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India Pakistan War (1971)

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  • čas přidán 28. 01. 2023
  • India wars - • India
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    1971 Indian-Pakistani War
    The Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 was a military confrontation between India and Pakistan that occurred during the Bangladesh Liberation War in East Pakistan from 3 December 1971 until the Pakistani capitulation in Dacca on 16 December 1971. Fighting in the western sector ended in a stalemate, but in the eastern sector, Indian-Bangladeshi forces achieved a decisive victory. In the aftermath, the new state of Bangladesh was formed.
    Timeline
    August 1947 - The Indian subcontinent is partitioned into the independent states of India and Pakistan
    October 1947 - Start of the First India-Pakistan War
    1962 - Sino-Indian War
    1963 - Pakistan and China sign a border treaty, greatly improving bilateral relations
    1965 - Second India-Pakistan War
    1948 - 1970 - Rising tensions between East Pakistan and West Pakistan
    December 1970 - A East Pakistani political party wins national elections, which triggers a political crisis
    March 1971 - East Pakistan is seething with rebellion
    March 25, 1971 - The Pakistani military launches an anti-dissident campaign in East Pakistan, which inflicts a heavy loss of lives and forces millions of East Pakistanis to flee into neighboring India; Bengalis rise up in rebellion and form Mukti Bahini, a guerilla militia; Bengali leaders declare secession as the independent state of Bangladesh
    March 27, 1971 - India announces its support for Bangladesh’s independence and begins to covertly train and arm the Bangladeshi militias
    October 1971 - Indian and Pakistani forces engage in air and medium-scale ground fighting near the East Pakistani border
    December 3, 1971 - Full-scale war breaks out between India and Pakistan
    December 1971 - In the western sector, the Indian Navy launches attacks in Karachi; in the air, both sides conduct raids on the other’s military installations; on land, fighting takes place in the highly volatile regions of Jammu and Kashmir, Punjab, and Sindh-Rajasthan
    December 1971 - Indian forces launch a full-scale invasion of East Pakistan, overwhelming the undermanned defenses and forcing surrender on December 16th; with the collapse of the eastern sector, fighting in the western sector also ends
    January 10, 1972 - Mujibur Rahman, the Bengali leader, returns to Bangladesh and becomes its first President
    September 1974 - Bangladesh becomes a full member of the United Nations
    BANGLADESH WAR OF INDEPENDENCE - Timeline
    1948 - Pakistan adopts Urdu as the national language, sparking criticism in the Bengali-speaking east
    1950s - 1960s - Tensions grow between east and west because of political, economic, and social differences and inequalities
    1965 - In the 1965 Indo-Pakistani War, Pakistan allocates massive military resources in the west, generating criticism in the east, which is defended only by an understrength force
    1965 - Pakistan implements the “One Unit Scheme”, which is also criticized in the east
    1968 - East-west relations had deteriorated considerably that the central government has begun to accuse Bengali politicians of conspiring with India for East Pakistan’s secession
    November 1970 - A powerful cyclone hits East Pakistan
    December 1970 - In general elections, the leading East Pakistani party is victorious, but its leader, Mujibur Rahman, is prevented from becoming become Prime Minister
    January-March 1971 - East Pakistan is seething with rebellion, with widespread street protests breaking out in response to Mujibur’s call for civil disobedience
    March 25, 1971 - The Pakistan military begins a campaign to suppress dissent in East Pakistan; hundreds of thousands are killed and some ten million flee into neighboring India; Mujibur declares East Pakistan’s independence as the new nation of Bangladesh
    April 1971 - Bengali civilians organize into militia groups collectively known as Mukti Bahini; they are soon joined by defecting Bengali soldiers of the Pakistani Army
    May 1975 - India is prepared to become directly involved by invading East Pakistan
    October 1971 - Indian and Pakistani forces engage in border clashes in East Pakistan
    On December 3, 1971 - Full-scale war break out between India and Pakistan
    December 4, 1971 - Indian and Bangladeshi forces invade East Pakistan
    December 16, 1971 - Pakistani forces in East Pakistan surrender
    January 10, 1972 - Mujibur Rahman returns to Bangladesh and becomes its first President
    September 1974 - Bangladesh becomes a full member of the United Nations

Komentáře • 10

  • @WarsOfThe20thCentury

    India war videos - czcams.com/play/PLUXfpu44ghbBrplHUl3UWfdM8ZE9H7VWu.html

  • @chiper5604
    @chiper5604 Před rokem +6

    Outwardly, the 1971 treaty between India and USSR was just a "Friendship and Cooperation" agreement. However, it contained a secret security provision, that was really like a military alliance. That's why the Soviets acted aggressively to a potential threat to India

  • @Minkamet920-kl9iq
    @Minkamet920-kl9iq Před rokem +1

    The U.S. government stated that the presence of its ships in the Bay of Bengal was to help evacuate Pakistani forces from East Pakistan following the ceasefire. however, India interpreted its presence a show of strength against its naval blockade; a Soviet Navy submarine was also trailing the U.S. task force; confrontation was averted when Enterprise moved away from the Indian Ocean toward Southeast Asia

  • @kolbybyer2755
    @kolbybyer2755 Před rokem

    I love your videos. Thank you.

  • @pokethegreat4145
    @pokethegreat4145 Před rokem +1

    Jai Hind
    Jai Indian Armed Forces

  • @Minkamet920-kl9iq
    @Minkamet920-kl9iq Před 9 měsíci

    India's invasion of East Pakistan violated the UN Charter, esp. Article 2 "All Member states shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any UN member state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the UN."

    • @WarsOfThe20thCentury
      @WarsOfThe20thCentury  Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks for your comment

    • @70galaxie
      @70galaxie Před 8 měsíci

      that very article is UN imperialism.
      re: being a member of the UN,no matter what governance you hav,means no"one",or nation,if you
      will,can liberate your people,from
      whatever conditions your government puts you under. Am
      reminded of modern states(nations)that are under
      brutal poverty& tyranny

  • @user-dv5ob2fl2f
    @user-dv5ob2fl2f Před 5 měsíci +2

    Last minute - god on India side making Russia to backup ( where all countries support Pakistan ) India stand alone but ( god - motherland n birthplaces called bharat never let India stand alone ( by unique.subtle n incognito making Russia enter war zone ( all coward country run from war zone ) so this is proof / evidence that god ( supreme father supreme soul with bharat forever ( no one country can ( now ) face India ( because god promises at brahma kumaris will protect n save bharat without any cause ( can making other country to help India ) mind it