Even as the role of the Indian military in giving birth to the new nation is celebrated, the role of its intelligence services remains largely unknown.
Forty-five minutes before 12.00 pm on December 14, 1971, Indian Air Force pilots at Hashimpara and Gauhati received instructions to attack an unusual target: a sprawling colonial-era building in the middle of Dacca that had no apparent military value whatsoever.
There were nothing but tourist maps available to guide the pilots to their target — but the results were still lethal. The first wave of combat jets, four MiG21 jets armed with rockets, destroyed a conference hall; two more MiGs and two Hunter bombers levelled a third of the main building.
Inside the building — the Government House — East Pakistan's Cabinet had begun an emergency meeting to discuss the political measures to avoid the looming surrender of their army at Dacca 55 minutes before the bombs hit. It turned out to be the last-ever meeting of the Cabinet. A.M. Malik, head of the East Pakistan government, survived the bombing along with his Cabinet — but resigned on the spot, among the burning ruins; the nervous system, as it were, of decision-making had been destroyed.
For years now, military historians have wondered precisely how the Government House was targeted with such precision; rumours that a spy was present have proliferated. From the still-classified official history of the 1971 war, we now know the answer. Indian cryptanalysts, or code-breakers, had succeeded in breaking Pakistan's military cipher — giving the country's intelligence services real-time information on the enemy's strategic decision-making.
India's Army, Navy and Air Force were lauded, during the celebrations of the 40th anniversary of Bangladesh's independence, for their role in ending a genocide and giving birth to a new nation. The enormous strategic contribution of India's intelligence services, however, has gone largely unacknowledged.
Seven months before the December 3 Pakistan Air Force raid that marked the beginning of the war, India's Chief of Army Staff issued a secret order to the General Officer Commanding, Eastern Command, initiating the campaign that would end with the dismemberment of Pakistan.
Operation Instruction 52 formally committed the Indian forces to “assist the Provisional Government of Bangladesh to rally the people of East Bengal in support of the liberation movement,” and “to raise, equip and train East Bengal cadres for guerrilla operations for employment in their own native land.”
The Eastern Command was to ensure that the guerrilla forces were to work towards “tying down the Pak [Pakistan] Military forces in protective tasks in East Bengal,” “sap and corrode the morale of the Pak forces in the Eastern theatre and simultaneously to impair their logistic capability for undertaking any offensive against Assam and West Bengal,” and, finally, be used along with the regular Indian troops “in the event of Pakistan initiating hostilities against us.”
Secret army
The task of realising these orders fell on Sujan Singh Uban. Brigadier — later Major-General — Uban was an artillery officer who had been handpicked to lead the Special Frontier Force, a secret army set up decades earlier with the assistance of the United States' Central Intelligence Agency to harry the Chinese forces in Tibet. The SFF, which until recently served as a kind of armed wing of India's external covert service, the Research and Analysis Wing, never did fight in China. In Bangladesh, the contributions of its men and officers would be invaluable.
Brigadier Uban — whose enthusiasm for irregular warfare was rivalled, contemporaries recall, only by his eccentric spiritualism — later said he had received a year's advance warning of the task that lay ahead from the Bengali mystic, Baba Onkarnath.
Less-than-holy war
The war he waged, though, was less-than-holy. In July 1971, India's war history records, the first Bangladesh irregulars were infiltrated across the border at Madaripur. This first group of 110 guerrillas destroyed tea gardens, riverboats and railway tracks — acts that tied down troops, undermined East Pakistan's economy and, the history says, destroyed “communications between Dhaka, Comilla and Chittagong.”
Much of the guerrilla war, however, was waged by the volunteers of the Gano Bahini, a volunteer force. The Indian forces initially set up six camps for recruiting and training volunteers, which were soon swamped. At one camp, some 3,000 young men had to wait up to two months for induction, although the “hygienic condition was pitiable and food and water supply almost non-existent.”
By September 1971, though, Indian training operations had expanded dramatically in scale, processing a staggering 20,000 guerrillas each month. Eight Indian soldiers were committed to every 100 trainees at 10 camps. On the eve of the war, at the end of November 1971, over 83,000 Gano Bahini fighters had been trained, 51,000 of whom were operating in East Pakistan — a guerrilla operation perhaps unrivalled in scale until that time. In the Chittagong Hill Tracts, Brigadier Uban sent in Indian soldiers or, to be more exact, CIA-trained, Indian-funded Tibetans using hastily-imported Bulgarian assault rifles and U.S.-manufactured carbines to obscure their links to India. Fighting under the direct command of RAW's legendary spymaster Rameshwar Kao, Brig. Uban's forces engaged in a series of low-grade border skirmishes.
Founded in 1962, the SFF had originally been called Establishment 22 — and still has a road named after it in New Delhi, next to the headquarters of the Defence Ministry. The organisation received extensive special operations training from the U.S., as part of a package of military assistance. In September 1967, the control of these assets was formally handed over to RAW — and used in Bangladesh to lethal effect.
From December 3, 1971, Brig. Uban's force began an extraordinary campaign of sabotage and harassment. At the cost of just 56 dead and 190 wounded, the SFF succeeded in destroying several key bridges, and in ensuring that Pakistan's 97 Independent Brigade and crack 2 Commando Battalion remained bogged down in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. Some 580 members of Brig. Uban's covert force were awarded cash, medals and prizes by the Government of India.
November 1971 saw the Indian-backed low-intensity war in East Pakistan escalate to levels Pakistan found intolerable — pushing it to act. On December 3, Pakistan attempted to relieve the pressure on its eastern wing by carrying out strikes on major Indian airbases. India retaliated with an offensive of extraordinary speed that has been described as a “blitzkrieg without tanks.”
Rejecting an offer for conditional surrender in the East, the Indian forces entered Dacca on December 15. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi promptly ordered a ceasefire on the western front as well: “if I don't do so today,” she said of the decision to end the war, “I shall not be able to do so tomorrow.”
How important was the covert war to this victory, and what cost did it come at?
India's new communications intelligence technologies were clearly critical; three decades on, the government would be advised to make fuller accounts public, and publicly honour the anonymous cryptanalysts who achieved so much.
The 1971 war history records that their efforts meant “several important communications and projections of the Pak[istani] high command were intercepted, decoded and suitable action [was] taken.” Indian communications interception, the history states, even prevented a last-minute effort to evacuate the Pakistani troops from Dacca, using five disguised merchant ships.
The role of irregular forces, though, needs a more nuanced assessment. There is no doubt that they served to tie down Pakistani troops, and derail their logistical backbone. They were also, however, responsible for large-scale human rights abuses targeting Pakistani sympathisers and the ethnic Bihari population. There is no moral equivalence between these crimes and those of the Pakistani armed forces in 1971 — but the fact also is that the irregular forces bequeathed to Bangladesh a militarised political culture that would have deadly consequences of its own.
India's secret war in Bangladesh would have served little purpose without a conventional, disciplined military force to secure a decisive victory — a lesson of the utility and limitations of sub-conventional warfare that ought to be closely studied today by the several states that rely on these tactics.


Comments:
As heart warming to read the account of India's secret war in 1971, I am not sure if it makes a great sense to publish it at this juncture in time when India-Pakistan relation is delicately poised and at a fork on the road that can go either way. Since the 1971 debacle in Bangladesh, this event acted as a singular focus for the Pakistani military that it felt needed to be avenged at any cost, resulting in death and destruction all over South Asia including India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. I just hope this prominent story in India's leading newspaper does not act as a rub on the old wound in the psyche of the Pakistani military. Some things are better kept secret until the time when the parties involved are able to look back in a more objective manner.
It is a pity that madam Khalida Zia never acknowledged the sacrifices made by India in liberating East Pakistan from the ruthless military leaders and forces of Pakistan who managed to kill millions of Bengali people. It is not too late even now if she changes her policy and show gratitude to India.
Should not someone write a book on the Independence War of Bangladesh? A book similar to Freedom at Midnight, with support from Indian government should be an interesting read and an important eye-opener to many in Bangladesh who do not give India their due in this war.
India supported non-state actors, commonly known as terrorists.
Indian Armed forces played a very important role in liberating the menace of West Pakistans terror. The current Armed forces including the external intelligence agencies such as RAW and IB are nothing but toothless weapons used by the ruling party on its political opponents, as recently stated the The Hindu investigation. No Wonder regular terrorist attacks on its soil happen time and again when almost 50,000 intelligence people are covering Rahul Gandhi's meetings in UP or secretly finding out CPI-M leaders views about Nuclear deal with USA.
This is exactly the kind of operation Pakistan is running across the Kashmir border. I feel if we reward our own army for running covert guerrilla warfare against Pakistan in Bangladesh. We should accept then what's happening in Kashmir and understand that Pakistan is just repeating the history of what India did in Bangladesh. In the articles fighters are called guerrilla now we call them terrorist. I feel war should come to an end and as a civilized and more developed human beings we should stop celebration of killing and destruction. Hope one day as humans we might learn to respect other humans and stop this non-sense of war and building up of weapons. I hope one day we be proud to save human life rather then trying to build CBM's and fighter jets.
Awesome Article,Thanks to the author for presenting a stupendous and an unexplored part of a very important event in history of India.
Amazing revelations. Many thanks to The Hindu. Only a very mature nation with an unemotional acceptance of its geopolitical realities can even acknowledge the need and the presence of these very special individuals involved in plans and actions that raise many questions. One can wish for a world without need for many of these covert actions and violations, but in the meantime, many thanks and kudos to these very special individuals.
A great victory and also a warning to the religion based nations that they cannot suppress culture in the name of one religion. This war showed the world that religion cannot suppress culture and culture is more important than religion for people. Even after 40 years, Pakistan and its citizens have trouble understanding that religion cannot guarantee peace and security. Even today, the criminals of 1971 genocide are yet be tried. This crime is the biggest genocide committed after 1947 on fellow muslims, hindus of Bengal by Pakistan army and its hooligans. Nearly 100000 people died due to this. Yet Indian army let the captured Pakistan Army go back to Pakistan-without answering this fundamental question!! Who will punish them?? And when? Does any nation have courage to answer this?
Unpunished culprits means they will not learn from the mistakes and have
tendency to repeat them as is now happening in Pakistan. Law has been hijacked
by religion based extremists in Pakistan.
Abbas
Dhaka
Well, people may tell this was a great way of winning (if any one did really win), using the local population, training them to be 'guerrillas', and using them to 'disrupt' the country's economy.. Fast forward some 20 more years, when Pakistan carried a similar operation, they became, a country sponsoring 'terrorism'! This ought not be the game. It's high time that people realize, that the so called 'history text books' are more often written to the taste of the country and are NOT what they profess to be. We need peace, and what is to be done, is to open up, and tell the truth. Let the people know the truth and decide who is wrong and who is right!!
It is very unfortunate the covert offensive capability of RAW was abandoned by IK Gujral and not resurrected since. Pakistan is very unstable and the only way to increase their frustration is to stop any more attacks on our soil while progressing as a country (inspire of our neta's and babus). Nothing increases hatred more than jealousy and helplessness.
I am of of the opinion that Hindu could have waited for sometime to publish such article and it seems has inclination towards deteriorating relations between Ind-Pak. Another side of Indian story is that even with our full support to Bangladesh, they are just behind us in any international platform to abuse. Similar is the case coming with Nepal now, given that I personally supported many Nepalies in their livelihood and still am, but, they are just behind India to rubbish all support we have provided to these 'kaanchha' since time immemorial. Now, we are struggling with other wars started by our 'family' oriented politicians to remain in politics and loot the country in the name of divide and rule for cast, religion, reservation and giving ways to foreign investors without thinking the poverty and real issues within India and the people are facing here. In my view at least we now get better treatment from our fellows from Pakistan than from Nepal and Bangladesh..! Our poor diplomats..
..1. I consider that Liberation Of Bangladesh is a Historical Mistake .
..2. It has opened another terrorist center against India in the East.
..3 . I feel that India achieved nothing due to this war
...4. Indiraji had lost a Golden Chance to settle Kashmir Dispute.
...5. She should have settled for LOC as permanent Border .
...6 Releasing of nearly one Lakh POWs in exchange of nothing.
...7. Actually this war has made Pakistan to Launch Indirect war .
...8 We are suffering the effect till this day.
.. 9. Diplomatically Pakies are surely a better lot
India's covert operations wing served it well during the Bangladesh War. However, the covert operations wing was disbanded by former PM Inder Gujral and subsequent PMs have not revived the same even though the country faces two very hostile neighbours. Pakistan routinely uses terrorists to hit Indian targets knowing fully well that it need not fear any retaliatory attacks from India.
A very good article indeed. This article just point out the need of
securing rights and privacy of Intelligence agencies. In the previous
articles in HINDU point was made about giving rights to RAW,IB about
gathering information or phone tapping. I think the need of hour is to
free these agencies from political infringement and simultaneously
giving these agencies enough rights to gather information of national
importance.
Interesting piece. It breathes new life into our confidence in our intelligence agencies. Official accolades for intelligence personnel could be forthcoming without necessarily naming individuals, but as several commentators have pointed out, now is perhaps not the best time to rub salt into 40 decade-old wounds. We stand little to gain from such a move. Nevertheless we must salute our military men and women. Jai Hind!
This article marginalizes the freedom fighters of Bangladesh and endows Indian agency with the central role. That is a usurpation of the motivating force of Bangladesh's struggle, the sacrifices of the freedom fighters and the support of the general population. That usurpation is evident in the way the Indian government used its dominant position to control the recuitment, training and deployment of the freedom fighters. The timing of intervention by India's conventional forces was meant to preempt the development of a fully capable Bangladeshi capability. And India's determinacy over the aftermath completed the takeover.
It was the bengali's of east bengal before partition played an imporatant role in achieving seperate state of east pakistan than thier counter parts in west.The population ,overwhelmingly voted for seperate state of muslims in the referendum and afterwards started moving towards Bengali nationalism. what india gained from this war is that ,indians were able to nuetralize its eastern frontiers.The credit goes to Indira Gandhi to take abold decision like this.
Interesting facts about our intelligence agencies !! kudos to all behind that epic moment in Indian history... but i feel the timing was bad in revealing this info since some old wounds are yet to heal.
It was very informative and insightful articles about rare access 1971 war. I feel role of SFF espcially"estalished 22" has been down played for some untasteful reason. Fighting for one's country is a duty but i respect and salute those Tibetan flighter who fought for our cause with this much sincerity. At this time when chinese incursion is taking place on regular base, it would be useful to deploy these Tibetan fighter at LAC border. After all,it is established for this very purpose to counter chinese imperalism.
Reaffirms what Pakistanis staunchly believe: since 1947, Bharat has been consistently and costantly working at finishing Pakistan off. Thanks for giving fresh impetus to this view and may be delaying for many years any peace between the two countries.
Excellent article. Mrs. India Gandhi made Indians proud and send a strong signal to the world leaders that India can deliver and ready to meet all challenges. This charismatic Leader was sympathetic to the Eelam Tamils' cause and supported the Tamils' struggle for equality and rights. Since Mrs. Indran Gandhi's demise, we are yet to see a strong, vibrant, fearless, ethical, moral and decision making leader in India and G Parthasarathy was an eminent advisor to the Iron lady of India. India lost its image in the global stage as Gandhian with strong ethical and moral values after collaborating with the Sri Lankan regime in committing human rights abuses and later voting against UN investigation in Sri Lanka on accountability and deliver justice. Under the current Congress regime, 2G Scam, Commonwealth games corruption, delay in PC Election case, exclusion of CBI from the anti-corruption law shows the world about the quality of the Leaders in India at present. Shame on the Indians!
I was with Brig SS Uban in 22 and Chittagong Hill tracts. The contents of the article as regards SFF OP is concerned is not factual
interesting piece. thanks for publishing this.
I find this part of the article – "Brigadier Uban sent in Indian soldiers or, to be more exact, CIA-trained, Indian-funded Tibetans using hastily-imported Bulgarian assault rifles and U.S.-manufactured carbines to obscure their links to India" – interesting. Many things have been written on the pros side of the Bangla war. On the cons, it has made a gift of Assam to Bangla.
Ubhan Singh wrote a book about the SFF's exploits in Bangladesh. I'm surprised that that the author made no reference to it. The book is called 'Phantoms of Chittagong'
For once we took a page from our western neighbours, training cadre to hurt the establishment. In this case our training and the spirit of the Bengalis was much better than what Pakistan has been dishing out to us for the past 60 years.
Dear Sir, my humble request is to ask you, what purpose this kind of
article will serve at a time when the security scenario across the
subcontinent is delicately poised due to large scale activities of
several militant groups, sleeping cells and what not, and that too
from a leading English daily known for its probity. What is the
point of dwelling on an issue whose main actors are no longer alive
and kicking and so much water has already flown under the Ganga and
Hubly rivers? Human history is replete with so many such things
which one can only see in hindsight, I personally feel you should
have desisted from publishing this type of article at least for the
time being.
Great article - its about time our armed forces and intelligence were lauded for their historical role and great victory.
I think the author has not talked about the role of BSF while role of EST 22 is highlighted. It should be remebered that Field Marshal Manekshaw was not willing to take action citing lot of drawbacks in Indian Army. He was also not willing to enter Dacca. It is General Auroara and maj Gen Sagat singh who carried out the last operation on political directions and thus fooling USA.
Testimony to Pakistan's innocence that it was India all along training and army Bengoli speaking non East Pakistanis to infiltrate and incite violence and start terror inside Pakistan. This single act of terror gives Pakistan legitimacy on every thing it does to India. Kashmir is not integral to India but recongised for what it is a DISPUTED region and separted by Pakistan not by a border but a LoC.
Many Hindu's of India think it. Because they don't know that for 24 years people of east Pakistan protested against Pakistan - they protested Pakistan on 20 march, 1948 though Pakistan born in 1945.They gave blood in 1952 and the 6th condition was submitted by Sheik Mujib in 1966. Read it carefully, Hindu. in 1970 Awami League won 167 seats out of 169. In 1971 about 90 percent people of Bangladesh behind Mujib for liberation. Ana list say, if the 90 percent people want freedom the ruler will be ousted..
The problem of Pakistan in 1971 was Pakistan itself, I mean its politicians from the western part.Look at history,please.It is Bhutto who counselled Yahia not to hand over power to elected leader Sk Mujibur Rahman.It was sheer cheating!Bhutto and bloody Tikka Khan were behind brutal army crack down in East Pakistan's patriotic,unarmed people deceived long in every respect by West Pak rulers.West Pakistan's leaders and generals seem to be hotheaded bulls.Bhutto proved it throwing away cease-fire papers in Security Council in December,1971.Pak forces and Islami 'Jamats'just exterminated ethnic minority hindus simply because they were not muslims! Unparalled brutality in history!Look at the pictures released in the press of Bangalee women raped and tortured by 'Jamats' and Pak forces are enough to prove that they are not humans, but bloody 'beasts', I mean abominable 'beasts'!Don't look for enemies in India. India acted as any other state would habe done in that situatiion.
Mr. Swami spins an interesting tale without any effort to provide proof. I have no idea whether this is true or not. There are no references, no quotes. Doesn't the Hindu have a fact checking department?
Unless he proves otherwise, I think Pravin Swami heard all this from somebody's uncle.
Fascinating indeed! We also need to learn some lessons here. Pakistan alienated its
own people in East Bengal with the systematic repression at all levels, which
eventually predisposed many of these to seek outside help, from India. While the
atrocities perpetrated by Indian soldiers in our frontier regions are nowhere close to those perpetrated by Pakistan in East Bengal, the psychological component is vital - people on Indian territory need to be shown that India offers a better future and more rights for them than whatever the alternative is - independence or Pakistan.
Sadly! we aren't learning the lesson. Patriotic rhetoric cannot solve problems like Punjab, Kashmir, Manipur etc. Excessive force will only plunge innocents into misery and benefit extremism. We need a "Sikkim-solution", with considerable political and fiscal autonomy for frontier regions like J&K and the Northeast, at least for an interim period. Peace has a price, but is still cheaper than war in the long run!
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