of
Jammu and Kashmir in military uniform With the independence of the Dominions, the
British Paramountcy over the princely states came to an end. The rulers of the states were advised to join one of the two dominions by executing an
Instrument of Accession.
Maharaja Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir, along with his prime minister
Ram Chandra Kak, decided not to accede to either dominion. The reasons cited were that the Muslim majority population of the state would not be comfortable with joining India, and that the Hindu and Sikh minorities would become vulnerable if the state joined Pakistan. In 1947, the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir had a wide range of ethnic and religious communities. The
Kashmir province consisting of the
Kashmir Valley and the
Muzaffarabad district had a majority Muslim population (over 90%). The
Jammu province, consisting of five districts, had roughly equal numbers of Hindus and Muslims in the eastern districts (
Udhampur,
Jammu and
Reasi), and a Muslim majority in the western districts (
Mirpur and
Poonch). The mountainous
Ladakh district (
wazarat) in the east had a significant Buddhist presence with a Muslim majority in
Baltistan. The
Gilgit Agency in the north was overwhelmingly Muslim and was directly governed by the British under an agreement with the Maharaja. Shortly before the transfer of power, the British returned the Gilgit Agency to the Maharaja, who appointed a
Dogra governor for the district and a British commander for the local forces. The predominant political movement in the Kashmir Valley, the
National Conference led by
Sheikh Abdullah, believed in secular politics. It was allied with the
Indian National Congress and was believed to favour joining India. On the other hand, the Muslims of the Jammu province supported the
Muslim Conference, which was allied to the
All-India Muslim League and favoured joining Pakistan. The Hindus of the Jammu province favoured an outright merger with India. In the midst of all the diverging views, the Maharaja's decision to remain independent was apparently a judicious one.
Operation Gulmarg plan According to Indian military sources, the Pakistani Army prepared a plan called Operation Gulmarg and put it into action as early as 20 August, a few days after Pakistan's independence. The plan was accidentally revealed to an Indian officer,
Major O. S. Kalkat serving with the
Bannu Brigade. According to the plan, 20
lashkars (tribal militias), each consisting of 1,000
Pashtun tribesmen, were to be recruited from among various Pashtun tribes, and armed at the brigade headquarters at
Bannu,
Wanna,
Peshawar,
Kohat,
Thall and
Nowshera by the first week of September. They were expected to reach the launching point of
Abbottabad on 18 October, and cross into Jammu and Kashmir on 22 October. Ten
lashkars were expected to attack the
Kashmir Valley through
Muzaffarabad and another ten
lashkars were expected to join the rebels in
Poonch,
Bhimber and
Rawalakot with a view to advance to
Jammu. Detailed arrangements for the military leadership and armaments were described in the plan. The regimental records show that, by the last week of August, the
11th Prince Albert Victor's Own Cavalry (Frontier Force) (PAVO Cavalry) regiment was briefed about the invasion plan. Colonel Sher Khan, the Director of Military Intelligence, was in charge of the briefing, along with Colonels Akbar Khan and Khanzadah. The Cavalry regiment was tasked with procuring arms and ammunition for the 'freedom fighters' and establishing three wings of the insurgent forces: the South Wing commanded by Major General
Zaman Kiani, a Central Wing based at Rawalpindi and a North Wing based at Abbottabad. By 1 October, the Cavalry regiment completed the task of arming the insurgent forces. "Throughout the war there was no shortage of small arms, ammunitions, or explosives at any time." The regiment was also told to be on stand by for induction into fighting at an appropriate time. Scholars have noted considerable movement of Pashtun tribes during September–October. By 13 September, armed Pashtuns drifted into Lahore and Rawalpindi. The Deputy Commissioner of
Dera Ismail Khan noted a scheme to send tribesmen from
Malakand to
Sialkot, in lorries provided by the Pakistan government. Preparations for attacking Kashmir were also noted in the princely states of
Swat,
Dir, and
Chitral. Scholar Robin James Moore states there is "little doubt" that Pashtuns were involved in border raids all along the Punjab border from the
Indus to the
Ravi. Pakistani sources deny the existence of any plan called Operation Gulmarg. However, Shuja Nawaz does list 22 Pashtun tribes involved in the invasion of Kashmir on 22 October.
Rebellion in Poonch Sometime in August 1947, the first signs of trouble broke out in
Poonch, about which diverging views have been received. Poonch was originally an internal
jagir (autonomous principality), governed by an alternative family line of Maharaja Hari Singh. The taxation is said to have been heavy. The Muslims of Poonch had long campaigned for the principality to be absorbed into the Punjab province of British India. In 1938, a notable disturbance occurred for religious reasons, but a settlement was reached. During the
Second World War, over 60,000 men from Poonch and Mirpur districts enrolled in the British Indian Army. After the war, they were discharged with arms, which is said to have alarmed the Maharaja. In June, Poonchis launched a 'No Tax' campaign. In July, the Maharaja ordered that all the soldiers in the region be disarmed. The absence of employment prospects coupled with high taxation drove the Poonchis to rebellion. The "gathering head of steam", states scholar Srinath Raghavan, was utilised by the local Muslim Conference led by
Sardar Muhammad Ibrahim Khan (Sardar Ibrahim) to further their campaign for accession to Pakistan. According to state government sources, the rebellious militias gathered in the Naoshera-Islamabad area, attacking the state troops and their supply trucks. A battalion of state troops was dispatched, which cleared the roads and dispersed the militias. By September, order was reestablished. The Muslim Conference sources, on the other hand, narrate that hundreds of people were killed in
Bagh during flag hoisting around 15 August and that the Maharaja unleashed a 'reign of terror' on 24 August. Local Muslims also told Richard Symonds, a British Quaker social worker, that the army fired on crowds, and burnt houses and villages indiscriminately. According to the Assistant British High Commissioner in Pakistan, H. S. Stephenson, "the Poonch affair... was greatly exaggerated".
Operation Datta Khel Operation Datta Khel was a military operation and coup planned by
Major William Brown along with the
Gilgit Scouts, aimed at overthrowing the rule of the
Dogra dynasty of
Kashmir. The operation was launched shortly after the independence of Pakistan. By 1 November,
Gilgit-Baltistan had been annexed from the Dogra dynasty, and was made part of Pakistan after a brief provisional government.
Pakistan's preparations, Maharaja's manoeuvring , Prime Minister of Pakistan Scholar
Prem Shankar Jha states that the Maharaja had decided, as early as April 1947, that he would accede to India if it was not possible to stay independent. The rebellion in Poonch possibly unnerved the Maharaja. Accordingly, on 11 August, he dismissed his pro-Pakistan Prime Minister, Ram Chandra Kak, and appointed retired Major
Janak Singh in his place. On 25 August, he sent an invitation to Justice
Mehr Chand Mahajan of the Punjab High Court to come as the Prime Minister. On the same day, the Muslim Conference wrote to the Pakistani Prime Minister
Liaquat Ali Khan warning him that "if, God forbid, the Pakistan Government or the Muslim League do not act, Kashmir might be lost to them". This set the ball rolling in Pakistan. Liaquat Ali Khan sent a Punjab politician
Mian Iftikharuddin to explore the possibility of organising a revolt in Kashmir. Meanwhile, Pakistan cut off essential supplies to the state, such as petrol, sugar and salt. It also stopped trade in timber and other products, and suspended train services to Jammu. Iftikharuddin returned in mid-September to report that the National Conference held strong in the Kashmir Valley and ruled out the possibility of a revolt. , overlooking Kashmir Meanwhile, Sardar Ibrahim had escaped to West Punjab, along with dozens of rebels, and established a base in
Murree. From there, the rebels attempted to acquire arms and ammunition for the rebellion and smuggle them into Kashmir. Colonel
Akbar Khan, one of a handful of high-ranking officers in the Pakistani Army, with a keen interest in Kashmir, arrived in Murree, and got enmeshed in these efforts. He arranged 4,000 rifles for the rebellion by diverting them from the Army stores. He also wrote out a draft plan titled
Armed Revolt inside Kashmir and gave it to Mian Iftikharuddin to be passed on to the Pakistan's Prime Minister. On 12 September, the Prime Minister held a meeting with Mian Iftikharuddin, Colonel Akbar Khan and another Punjab politician Sardar
Shaukat Hayat Khan. Hayat Khan had a separate plan, involving the
Muslim League National Guard and the militant Pashtun tribes from the
Frontier regions. The Prime Minister approved both the plans, and despatched
Khurshid Anwar, the head of the Muslim League National Guard, to mobilise the Frontier tribes. , Prime Minister of India The Maharaja was increasingly driven to the wall with the rebellion in the western districts and the Pakistani blockade. He managed to persuade Justice Mahajan to accept the post of Prime Minister (but not to arrive for another month, for procedural reasons). He sent word to the Indian leaders through Mahajan that he was willing to accede to India but needed more time to implement political reforms. However, it was India's position that it would not accept accession from the Maharaja unless it had the people's support. The Indian Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru demanded that Sheikh Abdullah should be released from prison and involved in the state's government. Accession could only be contemplated afterwards. Following further negotiations, Sheikh Abdullah was released on 29 September. Nehru, foreseeing a number of disputes over princely states, formulated a policy that states The policy was communicated to Liaquat Ali Khan on 1 October at a meeting of the Joint Defence Council. Khan's eyes are said to have "sparkled" at the proposal. However, he made no response.
Operations in Poonch and Mirpur Armed rebellion started in the Poonch district at the beginning of October 1947. The fighting elements consisted of "bands of deserters from the State Army, serving soldiers of the Pakistan Army on leave, ex-servicemen, and other volunteers who had risen spontaneously." The first clash is said to have occurred at
Thorar (near
Rawalakot) on 3–4 October 1947. The rebels quickly gained control of almost the entire Poonch district. The State Forces garrison at the
Poonch city came under heavy siege. In the
Kotli tehsil of the Mirpur district, border posts at Saligram and
Owen Pattan on the Jhelum river were captured by rebels around 8 October.
Sehnsa and
Throchi were lost after some fighting. State Force records reveal that Muslim officers sent with reinforcements sided with the rebels and murdered the fellow state troops. Radio communications between the fighting units were operated by the Pakistan Army. Even though the Indian Navy intercepted the communications, lacking intelligence in Jammu and Kashmir, it was unable to determine immediately where the fighting was taking place. == Accession of Kashmir ==