Jinnah sent Khurshid on a mission to Kashmir in the summer of 1947. Jinnah wanted to holiday in Kashmir at this time but, given the pressure on him to accede to one of the incoming dominions, the Maharajah
Hari Singh was no mood to entertain the request. Khurshid reportedly told the Maharajah that he was an independent sovereign and need not consult anybody regarding the accession of the state. If he acceded to Pakistan, he would not have to delegate any of his powers to
Sheikh Abdullah. "Pakistan would not touch a hair of his head or take an iota of his powers." Scholar Das Gupta also states that Khurshid stayed there for several months and created an atmosphere of communal frenzy against India. At the beginning of October 1947, Jinnah sent him to Kashmir again. The Maharajah had appointed Justice
Mehr Chand Mahajan, with known connections to the
Indian National Congress, as his prime minister, replacing the pro-Pakistan
Ram Chandra Kak. Jinnah wanted to find out Maharajah's intentions. Khurshid reported back on 12 October stating that the Maharajah was "dead set against accession to Pakistan". He also reported that the pro-India
National Conference was the only party in the state. The pro-Pakistan Muslim Conference was "essentially defunct". He concluded: In fact, Major
Khurshid Anwar had already mobilised the Pashtun tribes from the
Frontier for a raid on Kashmir and was poised to launch his attack on 15 October. When the
tribal invasion was launched on 22 October 1947, Khurshid was still in the
Valley. He was arrested on 2 November 1947 by the State Police, who recovered maps and documents from him. Indian sources say that Khurshid had gone underground and was attempting to organise an agitation against the state government from the Jama Masjid, the hub of activity for the Muslim Conference. Khurshid remained in custody until a prisoner exchange in 1949, after the
Karachi Agreement was signed by India and Pakistan. ==Azad Kashmir politics==