq era Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 22 July 2020
  35. ^ a b c Newberg, Paula R. (2002). Judging the state : courts and constitutional politics in Pakistan (1st paperback ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521894401.
  36. ^ a b c Gandhi, Sajit (16 December 2002). "The Tilt: The U.S. and the South Asian Crisis of 1971". The National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 79. The National Security Archive (United States). Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  37. ^ a b Mark Dummett (16 December 2011). "Bangladesh war: The article that changed history". BBC News. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  38. ^ a b Ian Jack (21 May 2011). "It's not the arithmetic of genocide that's important. It's that we pay attention". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  39. ^ Bose, Sarmila (8 October 2005). . Economic and Political Weekly. Archived from the original on 1 March 2007. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  40. ^ Salik, Siddiq (1997). Witness to surrender. Dhaka: University Press. pp. 63, 228–9. ISBN 978-984-05-1373-4.
  41. ^ Pakistan Defence Journal, 1977, Vol 2, p2-3
  42. ^ Bass 2013, pp. 350–351 reviews the various estimates here [1].
  43. ^ White, Matthew, Death Tolls for the Major Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century
  44. ^ Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report, chapter 2, paragraph 33
  45. ^ Obermeyer, Ziad; et al. (June 2008). "Fifty years of violent war deaths from Vietnam to Bosnia: analysis of data from the world health survey programme". British Medical Journal. 336 (7659): 1482–1486. doi:10.1136/bmj.a137. PMC 2440905. PMID 18566045.
  46. ^ Ahsan, Syed Badrul (8 August 2019). "When Pakistan put Bangabandhu on trial". Dhaka Tribune. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  47. ^ "A leaf from history: Simla Agreement, at last". Dawn. Pakistan. 23 September 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  48. ^ Bass 2013, p. 7
  49. ^ Kissinger's Secret Trip to China
  50. ^ Mosleh Uddin. . Asiaticsociety.org.bd. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  51. ^ Black 2007, p. 751
  52. ^ . Time. 17 January 1972. p. 17. Archived from the original on 6 November 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  53. ^ . Time. 2 August 1971. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
  54. ^ Black 2007, pp. 751–752
  55. ^ Jayakar, Indira Gandhi, p. 232; Kissinger, White House Years, pp. 878 & 881–82.
  56. ^ Black 2007, p. 753
  57. ^ Black 2007, p. 755
  58. ^ Black 2007, p. 756
  59. ^ Black 2007, p. 757
  60. ^ Raghavan, Srinath (2013). 1971: A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-674-72864-6. The promotion was all the more remarkable given that Yahya was a Shia in the predominantly Sunni officer corps.
  61. ^ Badrul Ahsan, Syed (15 March 2016). "The rise and fall of Yahya Khan". The Daily Observer. Retrieved 30 May 2022. Yahya Khan had a life-long affair with drinking, to a point where he invariably got raucously tipsy. His affairs with women were legion.
  62. ^ Raghavan, Srinath (2013). 1971: A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-674-72864-6. Yahya's energies were also sapped by his hectic social routine. He was excessively fond of the bottle, and his pursuit of a string of liaisons was unblemished by concerns about public opprobrium or professional ethics.
  63. ^ Berindranath, Dewan (2006). Private Life of Yahya Khan. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers. pp. 24–25.
  64. ^ Zaman, Muhammad Qasim (2020). Islam in Pakistan: A History. Princeton University Press. p. 158.
  65. ^ Singh, Ravi Shekhar Narayan (2008). The Military Factor in Pakistan. Lancer Publishers. p. 230.
  66. ^ Berindranath, Dewan (2006). Private Life of Yahya Khan. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers. p. 121.
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  68. ^ Naveed, Ahmed (14 December 2021). "Lest We Forget: Yahya Khan Was Busy Partying As Dhaka Fell". The Friday Times.
  69. ^ "Yahya Khan Was Busy Having a Good Time as Dhaka Fell". 18 December 2019.
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  71. ^ "General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan". 27 August 2000.
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  73. ^ a b Cowasjee, Ardeshir (27 August 2020). "General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan". Dawn News. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  74. ^ Raghavan, Srinath (2013). 1971: The Global History of Creation of the Bangladesh. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674731271.
  75. ^ Kux, Dennis (2001). The United States and Pakistan, 1947-2000: Disenchanted Allies. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 195.

Bibliography edit

  • Mukerjee, Dilip (1972). Yahya Khan's "Final War": India Meets Pakistan's Threat. Times of India.
  • Bhargava, G.S. (1972). "Crush India"--Gen. Yahya Khan Or, Pakistan's Death Wish. Indian School Supply Depot.
  • Berindranath, Dewan (1974). Private Life of Yahya Khan. Sterling Publishers.
  • Black, Conrad (2007). Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full. New York: PublicAffairs. ISBN 9781586486747.
  • Bass, Gary J. (2013). The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-307-70020-9.
  • Ṣiddīqī, ʻAbdurraḥmān (2020). General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan: The Rise & Fall of a Soldier, 1947-1971. Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  • Official profile at Pakistan Army website 23 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • YAHYA KHAN AND BANGLADESH
  • Henry Kissinger and PM China discussed Yahya Khan and 1971 loss
Military offices
Preceded by Chief of General Staff
1957–1962
Succeeded by
Malik Sher Bahadur
Preceded by C-in-C of the Pakistan Army
1966–1971
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by President of Pakistan
1969–1971
Succeeded by
Chief Martial Law Administrator
1969–1971
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1969–1971
Preceded by Minister of Defence
1969–1971

yahya, khan, afghan, cricketer, cricketer, agha, muhammad, february, 1917, august, 1980, pakistani, military, officer, served, third, president, pakistan, from, 1969, 1971, also, served, commander, chief, pakistan, army, from, 1966, 1971, along, with, tikka, k. For the Afghan cricketer see Yahya Khan cricketer Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan a 4 February 1917 10 August 1980 was a Pakistani military officer who served as the third president of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971 He also served as the Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army from 1966 to 1971 Along with Tikka Khan he was considered the chief architect of the 1971 Bangladesh genocide 1 2 General Yahya KhanNePlیحیی خانOfficial military portrait c 19663rd President of PakistanChief Martial Law AdministratorIn office 25 March 1969 20 December 1971Prime MinisterNurul AminPreceded byMuhammad Ayub KhanSucceeded byZulfikar Ali Bhutto5th Commander in Chief of the Pakistan ArmyIn office 18 September 1966 20 December 1971PresidentMuhammad Ayub KhanHimselfPrime MinisterNurul AminPreceded byMuhammad MusaSucceeded byGul HassanPersonal detailsBornAgha Muhammad Yahya Khan 1917 02 04 4 February 1917Chakwal Punjab British IndiaDied10 August 1980 1980 08 10 aged 63 Rawalpindi Punjab PakistanResting placePeshawar PakistanNationalityBritish Indian 1917 1947 Pakistani 1947 1980 Political partyNone martial law EducationColonel Brown Cambridge School DehradunAlma materIndian Military AcademyStaff College QuettaMilitary serviceAllegianceBritish India 1939 47 Pakistan 1947 71 Branch serviceBritish Indian Army Pakistan ArmyYears of service1939 1971RankGeneralUnit4th Battalion 10th Baluch Regiment Now 11th Baloch Regiment S No PA 98 CommandsC in C Pakistan Army 7th Infantry Division 12th Infantry Division 105th Independent BrigadeBattles warsWorld War II Mediterranean Theatre Indo Pakistani War of 1965 Battle of Chawinda Pakistan Civil War Indo Pakistani War of 1971Awards Hilal e Jurat Hilal e Pakistan Sitara e Pakistan Order of Pahlavi Khan was commissioned to the British Indian Army in 1939 He fought in the Second World War in the Mediterranean theatre and was promoted to major acting lieutenant colonel Following the creation of Pakistan in 1947 he advanced in the Pakistan Army During the Second India Pakistan War of 1965 Khan helped in executing the covert infiltration in Indian administered Kashmir After being controversially appointed to assume the army command in 1966 Khan succeeded to the presidency from Ayub Khan who resigned in March 1969 Yahya Khan s presidency oversaw martial law by suspending the constitution in 1969 Holding the country s first general election in 1970 he blocked the power transition to the victorious Sheikh Mujibur Rahman from East Pakistan In March 1971 Khan ordered Operation Searchlight in an effort to suppress Bengali nationalism This led to the Bangladesh Liberation War in March 1971 Yahya Khan was central to the perpetration of Bangladesh genocide in which around 300 000 3 000 000 Bengalis were killed and between 200 000 to 400 000 women were raped 3 4 In December 1971 Pakistan carried out pre emptive strikes against the Bengali allied Indian Army culminating in the start of the Third India Pakistan War The wars resulted in the surrender of the Pakistani armed forces in East Pakistan and East Pakistan seceded as Bangladesh After the surrender Khan resigned from the military command and transferred the presidency to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Khan remained under house surveillance prior to 1979 when he was released by Fazle Haq Khan died the following year in Rawalpindi and was buried in Peshawar Khan s short regime was regarded as the leading cause of the breakup of Pakistan He is viewed negatively in both Bangladesh being considered the chief architect of the genocide and in Pakistan Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military service 2 1 Career before Pakistan s separation 2 2 After the birth of Pakistan 2 3 The C in C 3 Presidency 1969 1971 3 1 National Security Council and Legal Frame Order 3 2 1970 general election 3 3 Bangladesh Liberation War and genocide 3 4 US role 3 5 Fall from power 4 Personal life 4 1 Religion 4 2 Relationships 4 3 Family 5 Death 6 Legacy 6 1 In Pakistan 6 2 In the United States 7 In popular culture 8 Book 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life and education editAgha Muhammad Yahya Khan was born in Chakwal Punjab British India 5 in a Qizilbash family on 4 February 1917 according to the references written by Russian sources 6 7 His family descended from the elite soldier class of Iranian conqueror Nader Shah 8 He and his family were of Pashtun origin 9 10 11 12 13 14 Few Pakistanis knew anything about Yahya Khan when he was vaulted into the presidency two years ago The stocky bushy browed Pathan had been the army chief of staff since 1966 Editorial Time 2 August 1971 15 According to Indian journalist Dewan Barindranath s book Private Life of Yahya Khan published in 1974 Yahya s father Saadat Ali Khan worked in the Indian Imperial Police in the Punjab province He joined as a head constable and retired as a deputy superintendent He was posted in Chakwal Punjab British India when Yahya Khan was born He was rewarded with the title of Khan Sahib for having removed the bodies of many freedom fighters including Bhaghat Singh as they were executed in secrecy and the British needed to get rid of the corpses without attracting much attention operations Saadat Ali Khan carried out efficiently and faithfully 16 Yahya s father was originally from Peshawar 17 Yahya studied in the prestigious Colonel Brown Cambridge School in Dehradun and later enrolled at the University of the Punjab in Lahore from where he graduated with a B A degree finishing first in his class 8 16 Military service editCareer before Pakistan s separation edit Yahya Khan was commissioned into the British Indian Army from the Indian Military Academy Dehradun on 15 July 1939 his date of commission was later antedated to 28 August 1938 8 5 An infantry officer from the 4th 10th Baluch Regiment 4th Battalion of 10th Baluch Regiment later amalgamated with the modern and current form of Baloch Regiment Baloch was spelled as Baluch in Yahya s time Yahya saw action during World War II in North Africa where he was captured by the Axis Forces in June 1942 and interned in a prisoner of war camp in Italy from where he escaped in the third attempt 5 Yahya Khan served in World War II as a lieutenant and later captain in the 4th Infantry Division India He served in Iraq Italy and North Africa He was a POW in Italy before returning to India 8 After the birth of Pakistan edit nbsp Lt Col Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan presents the crest of the Baloch Regiment to the Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan watches March 1950 After the partition of India he decided to join the Pakistan Army in 1947 he had already reached to the rank of major acting lieutenant colonel In this year he was instrumental in not letting the Indian officers shift books from the famous library of the Pakistan Army Staff College now Command and Staff College at Quetta 8 where Yahya was posted as an instructor at the time of the partition of India He renamed the Command and Staff College from Army Staff College 5 At the age of 34 he was promoted to Brigadier 8 And then he was appointed as commander of the 105th Independent Brigade that was deployed in LoC ceasefire region in Jammu and Kashmir in 1951 1952 18 Later Yahya Khan as Vice Chief of General Staff was selected to head of the army s planning board set up by Ayub Khan to modernize the Pakistan Army in 1954 57 Yahya also performed the duties of Chief of General Staff from 1958 to 1962 from where he went on to command two infantry divisions from 1962 to 1965 He played a pivotal role in sustaining the support for President Ayub Khan s campaign in the 1965 presidential elections against Fatima Jinnah 6 He was made GOC of the 7th Infantry Division of the Pakistan Army which he commanded during the 1965 war with India and in the same war he also commanded the 12th Infantry Division During these years Yahya was also tasked in civil and administrative matters including being the Administrator of the Islamabad Capital Project the job for major execution being given to him 19 The C in C edit After the 65 war Maj Gen Yahya Khan was appointed in the GHQ Pakistan as the chief of staff of the army at that time this appointment was the deputy to the commander in chief of the army and was promoted to lieutenant general Soon he was appointed as the commander in chief of the Pakistan Army in March 1966 20 and took command on the 18th day of September when President Ayub promoted him to full general At promotion Yahya Khan superseded two of his seniors Lieutenant General Altaf Qadir and Lieutenant General Bakhtiar Rana 8 21 After becoming the commander in chief of the army Yahya energetically started reorganizing the Pakistan Army in 1966 8 The post 1965 situation saw major organizational and technical changes in the Pakistan Army Until 1965 it was thought that army divisions could function effectively while getting orders directly from the army s GHQ This idea failed miserably in the 1965 war and the need to have intermediate corps headquarters in between the GHQ and the fighting combat divisions was recognized as a foremost operational necessity after the 1965 war In the 1965 war the Pakistan Army had only one corps headquarters the 1 Corps 21 Soon after the war had started the United States had imposed an embargo on military aid to both India and Pakistan This embargo did not affect the Indian Army but produced major changes in the Pakistan Army s technical composition US Secretary of State Dean Rusk well summed it up when he said Well if you are going to fight go ahead and fight but we re not going to pay for it 22 Pakistan now turned to China for military aid and the Chinese tank T 59 started replacing the US M 47 48 tanks as the Pakistan Army s MBT Main Battle Tank from 1966 80 tanks the first batch of T 59s a low grade version of the Russian T 54 55 series were delivered to Pakistan in 1965 66 The first batch was displayed in the Joint Services Day Parade on 23 March 1966 The 1965 War had proved that Pakistan Army s tank infantry ratio was lopsided and more infantry was required Three more infantry divisions 9 16 and 17 Divisions largely equipped with Chinese equipment and popularly referred to by the rank and file as The China Divisions were raised by the beginning of 1968 Two more corps headquarters the 2 Corps Headquarters Jhelum Ravi Corridor and the 4 Corps Headquarters Ravi Sutlej Corridor were raised also in East Pakistan a corps sized formation which was titled as the Eastern Command was created Presidency 1969 1971 editThis section may require copy editing for repetition and chronological presentation March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp President Yahya Khan with United States President Richard Nixon in October 1970 A sustained anti regime mass movement began in the fall of 1968 in West Pakistan The uprising spread to East Pakistan and gathered strength President Ayub Khan tried to quell the revolt by making concessions to the opposition but demonstrations continued 23 Rather than resigning and allowing a constitutional transfer of power Ayub Khan requested that Yahya Khan Commander in Chief of the Army utilize the military s supra constitutional authority to declare martial law and take power 24 On 25 March 1969 Yahya did so 25 26 When Yahya Khan assumed the office on 25 March 1969 he inherited a two decade constitutional problem of inter provincial ethnic rivalry between the Punjabi Pashtun Mohajir dominated and almost exclusively Muslim West Pakistan and the ethnically Bengali dominated East Pakistan where non Muslims constituted one fourth of the population In addition Yahya also inherited an 11 year problem of transforming a country essentially ruled by one man to a democratic country which was the ideological basis of the anti Ayub movement of 1968 69 As an army chief Yahya had all the capabilities qualifications and potential but he inherited an extremely complex problem and was forced to perform the multiple roles of caretaker head of the country drafter of a provisional constitution resolving the One Unit question satisfying the frustrations and the sense of exploitation and discrimination successively created in the East Wing by a series of government policies since 1948 8 18 The American political scientist Lawrence Ziring observed Yahya Khan has been widely portrayed as a ruthless uncompromising insensitive and grossly inept leader While Yahya cannot escape responsibility for these tragic events it is also on the record that he did not act alone All the major actors of the period were creatures of a historic legacy and a psycho political milieu which did not lend itself to accommodation and compromise to bargaining and a reasoned settlement Nurtured on conspiracy theories they were all conditioned to act in a manner that neglected agreeable solutions and promoted violent judgments 27 Yahya Khan attempted to solve Pakistan s constitutional and inter provincial regional rivalry problems once he took over power from Ayub Khan in March 1969 The tragedy of the whole affair was the fact that all of the actions that Yahya took were correct in principle but too late and served only to further intensify the political polarization between the East and West wings He dissolved the One Unit and restored the pre 1955 provinces of West Pakistan 18 He promised free fair direct one man one vote 18 elections on adult franchise a basic human right that had been denied to the Pakistani people since the pre independence 1946 elections by political inefficiency double games and intrigue by civilian governments from 1947 to 1958 and by Ayub s one man rule from 1958 to 1969 However the dissolution of One Unit did not lead to the positive results that it might have occurred earlier 18 Yahya also made an attempt to accommodate the East Pakistanis by abolishing the principle of parity in the hope that a greater share in the assembly would redress their wounded ethnic regional pride and ensure the integrity of Pakistan Instead of satisfying the Bengalis it intensified their separatism since they felt that the west wing had politically suppressed them since 1958 which caused the rise of anti West Wing sentiment in the East Wing In 1968 the political pressure exerted by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had weakened President Ayub Khan who had sacked Bhutto for disagreeing with Ayub s decision to implement on Tashkent Agreement facilitated by the Soviet Union to end the hostilities with India 28 To ease the situation Ayub had tried reaching out to terms with the major parties the Pakistan Peoples Party PPP and the Awami League AL but remained unsuccessful 28 In poor health President Ayub abrogated his own constitution and suddenly resigned from the presidency 29 On 24 March 1969 President Ayub directed a letter to General Yahya Khan inviting him to deal with the situation as it was beyond the capacity of civil government to deal with the Complex situation 30 On 26 March 1969 General Yahya appeared in national television and announced to enforce martial law in all over the country The 1962 constitution was abrogated the parliament was dissolved and Ayub s civilian officials were dismissed 30 In his first nationwide address Yahya maintained I will not tolerate disorder Let everyone remain at his post 8 31 With immediate effect he installed a military government and featured active duty military officials Yahya Khan administration Ministers Portrait Ministries and departments Inter services General Yahya Khan 32 President and Chief Martial Law AdministratorInformation and BroadcastingLaw and JusticeForeign and Defence nbsp Pakistan Army General Abdul Hamid Khan 32 Deputy CMLAInterior and Kashmir Affairs nbsp Pakistan Army Vice Admiral Syed Mohammad Ahsan 32 Deputy CMLAFinance and Planning CommissionStatistics Commerce and Industry nbsp Pakistan Navy Air Marshal Nur Khan 32 nbsp Deputy CMLACommunications and HealthLabour and Science and Technology nbsp Pakistan Air Force National Security Council and Legal Frame Order edit Yahya was well aware of this explosive situation and decided to bring changes all over the country His earlier initiatives directed towards establishing the National Security Council NSC with Major General Ghulam Omar being its first advisor 33 34 It was formed to analyse and prepare assessments towards issues relating the political and national security 33 In 1969 President Yahya also promulgated the Legal Framework Order No 1970 which disestablished the One Unit programme which had formed West Pakistan 35 Instead it removed the prefix West but instead added Pakistan 35 The decree had no effect on East Pakistan 35 Then Yahya announced general elections to be held in 1970 and appointed Judge Abdus Sattar as Chief Election Commissioner of the Election Commission of Pakistan 28 The changes were carried out by President Yahya Khan to return the country towards parliamentary democracy 28 1970 general election edit nbsp Gen Yahya Khan in East Pakistan 20 November 1970 Gen Abdul Hamid Khan is seen beside him they had visited East Pakistan for 1970 Bhola cyclone By 28 July 1969 President Yahya Khan had set a framework for elections that were to be held in December 1970 18 34 Finally the general elections were held all over the country In East Pakistan the Awami League led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman held almost all seats but no seat in any of four provinces of West Pakistan The socialist Pakistan Peoples Party PPP had won the exclusive mandate in the four provinces of Pakistan but none in East Pakistan The Pakistan Muslim League PML led by Nurul Amin was the only party to have representation from all over the country but it had failed to gain the mandate to run the government The Awami League had 160 seats all won from East Pakistan the socialist PPP 81 and the conservative PML 10 in the National Assembly The general elections s results truly reflected the ugly political reality the division of the Pakistani electorate along regional lines and political polarisation of the country between East Pakistan and West Pakistan 34 36 In political terms therefore Pakistan as a nation stood divided as a result A series of bilateral talks between the PPP and Mujibur Rahman produced no results and were unable to come to an agreement of a transfer of power from West Pakistan to East Pakistan s representatives on the basis of the six point programme In Pakistan the people had felt that the six point programme was a step towards the secession from Pakistan 34 Bangladesh Liberation War and genocide edit See also The Gonohotta While the political deadlock remained between the Awami League PPP and the military government after the general elections in 1970 Yahya Khan began coordinating several meetings with his military strategists over the issue in East Pakistan On 25 March 1971 8 5 Yahya initiated Operation Searchlight a genocidal crackdown to suppress Bengali dissent 34 The situation in East Pakistan worsened and the gulf between the two wings had become too wide to be bridged As a result of Operation Searchlight agitation was now transformed into civil war as Bengali members of Pakistan armed forces and Police mutinied and formed the Mukti Bahini along with common people of all classes to launch unconventional and hit and run operations 37 38 Violent disorder and chaos followed after the Pakistan Army continued its systematic and deliberate campaign of killing and mass rape of the populace of East Pakistan Both Yahya Khan and Bhutto flew to Dhaka and tried negotiations one more time but they did not succeed and reached a deadlock 34 Operation Searchlight was a genocidal military operation carried out by the Pakistan Armed Forces to curb the Bengali nationalist movement in erstwhile East Pakistan in March 1971 8 39 Ordered by the government in Pakistan it was seen as the sequel to Operation Blitz which had been launched in November 1970 The Pakistani government s view was that it had to launch a campaign to neutralise a rebellion in East Pakistan to save the unity of Pakistan Sheikh Mujibur Rahman proclaimed the independent state of Bangladesh and a government in exile 34 The original plan envisioned taking control of the major cities on 26 March 1971 and then eliminating all opposition political or military 40 within one month The prolonged Bengali resistance had not been anticipated by Pakistani planners 41 The main phase of Operation Searchlight ended with the fall of the last major town in Bengali hands in mid May The total number of people killed in East Pakistan is not known with any degree of accuracy 42 Bangladeshi authorities claim that 3 million people were killed 43 while the Hamoodur Rahman Commission an official Pakistani Government investigation put the figure as low as 26 000 civilian casualties 44 In her widely discredited book Dead Reckoning Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War Sarmila Bose said between 50 000 and 100 000 combatants and civilians were killed by both sides during the war 38 A 2008 British Medical Journal study by Ziad Obermeyer Christopher J L Murray and Emmanuela Gakidou estimated that up to 269 000 civilians died as a result of the conflict the authors note that this is far higher than a previous estimate of 58 000 from Uppsala University and the Peace Research Institute Oslo 45 General Yahya Khan arrested Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on charges of sedition and appointed Brigadier Rahimuddin Khan later General to preside over a special tribunal dealing with Mujib s case Rahimuddin awarded Mujib the death sentence 46 and President Yahya put the verdict into abeyance Yahya s crackdown however had led to the Bangladesh Liberation War within Pakistan with India being drawn into the war India fighting on behalf of the Bangladeshis against Pakistan a war which would later extend into the Indo Pak war of 1971 36 34 37 The aftermaths of this war were mainly that East Pakistan became independent as Bangladesh and India captured approximately 15 000 square kilometres 5 000 square miles of land of West Pakistan now Pakistan However the captured territory of West Pakistan was given back to Pakistan in the Simla Agreement signed later on 2 July 1972 between Indira Gandhi and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto 47 The 1971 war led to increased tensions between the countries but nonetheless Pakistan recognised the independence of Bangladesh after severe pressure from the OIC But this event led to high tensions between Pakistan and India US role edit Main article Pakistan United States relations The United States had been a major sponsor of President Yahya s military government American journalist Gary Bass notes in The Blood Telegram Nixon Kissinger and a Forgotten Genocide Nixon liked very few people but he did like General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan 48 Personal initiatives of President Yahya had helped to establish the communication channel between the United States and China which would be used to set up the Nixon s trip in 1972 49 Since 1960 Pakistan was perceived in the United States as an integral bulwark against global Communism in the Cold War The United States cautiously supported Pakistan during 1971 although Congress kept in place an arms embargo 50 In 1970 India with a heavily socialist economy entered in a formal alliance with the Soviet Union in August 1971 Nixon urged President Yahya Khan multiple times to exercise restraint 51 His objective was to prevent a war and safeguard Pakistan s interests though he feared an Indian invasion of Pakistan that would lead to Indian domination of the subcontinent and strengthen the position of the Soviet Union 52 Similarly President Yahya feared that an independent Bangladesh could lead to the disintegration of Pakistan Indian military support for Bengali guerrillas led to war between India and Pakistan 53 In November 1971 Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi met Nixon in Washington She assured him that she didn t want war with Pakistan but he did not believe her 54 Witness accounts presented by Kissinger pointed out that Nixon made specific proposals to Prime Minister Gandhi on a solution for the crisis some of which she heard for the first time including a mutual withdrawal of troops from the Indo East Pakistan borders Nixon also expressed a wish to fix a time limit with Yahya for political accommodation in East Pakistan Nixon asserted that India could count on US endeavors to ease the crisis within a short time But both Kissinger and Gandhi s aide Jayakar maintained Gandhi did not respond to these proposals Kissinger noted that she listened to what was in fact one of Nixon s better presentations with aloof indifference but took up none of the points Jayakar pointed out that Gandhi listened to Nixon without a single comment creating an impregnable space so that no real contact was possible She also refrained from assuring that India would follow Pakistan s suit if it withdrew from India s borders As a result the main agenda was dropped altogether 55 On 3 December 1971 Yahya preemptively attacked the Indian Air Force and Gandhi retaliated pushing into East Pakistan Nixon issued a statement blaming Pakistan for starting the conflict and blaming India for escalating it 56 He favored a cease fire 57 The United States was secretly encouraging the shipment of military equipment from Iran Turkey and Jordan to Pakistan offering to later replenish those countries weapons stocks 58 despite Congressional objections 36 The US used the threat of an aid cut off to force Pakistan to back down while its continued military aid to Islamabad prevented India from launching incursions deeper into the country Pakistan forces in East Pakistan surrendered on 16 December 1971 leading to the creation of the independent state of Bangladesh 8 34 59 Fall from power edit When the news of the surrender of Pakistan reached through the national television the spontaneous and overwhelming public anger over Pakistan s defeat by Bangladeshi rebels and the Indian Army followed by the division of Pakistan into two parts boiled into street demonstrations throughout Pakistan Rumors of an impending coup d etat by junior military officers against President Yahya Khan swept the country Yahya became the highest ranking casualty of the war to forestall further unrest on 20 December 1971 he handed over the presidency and government to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto the ambitious leader of Pakistan s powerful and popular at that time People s Party 8 Within hours of Yahya stepping down President Bhutto reversed Judge Advocate General Branch Pakistan s verdict against Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and instead released him to see him off to London President Bhutto also signed orders for Yahya s house confinement the man who imprisoned Mujib in the first place Both actions produced headlines around the world 8 Personal life editReligion edit He was nominally a Shia Muslim 60 but was non practising and was known to have indulged in activities prohibited in Islam such as womanizing and the consumption of alcohol 61 62 Indian journalist Dewan Berindranath argued that Yahya turned to alcohol and womanizing when he gained power as a coping mechanism to deal with stress and that when he was a soldier he was known for being morally upright abstaining from partying unlike other officers and instead preferring to spend time with his family and also practicing Islamic rituals such as the fast of Ramadan eventually quoting Ayub Khan who said that Give me half a dozen officers of the calibre and moral standards of Yahya Khan and I can show you what can Pakistan do as a great nation of the Islamic world 63 During his rule from 1969 to 1971 Mian Tufail Mohammad a prominent leader of the Jamaat e Islami the country s main Islamist party hailed Yahya as the champion of Islam as there was a general view among Islamists that he would fight leftist elements of the country the Pakistan People s Party in West Pakistan and the Awami League in what was East Pakistan and now Bangladesh and also push for the Islamization of the Constitution 64 More generally Yahya used the intelligence services the ISI and the IB to keep secular political parties under check mobilizing the Information Ministry for propaganda and pushing the idea that they put Islam and Pakistan in danger 65 Towards the end of his life during and following his imprisonment Yahya slowly abandoned drinking altogether as he turned extremely religious 66 Relationships edit Yahya is said to have had a relationship with Akleem Akhtar nicknamed General Rani but he was never married 67 His name was linked with the singer and actress Noor Jehan as well 68 He also had a brief relationship with a Bengali woman called Mrs Shamim K Hussain also known as Black Beauty 69 The wife of a police officer Yahya appreciated her company not so much for her looks but mainly because she was fluent in English and could talk about Shakespeare and Lord Byron among his favourite poets and she eventually became influential enough to shape the decisions of the foreign office 70 Family edit Yahya had a son named Ali Yahya and a daughter named Yasmin Yahya 71 His elder brother Agha Muhammad Ali Khan worked in the police among other postings being the Senior Superintendent of Police SSP Lahore from 1948 to 1951 72 and later retired as Inspector General West Pakistan His nephew Ahmed Ali was also in the Pakistan Army as a captain and then as a major serving as Yahya s aide de camp from 1966 to 1969 73 and later was elevated to the rank of major general in the Pakistan Army Death editYahya remained under house arrest until 1979 when he was released from custody by martial law administrator General Fazle Haq He stayed out from public events and wrote down his memoirs in the form of notes that remain unpublished 73 He died on 10 August 1980 in Rawalpindi Punjab and was interred at Circle road graveyard Peshawar Pakistan 8 5 Legacy editIn Pakistan edit Yahya Khan was awarded HPk HJ SPk NePl but then stripped of his service honours by Pakistan 8 5 Khan is viewed largely negatively by Pakistani historians and is considered among the worst of the country s leaders 5 His rule is widely regarded as the leading cause of the breakup of Pakistan 74 In the United States edit In the United States he has been appreciated for facilitating the American opening to China President Richard Nixon sending a handwritten letter to him stating that without your personal assistance the profound breakthrough in relations between the USA and the Peoples Republic of China would never have been accomplished Those who want a more peaceful world in the generations to come will be forever in your debt 75 In popular culture editIn the 2023 film Sam Bahadur Khan is portrayed by Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub Book editThe Breaking of Pakistan Yahya Speaks about the Bhutto Mujib Interaction which Broke Pakistan Lahore Liberty Publishers 1997 184 p Notes edit Urdu آغا محمد یحی ی خانReferences edit Totten Samuel Parsons William S Charny Israel W 2004 Century of Genocide Critical Essays and Eyewitness Accounts Psychology Press pp 295 303 ISBN 978 0 415 94430 4 The Pakistani government the Yahya regime was primarily responsible for the genocide Not only did it prevent the Awami League and Rahman from forming the federal government but it opted for a military solution to a constitutional crisis In doing so it decided to unleash a brutal military operation in order to terrorize the Bengalis Yahya s decision to put General Tikka Khan who had earned the name of Butcher of Baluchistan for his earlier brutal suppression of Baluchi nationals in the 1960s in charge of the military operation in Bangladesh was an overt signal of the regime s intention to launch a genocide Mishra Pankaj 16 September 2013 Unholy Alliances The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved 3 September 2023 The military junta led by General Yahya Khan who had assumed power in 1969 was reluctant to accept the election results and Khan postponed convening Pakistan s National Assembly On March 25 1971 the Pakistani Army launched a full scale campaign known as Operation Searchlight After arresting Mujib and abducting him to West Pakistan and banning his party it set about massacring his supporters with American weapons Firing squads spread out across East Pakistan sometimes assisted by local collaborators from Islamist groups that had been humiliated in the elections In the countryside where the armed resistance was strongest the Pakistani military burned and strafed villages killing thousands and turning many more into refugees Hindus who composed more than ten per cent of the population were targeted their un Muslimness ascertained by a quick inspection underneath their lungis Tens of thousands of women were raped in a campaign of terror The Past has yet to Leave the Present Genocide in Bangladesh Harvard International Review 1 February 2023 Retrieved 3 September 2023 House Resolution1430 Recognizing the Bangladesh Genocide of 1971 United States Congress a b c d e f g h General Yahya Khan Former Army Chief of Pakistan enforcing Martial Law in 1969 Story of Pakistan website 26 October 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2020 a b Mikaberidze Alexander ed 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World a Historical Encyclopedia Santa Barbara ABC CLIOm 2011 ISBN 978 1598843378 Democracy security and development in India By Raju G C Thomas a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Yahya Khan president of Pakistan on Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 22 July 2020 Raghavan Srinath 2013 1971 A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 674 72864 6 The promotion was all the more remarkable given that Yahya was a Shia in the predominantly Sunni officer corps Tinker Hugh 1990 South Asia A Short History University of Hawaii Press p 248 ISBN 978 0824812874 Wolper Stanley 2010 India and Pakistan Continued Conflict or Cooperation University of California Press p 35 ISBN 978 0520948006 Jaffrelot Christophe 2015 The Pakistan Paradox Instability and Resilience Oxford University Press pp 226 227 ISBN 978 0 19023 518 5 Pashtuns the community from which hailed the country s first four commanders in chief from Ayub Khan to Yahya Khan and Gul Hassan Khan with the exception of Mohammad Musa Hiro Dilip 2015 The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan Nation Books p 183 ISBN 978 1568585031 A burly double chinned bushy browed slothful Yahya Khan was like Ayub Khan an ethnic Pashtun Payne Robert 1973 Massacre The tragedy at Bangla Desh and the phenomenon of mass slaughter throughout history Macmillan Publishers p 13 ISBN 9780025952409 Good Soldier Yahya Khan Time 2 August 1971 p 32 Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 17 April 2014 a b Berindranath Dewan 2006 Private Life of Yahya Khan New Delhi Sterling Publishers p 20 Kassim Husain 2006 Yahya Khan Aga Muhammad In Leonard Thomas M ed Encyclopedia of the Developing World Vol 3 Routledge p 1745 ISBN 978 0 415 97664 0 Retrieved 8 December 2023 a b c d e f Shaikh Aziz 25 December 2011 A chapter from history Yahya Khan s quick action Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 19 July 2020 Berindranath Dewan 2006 Private Life of Yahya Khan New Delhi Sterling Publishers pp 22 24 Khan Aga Mohammad Yahya Banglapedia Retrieved 17 August 2023 a b A R Siddiqi 25 April 2004 Army s top slot the seniority factor scroll down to read this section and title Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 20 July 2020 Dennis Kux India and the United States Estranged Democracies Washington DC National Defense University Press 1992 239 Sisson Richard Rose Leo E 1990 War and secession Pakistan India and the creation of Bangladesh University of California Press pp 21 22 ISBN 0 520 07665 6 Haqqani Husain 2005 Between Mosque and Military Carnegie Endowment for International Peace p 52 ISBN 978 0 670 08856 0 Jaffrelot Christophe 2015 The Pakistan paradox instability and resilience Translated by Schoch Cynthia Oxford University Press pp 320 321 ISBN 978 0 19023 518 5 Martial Law Proclaimed President Ayub Resigns Pakistan Affairs 22 4 Washington D C Information Division Embassy of Pakistan 1969 Ziring Lawrence 1980 Pakistan The Enigma of Political Development Dawson p 104 ISBN 978 0 7129 0954 9 a b c d Akbar M K 1997 Pakistan from Jinnah to Sharif New Delhi Mittal Publications ISBN 978 8170996743 Peter R Blood 1996 Pakistan A Country Study United States Diane Publication Co ISBN 978 0788136313 a b Omar Imtiaz 2002 Emergency powers and the courts in India and Pakistan England Kluwer Law International ISBN 978 9041117755 KrishnaRao K V 1991 Prepare or perish a study of national security New Delhi Lancer Publ ISBN 978 8172120016 a b c d Dr GN Kazi 21 May 2008 Pakistan s Smallest Cabinet Dr GN Kazi Retrieved 20 July 2020 a b PILDT The Evolution of National Security Council in Pakistan Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency PILDT Retrieved 2 March 2013 a b c d e f g h i From disunion through the Zia al Huq era Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 22 July 2020 a b c Newberg Paula R 2002 Judging the state courts and constitutional politics in Pakistan 1st paperback ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521894401 a b c Gandhi Sajit 16 December 2002 The Tilt The U S and the South Asian Crisis of 1971 The National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No 79 The National Security Archive United States Retrieved 20 July 2020 a b Mark Dummett 16 December 2011 Bangladesh war The article that changed history BBC News Retrieved 19 July 2020 a b Ian Jack 21 May 2011 It s not the arithmetic of genocide that s important It s that we pay attention The Guardian Retrieved 19 July 2020 Bose Sarmila 8 October 2005 Anatomy of Violence Analysis of Civil War in East Pakistan in 1971 Economic and Political Weekly Archived from the original on 1 March 2007 Retrieved 17 July 2020 Salik Siddiq 1997 Witness to surrender Dhaka University Press pp 63 228 9 ISBN 978 984 05 1373 4 Pakistan Defence Journal 1977 Vol 2 p2 3 Bass 2013 pp 350 351 reviews the various estimates here 1 White Matthew Death Tolls for the Major Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report chapter 2 paragraph 33 Obermeyer Ziad et al June 2008 Fifty years of violent war deaths from Vietnam to Bosnia analysis of data from the world health survey programme British Medical Journal 336 7659 1482 1486 doi 10 1136 bmj a137 PMC 2440905 PMID 18566045 Ahsan Syed Badrul 8 August 2019 When Pakistan put Bangabandhu on trial Dhaka Tribune Retrieved 17 August 2023 A leaf from history Simla Agreement at last Dawn Pakistan 23 September 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Bass 2013 p 7 Kissinger s Secret Trip to China Mosleh Uddin Personal Prejudice Makes Foreign Policy Asiaticsociety org bd Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2020 Black 2007 p 751 The Kissinger Tilt Time 17 January 1972 p 17 Archived from the original on 6 November 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2008 World Pakistan The Ravaging of Golden Bengal Time 2 August 1971 Archived from the original on 11 March 2007 Retrieved 28 March 2011 Black 2007 pp 751 752 Jayakar Indira Gandhi p 232 Kissinger White House Years pp 878 amp 881 82 Black 2007 p 753 Black 2007 p 755 Black 2007 p 756 Black 2007 p 757 Raghavan Srinath 2013 1971 A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 674 72864 6 The promotion was all the more remarkable given that Yahya was a Shia in the predominantly Sunni officer corps Badrul Ahsan Syed 15 March 2016 The rise and fall of Yahya Khan The Daily Observer Retrieved 30 May 2022 Yahya Khan had a life long affair with drinking to a point where he invariably got raucously tipsy His affairs with women were legion Raghavan Srinath 2013 1971 A Global History of the Creation of Bangladesh Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 674 72864 6 Yahya s energies were also sapped by his hectic social routine He was excessively fond of the bottle and his pursuit of a string of liaisons was unblemished by concerns about public opprobrium or professional ethics Berindranath Dewan 2006 Private Life of Yahya Khan New Delhi Sterling Publishers pp 24 25 Zaman Muhammad Qasim 2020 Islam in Pakistan A History Princeton University Press p 158 Singh Ravi Shekhar Narayan 2008 The Military Factor in Pakistan Lancer Publishers p 230 Berindranath Dewan 2006 Private Life of Yahya Khan New Delhi Sterling Publishers p 121 Nadeem F Paracha 28 March 2014 The fascinating tale of General Rani The Friday Times newspaper Retrieved 17 July 2020 Naveed Ahmed 14 December 2021 Lest We Forget Yahya Khan Was Busy Partying As Dhaka Fell The Friday Times Yahya Khan Was Busy Having a Good Time as Dhaka Fell 18 December 2019 Berindranath Dewan 2006 Private Life of Yahya Khan New Delhi Sterling Publishers p 63 General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan 27 August 2000 Biographical Encyclopedia of Pakistan Biographical Research Institute Pakistan 1970 p 295 a b Cowasjee Ardeshir 27 August 2020 General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan Dawn News Retrieved 17 August 2023 Raghavan Srinath 2013 1971 The Global History of Creation of the Bangladesh Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674731271 Kux Dennis 2001 The United States and Pakistan 1947 2000 Disenchanted Allies Johns Hopkins University Press p 195 Bibliography editMukerjee Dilip 1972 Yahya Khan s Final War India Meets Pakistan s Threat Times of India Bhargava G S 1972 Crush India Gen Yahya Khan Or Pakistan s Death Wish Indian School Supply Depot Berindranath Dewan 1974 Private Life of Yahya Khan Sterling Publishers Black Conrad 2007 Richard M Nixon A Life in Full New York PublicAffairs ISBN 9781586486747 Bass Gary J 2013 The Blood Telegram Nixon Kissinger and a Forgotten Genocide New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 70020 9 Ṣiddiqi ʻAbdurraḥman 2020 General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan The Rise amp Fall of a Soldier 1947 1971 Oxford University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yahya Khan Official profile at Pakistan Army website Archived 23 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine YAHYA KHAN AND BANGLADESH Chronicles Of Pakistan Henry Kissinger and PM China discussed Yahya Khan and 1971 loss Military offices Preceded bySher Ali Khan Pataudi Chief of General Staff1957 1962 Succeeded byMalik Sher Bahadur Preceded byMuhammad Musa C in C of the Pakistan Army1966 1971 Succeeded byGul Hassan Khan Political offices Preceded byAyub Khan President of Pakistan1969 1971 Succeeded byZulfikar Ali Bhutto Chief Martial Law Administrator1969 1971 Preceded byMian Arshad Hussain Minister of Foreign Affairs1969 1971 Preceded byAfzal Rahman Khan Minister of Defence1969 1971 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yahya Khan amp oldid 1220993153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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