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Thursday, December 16, 2021
#Bangladesh50 #BangladeshLiberationWar - Declassified Tape: How US "Saved West Pakistan" As India Liberated Bangladesh
The 1971 war between India and Pakistan saw Bangladesh liberated and over 93,000 Pakistani troops surrender to the Indian Army. The war was fought on both the western and eastern fronts with Pakistan signing the instrument of surrender in just over 2 weeks.
A day after Bangladesh was liberated from Pakistan on December 16, 1971, the then President of the US, Richard Nixon was told by his strategic advisor Henry Kissinger that he had managed to "save West Pakistan," according to confidential papers since declassified by the US department of state. The 1971 war between India and Pakistan saw Bangladesh liberated and over 93,000 Pakistani troops surrender to the Indian Army. The war was fought on both the western and eastern fronts with Pakistan signing the instrument of surrender in just over 2 weeks. The journey to this ironic compliment in the midst of a defeat for US diplomacy at the time came eight-and -a-half months after leaders of the world's most powerful nation - the United States - agreed in a secret meeting that they had wrongly believed their protege Pakistani General Yahya Khan would be able to subdue the rebellion in East Pakistan with naked military might. "Congratulations Mr President. You saved West Pakistan," said Henry Kissinger over the phone to his boss Richard Nixon, about 16 hours after Gen AAK Niazi signed the surrender of East Pakistan and about the time India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared the unilateral ceasefire on the Western front on December 17 Indian Standard Time. Explaining the strange conversation, Ambassador Pinak R Chakravarty, former High Commissioner to Bangladesh, who is currently writing a book on the 1971 liberation of Bangladesh, said "Kissinger was playing a dubious role. Their (US administration's) main objective was to befriend China using the Pakistanis as middlemen during the conflict months. His comments should be read as both an attempt to take credit with the Pakistanis in the face of a hopeless situation and a bid to please a difficult boss." However, the fact remains that this was one war of liberation which the Americans probably misread from the very beginning. About eight-and-a-half months before, on March 29, 1971, Henry Kissinger was telling Richard Nixon in a similar telephone conversation that Pakistan would be able to contain the rebellion in its eastern wing and his President cited the example of British invasion of India to justify that belief. The US National Security Adviser told then President Nixon in a phone call soon after the Pakistan military regime cracked down in East Pakistan on March 26, 1971: "Apparently Yahya has got control of East Pakistan… all the experts were saying that 30,000 people (Pakistan Army at that time in the East) can't get control of 75 million (Bangladesh's population)... as of this moment it seems to be quiet." President Nixon responded that this ability of a small force to control large populations was normal and pointed out: "Look what the Spanish did when they came in and took the Incas. Look what the British did when they took India." "The Americans misread the situation completely. They failed to understand people's wish to be free and the fast pace with which the course of history changed," said Ambassador Tariq Karim, former High Commissioner of Bangladesh to New Delhi and one of the first East Pakistani diplomats to declare loyalty to the Bangladesh Government in exile. On December 8, as Pakistani defences in East Pakistan were falling before the onslaught of the joint command of the Indian Army and Bangladeshi Mukti Bahini (liberation warriors), Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger were busy plotting ways to change the ride of the war or to arrest it. Henry Kissinger in a meeting with Richard Nixon and Attorney General Newton Mitchell, now declassified, said he had "got a message to you from the Shah (of Iran), in which he says he can send ammunition (to a beleaguered Pakistan) - he is doing it now." The brilliant diplomat also revealed that Iran will send fighter planes to protect Jordan from Israel, while Jordan will send jets to Pakistan for the war effort against India. The US National Security Adviser also expressed fear that India would attack West Pakistan in a major way after winning the war in the east. "The Indian plan is now clear. They're going to move their forces from East Pakistan to the west. They will then smash the Pakistan land forces and air forces, annex (take back) the (Pakistan-occupied) part of Kashmir and then call it off," warned Henry Kissinger. "When this has happened, the centrifugal forces in West Pakistan would be liberated. Baluchistan and the Northwest Frontier will celebrate. West Pakistan would become a sort of intricate Afghanistan," Henry Kissinger mused. The dire warnings seemed to work and then US President Nixon in the same conversation goes on to commit to move the American Seventh Fleet into the Bay of Bengal from waters off Vietnam, on the pretext of evacuating US citizens from the war zone. Nixon responded by stating "Would you move the aircraft carrier? I'd do it immediately. I wouldn't wait 24 hours." The Seventh Fleet, led by the 75,000-ton nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, was considered the most formidable naval force of the time. The only aircraft carrier India had was the aging INS Vikrant which was readied to take on the massive force in case disaster did strike.
A day after Bangladesh was liberated from Pakistan on December 16, 1971, the then President of the US, Richard Nixon was told by his strategic advisor Henry Kissinger that he had managed to "save West Pakistan," according to confidential papers since declassified by the US department of state. The 1971 war between India and Pakistan saw Bangladesh liberated and over 93,000 Pakistani troops surrender to the Indian Army. The war was fought on both the western and eastern fronts with Pakistan signing the instrument of surrender in just over 2 weeks. The journey to this ironic compliment in the midst of a defeat for US diplomacy at the time came eight-and -a-half months after leaders of the world's most powerful nation - the United States - agreed in a secret meeting that they had wrongly believed their protege Pakistani General Yahya Khan would be able to subdue the rebellion in East Pakistan with naked military might. "Congratulations Mr President. You saved West Pakistan," said Henry Kissinger over the phone to his boss Richard Nixon, about 16 hours after Gen AAK Niazi signed the surrender of East Pakistan and about the time India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared the unilateral ceasefire on the Western front on December 17 Indian Standard Time. Explaining the strange conversation, Ambassador Pinak R Chakravarty, former High Commissioner to Bangladesh, who is currently writing a book on the 1971 liberation of Bangladesh, said "Kissinger was playing a dubious role. Their (US administration's) main objective was to befriend China using the Pakistanis as middlemen during the conflict months. His comments should be read as both an attempt to take credit with the Pakistanis in the face of a hopeless situation and a bid to please a difficult boss." However, the fact remains that this was one war of liberation which the Americans probably misread from the very beginning. About eight-and-a-half months before, on March 29, 1971, Henry Kissinger was telling Richard Nixon in a similar telephone conversation that Pakistan would be able to contain the rebellion in its eastern wing and his President cited the example of British invasion of India to justify that belief. The US National Security Adviser told then President Nixon in a phone call soon after the Pakistan military regime cracked down in East Pakistan on March 26, 1971: "Apparently Yahya has got control of East Pakistan… all the experts were saying that 30,000 people (Pakistan Army at that time in the East) can't get control of 75 million (Bangladesh's population)... as of this moment it seems to be quiet." President Nixon responded that this ability of a small force to control large populations was normal and pointed out: "Look what the Spanish did when they came in and took the Incas. Look what the British did when they took India." "The Americans misread the situation completely. They failed to understand people's wish to be free and the fast pace with which the course of history changed," said Ambassador Tariq Karim, former High Commissioner of Bangladesh to New Delhi and one of the first East Pakistani diplomats to declare loyalty to the Bangladesh Government in exile. On December 8, as Pakistani defences in East Pakistan were falling before the onslaught of the joint command of the Indian Army and Bangladeshi Mukti Bahini (liberation warriors), Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger were busy plotting ways to change the ride of the war or to arrest it. Henry Kissinger in a meeting with Richard Nixon and Attorney General Newton Mitchell, now declassified, said he had "got a message to you from the Shah (of Iran), in which he says he can send ammunition (to a beleaguered Pakistan) - he is doing it now." The brilliant diplomat also revealed that Iran will send fighter planes to protect Jordan from Israel, while Jordan will send jets to Pakistan for the war effort against India. The US National Security Adviser also expressed fear that India would attack West Pakistan in a major way after winning the war in the east. "The Indian plan is now clear. They're going to move their forces from East Pakistan to the west. They will then smash the Pakistan land forces and air forces, annex (take back) the (Pakistan-occupied) part of Kashmir and then call it off," warned Henry Kissinger. "When this has happened, the centrifugal forces in West Pakistan would be liberated. Baluchistan and the Northwest Frontier will celebrate. West Pakistan would become a sort of intricate Afghanistan," Henry Kissinger mused. The dire warnings seemed to work and then US President Nixon in the same conversation goes on to commit to move the American Seventh Fleet into the Bay of Bengal from waters off Vietnam, on the pretext of evacuating US citizens from the war zone. Nixon responded by stating "Would you move the aircraft carrier? I'd do it immediately. I wouldn't wait 24 hours." The Seventh Fleet, led by the 75,000-ton nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, was considered the most formidable naval force of the time. The only aircraft carrier India had was the aging INS Vikrant which was readied to take on the massive force in case disaster did strike.
Col Quazi Sajjad Ali Zahir (Retd.), a Bangladesh freedom fighter who was honoured earlier this year with the Padma Shri by India, said, "Leading Democrats, like Ted Kennedy, brother of slain US President Robert Kennedy, were with us. But the Republicans were blind-sided. The ordering of the US 7th fleet into the Bay of Bengal did not really impact the war as the Russians quickly sent their own fleet to counteract this chess move by the west."In a later conversation in 1972, Kissinger told the US President: "Not one has yet understood what we did in India-Pakistan and how we saved the China option which we need for the bloody Russians. Why should we give a damn about Bangladesh?"
https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/kissinger-nixon-tape-declassified-how-us-saved-west-pakistan-as-india-liberated-bangladesh-2655016
#Bangladesh50 #BangladeshLiberationWar - #Bangladesh marks 50 years of liberation war victory over Pakistan
Nation celebrates victory in 1971 war for independence by hosting military parade with India’s president as guest of honour.
Bangladesh has marked 50 years of victory over Pakistan in a bloody war for independence by hosting a military parade with the Indian president as a guest of honour.
Huge crowds paid tribute to Bangladesh’s war heroes in the capital Dhaka and other cities on Thursday.
Veterans who lost their limbs in the war laid wreaths – watched by thousands of solemn observers – at the National Martyrs’ Memorial, a concrete monument near Dhaka symbolising the campaign against Pakistani rule.
Women across the country wore saris of green and red, matching the national flag, as they watched concerts where musicians performed patriotic songs.
On December 16, 1971, Pakistani soldiers surrendered to a joint India-Bangladesh force, formally making Bangladesh a new nation under the leadership of independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the father of current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.The war began on March 26 and continued for nine months – killing as many as three million people – before victory was declared in December, aided by India under then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
Thursday’s celebrations were attended by Indian President Ram Nath Kovind, who was on a two-day visit to the Muslim-majority country.
After arriving on Wednesday, Kovind held discussions with Bangladeshi President Abdul Hamid in Dhaka.
Arindam Bagchi, a spokesman for the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, said the two leaders discussed issues of interest, including connectivity and trade, cooperation in the fight against COVID-19 and development partnerships. Hasina and Bangladeshi Foreign Minister A K Abdul Momen also received Kovind. “In 10 years, we will see very changed and different countries. We are looking at green technologies, renewables in this era of climate change to create employment, IT and digital platforms, startups,” said India’s Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla. Bangladesh has held celebrations throughout the year to mark the golden anniversary of its independence, though some events were called off because of the coronavirus pandemic.Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was the guest of honour in March to mark the outbreak of the conflict – a recognition of his country’s crucial aid and support at the time. “I recall the great valour and sacrifice by … the Indian Armed Forces,” Modi, who laid a wreath in New Delhi to mark the anniversary, tweeted on Thursday. “Together, we fought and defeated oppressive forces.”
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/12/16/bangladesh-50-years-liberation-war-victory-day-pakistan