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Monday 5 February 2024

Amritsar to Kargil: Wargaming South Asian conflicts 1919-1999

The session I co-presented at VCOW2024 was entitled AMRITSAR TO KARGIL – WARGAMING SOUTH ASIAN CONFLICTS 1919-1999 and looked at the variety of conflicts that took place in South Asia from just after the Great War until the end of the twentieth century.

I prepared a PowerPoint presentation and split the slides into separate decades.

South Asia in 1919

South Asia in 1919. The British-controlled areas are shown in pink, China and Tibet in yellow, Russian in red, Afghanistan in dark green, and Persia in light green.

  • In 1919, South Asia was almost entirely part of the British Empire.
  • To the northeast was China and Tibet, to the northwest was Russia and Afghanistan, and to the west was Persia.

South Asia 1919 to 1929

  • Almost as soon as the Great War ended, the region began to see a series of conflicts break out.
  • 1919: 3rd Anglo-Afghan War began on 6th May 1919 when Afghanistan invaded British India.
  • Fighting ended when an armistice was signed on 8th August 1919.
  • The Anglo-Afghan Treaty of 1919 resulted in the Afghans gaining control of their own foreign affairs from Britain and the British recognizing the Durand Line as the border between Afghanistan and British India.
  • The Afghan invasion sparked off a tribal rising in Waziristan on the borders of modern-day Pakistan and Afghanistan.
  • This lasted from 1919 to 1920, and the use of airpower featured prominently during the campaign.
  • On 13th April 1919, a pro-independence rally in Amritsar in the Punjab was ‘dispersed’ by Gurkha and Sikh troops under the command of Brigadier Dyer.
  • The troops opened fire on the peaceful crowd, and it is estimated that over 2,000 people were killed or wounded.
  • The so-called ‘Amritsar Massacre’ (also known as the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre) gave great impetus to the non-cooperation movement that was launched 0n 4th September 1920 by Mahatma Gandhi.
  • From then on this was a growing thorn in the side of the administration of British India as those seeking a peaceful route to independence coalesced around the movement.
  • The period also saw episodes of violent rioting that was usually suppressed by equally violent means and mass arrests.
  • The non-cooperation movement ended on 12th February 1922 after an incident at Chauri Chaura.
  • On 4th February, a mob had attacked and burnt to the ground police station containing 22 police officers in response to police violence against a group picketing a liquor shop.
  • Widespread violence was only just averted thanks to the Gandhi’s intervention, but this did not stop him being arrested and jailed for six years for sedition.
  • This splits the Congress Party and saw the rise of a nationalist movement that saw violence as the only path to independence.

South Asia 1929 to 1939

  • Peaceful protests continued and culminated in the Salt Satyagraha.
  • This led to the Government of India Act (1935) which recognised the Congress Party as representing the political views of the Indian people …
  • … but there were a growing number of violent incidents as the number of those who favoured violence to achieve independence grew in strength.

South Asia 1939 to 1949

  • The outbreak of the Second World War was seen by many Indians as the opportunity to win independence for India, both peacefully and by violence.
  • British Indian Army troops initially served alongside the BEF in France and then played a valuable role in the fighting in North and East Africa.
  • When the Japanese declared war on the British Empire in December 1941, units of the British Indian Army fought against them in both South and Southeast Asia.
  • At the same time, Subhas Chandra Bose and Thakin Aung San raised and led Indian and Burmese troops who fought alongside the Japanese against the British Empire forces.
  • By 1945 and despite being on the losing side, these troops – particularly the Burmese – were battle-hardened and remained committed to the liberation of their countries.
  • Before the war ended – and in the face of a growing threat from Communist-led Burmese forces – the latter changed sides in the belief that this would help gain Burma independence once the war ended.
  • Once the war ended, the British agreed that the BIA (Burmese Independence Army) would form part of the new Burmese Army and sent a Training Mission to Burma to assist in this process.
  • At the same time, the newly-constituted Burmese Army began a counterinsurgency campaign against Communist guerrillas and dacoits (bandits) that rumbled on for many years afterwards.
  • The new army and Burmese politics were riven by rivalries, and this culminated in the assassination of Aung San and most of the Burmese Cabinet on 19th July 1947.
  • During 1947 and 1948, British rule in South Asia came to an end as India, Pakistan, and Burma all gained independence.
  • This process was not achieved without serious outbreaks of violence between different religious groups, and saw mass migrations of millions of Hindus, Sikhs, and Moslems.

South Asia 1949 to 1959

South Asia in 1949. India is shown in pink, Pakistan in blue, the disputed Kashmir and Jammu area in grey. Burma in light green, Nepal in orange, Bhutan in gold, Sri Lanka in light grey, China and Tibet in yellow, Russian in red, Afghanistan in dark green, and Persia in light green.
  • The period following independence was not with its difficulties for the newly-formed nations.
  • The counterinsurgency in Burma continued unabated, and saw the growth of semi-independent, tribe-based ‘nations’ ruled by local warlords and financed by the production of drugs. 
  • At the same time Communists – supported by the Chinese government – also sought to overthrow the Burmese government.
  • Fighting broke out between India and Pakistan almost as soon as they gained independence, and the 1st Indo-Pakistan War was fought from 22nd October 1947 until 1st January 1949.
  • The war was fought for the control of the Kashmir and Jammu area and led to the de facto division of that area by the Indians and Pakistanis.
  • In September 1948, Indian troops ‘invaded’ Hyderabad (Operation Polo) to ensure it integration into the new state of India.
  • Its Moslem ruler (the Nizam) and his predominately Moslem army had wanted to remain independent, much against the wishes of the almost entirely Hindu population.
  • The invasion began on 13th September and by 17th a ceasefire was announced, and Hyderabad was subsequently integrated into India.
  • However, the period of integration saw a lot of inter-communal violence that the Indian government seemed unable to curb with any great success.

South Asia 1959 to 1969

  • Operation Polo was the first of several such military operations to ensure the integration of minor states and European colonies into India.
  • The most important of these was Operation Vijay (1961), which saw the Portuguese colonies of Goa, Daman, and Diu invaded by overwhelming Indian forces and resulted in their ‘liberation’ and integration into India.
  • 1962 also saw the Indian Army in action against the Communist Chinese Red Army along the border of the North-East Frontier Agency Area to the west of Bhutan and east of Nepal in what was termed the Sino-Indian War.
  • The fighting lasted just over a month and was resolved by the signing of a treaty that supposedly formalised the boundary between the two nations.
  • The Indian Army’s performance was not regard as being as good as it could have been and led to recriminations between the leadership of the army and the government.
  • Emboldened by the apparent weaknesses exposed by the Sino-Indian War, Pakistan began to infiltrate troops in the disputed areas of Kashmir and Jammu.
  • This led to the outbreak of the 2nd Indo-Pakistan War, which was fought between 5th August and 23rd September 1965.
  • After a series of land, sea, and air battles, neither side was able to gain an ascendency, and a ceasefire ended the fighting with no territory changing hands.
  • Indian troops were also involved in a series of counterinsurgency operations in the Northeast of the country as well as fighting against the Naxalite-Maoist Insurgency in east-central India.
  • The latter conflict is still ongoing and shows no sign of resolution.

South Asia 1969 to 1979

  • Growing tension between the Bengali population in East Pakistan and the predominately West Pakistani government of Pakistan led to growing tensions in East Pakistan.
  • This led to the outbreak of the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, which saw many examples of atrocities committed by both sides in East Pakistan.
  • India intervened in support of the Bengalis and sent troops into the area.
  • This – in turn – led to the outbreak of the 3rd Indo-Pakistan War, which lasted from 3rd December to 16th December 1971.
  • The Indians and Bangladeshis achieved a resounding victory which guaranteed the independence of Bangladesh.
  • During the fighting, the Indians captured territory in West Pakistan as well as Kashmir and Jammu.
  • As an act of goodwill, the former was handed back to Pakistan … but the latter was retained.
  • After gaining independence, Bangladesh did not enjoy a very long period of peace.
  • Between 1972 and 1975 they had to contend with a Communist-led insurgency, and between 1975 and 1977 there were three coup d-état and two major mutinies!
  • 1971 also saw the Communist-led JVP insurrection in the previously untroubled Sri Lanka … but this proved to be the opening shots of what was going to be a much more important conflict.
  • In 1973, the King of Afghanistan was overthrown in a coup d-état.
  • This marked the beginning of a period of instability in the country that resulted in an invasion by the Russians in 1979, who installed a puppet regime.
  • Efforts by the Russians to impose a Soviet-style government on the country was resisted, initially by local warlords and later by the Mujahedeen.
  • 1974 saw the underground explosion of a nuclear device (The Smiling Buddha) by the Indians.

South Asia 1979 to 1989

South Asia in 1979. India is shown in pink, Pakistan in blue, Bangladesh in purple, the disputed Kashmir and Jammu area in grey. Burma in light green, Nepal in orange, Bhutan in gold, Sri Lanka in light grey, China and Tibet in yellow, Russian in red, Afghanistan in dark green, and Persia/Iran in light green.
  • Other than in Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, this decade saw very little large-scale military action in most of South Asia other than the ongoing insurgencies in Burma, Kashmir and Jammu and central-east India.
  • The Afghan Mujahedeen received support from overseas (e.g. Charlie Wilson’s War) and in 1989 the Russians eventually withdrew after suffering 68,000 casualties.
  • The Afghans suffered between one and two million killed, thee million wounded, and seven million became refugees.
  • The Mujahedeen then began an offensive whose goal was the overthrow of the Afghan government.
  • Between 1st and 6th June 1984, units of the Indian Army mounted Operation Blue Star to remove Sikh militants from the Harmandar Sahib Complex in Amritsar.
  • During the fighting, the Golden Temple in Amritsar was damaged, and on 31st October that year, the Prime Minister of India – Indira Gandhi – was assassinated by two of her Sikh bodyguards.
  • Over the following few days, 8,000 Sikhs were killed in retaliatory attacks.
  • In 1983, the Sri Lankan Civil war started, and this rumbled on until its conclusion in 2009.
  • Indian intervened in 1987, initially as a peacekeeper but later took an active role in fighting the Tamil Tigers.
  • 1984 saw the forces of Pakistan and India clashing over control of the Siachen Glacier in Kashmir.
  • This situation gradually escalated in intensity over the next 15 years.

South Asia 1989 to 1999

  • During 1992 the Mujahedeen finally captured Kabul and took over government of Afghanistan.
  • They were – in turn – overthrown by the Taliban in 1996, and Usama bin Laden moved into the country.
  • It then became the base from which Al Qaida mounted its campaign of terrorism against the West.
  • In 1998, in retaliation for Al Qaida attacks on US embassies in East Africa, the United States mounted a series of cruise missile strikes on Al Qaida bases in Afghanistan.
  • The last decade of the twentieth century saw a mutiny (1994), an attempted coup d’état (1996), and a successful coup d’état (1998) in Bangladesh.
  • In 1996, civil war broke out in Nepal which resulted in the overthrow of the monarchy and the creation of a republic.
  • The fighting lasted until 2006 and was marked with numerous atrocities on both sides.
  • Growing tension between India and Pakistan saw both countries stage several underground nuclear tests (India: 5; Pakistan: 6).
  • In 1999 it was Pakistan’s turn to experience a coup d’état.
  • In the same year, the confrontation between India and Pakistan in Kashmir and Jammu erupted into what has become known as the Kargil War, which has ended in what can best be described as a stalemate.

It wasn’t until I did the research in preparation for this presentation that I realised the sheer range of conflicts that took place, including conventional wars, counter-insurgencies, civil wars, and coup d'états.

Over the years I’ve wargamed several battles set during the earlier Indo-Pakistan Wars and designed wargames about Operation Polo (the military operation that resulted in the integration of Hyderabad into India) and Operation Vijay (the military operation that resulted in the annexation of the Portuguese colonies of Goa, Daman, and Diu into India). It would appear, however, that there are still lots of conflict that as yet remain to be wargamed.

18 comments:

  1. One of my unstarted projects is the 1965 (and to a lesser extent 1971) Indo-Pakistan wars. I have the vehicles (1:87 Centurions, M48s, M47s, AMX-13s, various Shermans, Chaffies, M113s and even some M3 which probably weren't used) and figures (Elhiem dedicated ranges + various WW2 British), guns (25pdr, 105mm, Sextons, Priests, M36) and 1:144 aircraft (Hunter, Gnat, Vampires, Sabres, F104, Canberra).
    Just need to get it painted!
    Neil

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    Replies
    1. Neil Patterson (Neil),

      The earlier Indo-Pakistan Wars are so appealing because of the mixture of late WW2 and immediate post-war weaponry in use plus the deployment of many second generation jets. Because the armies of both sides were still very British in organisation and units often had pre-partition names, it sometimes feels almost as if you’re fighting a civil war!

      It’s certainly something I’d like to do … along with loads of other projects!

      All the best,

      Bob

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  2. Excellent info there Bob and so many possible options that we gamers tend to neglect, favouring the Cold War or the Arab-Israeli Wars and Vietnam over them. It certainly has given me pause for thought for some form of ImagiNations type games so that I can fun with all of the lovely WWII and 'Modern' kit:).

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    Replies
    1. Steve J.,

      I’m very pleased that you found this blog post useful. As you write in your comment, conflicts in South Asia have tended to be neglected, ignored, or overshadowed by other better known post World War 2 wars … and yet they have so much to offer wargamers looking for something slightly different.

      They are also great inspiration for imag-nations set in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.

      All the best,

      Bob

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  3. There is some debate about how peaceful the crowd was at Amritsar as many had weapons. However, it was handled badly by authorities as the order to disperse was not easily obeyed by the mob as exits points were confined.

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    Replies
    1. Quantrilltoy,

      The problem with the Amritsar incident is there don’t seem to be any impartial accounts of the event. A peaceful crowd can quickly become an angry mob … and a rock or stick that someone just picks up can easily be used as a weapon.

      Whatever the truth, Dyer did not handle things well and the crowd did not have sufficiently large exits available to them to disperse. It was a disaster waiting to happen.

      All the best,

      Bob

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  4. Bob -
    That is quite a programme of events - plenty to chew on there. Looking at the Indo-Pakistan wars one perceives the strong possibility of the 'Disguised Scenario'. Not having the inventory of kit that Neil lists, we might yet come up with a war involving the nascent Nawabate of Tchagai. I might also have another look into that Hyderabad thing...
    Great stuff!
    Cheers,
    Ion

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    Replies
    1. Archduke Piccolo (Ion),

      Frankly, I think that it cries out to be the basis of number of imagi-nations and disguised scenarios where players can field whatever suitable kit they have available. I’d love to see your take on fighting South Asian conflicts … and the Nawabate of Tchagai sounds like a great starting point.

      I understand that a couple of books about Operation Polo have been published, but I cannot remember the titles.

      All the best,

      Bob

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  5. For Steve J and Ion, it's worth pointing out that Chris Kemp of NQM fame used to have a "Pocketstan campaign" imaginary campaign scenario on a previous NQM website - possibly locatable on the Wayback Machine.
    Shermans were the most numerous tank in the Indian armoury, most still 75mm. They were also fairly numerous in the Pakistani army, although all upgunned in post-war American developments.
    Neil

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    Replies
    1. Neil Patterson (Neil),

      I have been trying to find a trace of Chris Kemp's original NQM website, but so far to no avail.

      Some of his models were decidedly interesting, and included a 6-wheeled armoured car that looked somewhat akin to a Saladin. It was made from a chopped-down ROCO 8-wheeled German armoured car.

      All the best,

      Bob

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  6. Bob,
    Try:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20161117185754/http://www.notquitemechanised.co.uk/

    Cannot guarantee all the links work.
    Neil

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    Replies
    1. Neil Patterson (Neil),

      Wow! I spent an enjoyable time looking through the recovered pages of Chris’s original NQM website. It brought back lots of great memories.

      Thanks very much for the link. It worked well for me.

      All the best,

      Bob

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    2. You're welcome Bob. The Wayback Machine is a wonderful resource but limited by what it captures.
      Neil

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    3. Neil Patterson (Neil),

      Thanks again. It’s a resource that is a bit hit and miss but still very useful.

      All the best,

      Bob

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    4. Neil and Bob -
      I got as far as Chris's introduction to his Indo-Pocketstan campaign (the 'Mongoose' A/Car), but from the the trail went cold. Did he get further along with this?
      Cheers,
      Ion

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    5. Archduke Piccolo (Ion),

      I am sure that there were other pages on his website that covered this, but I cannot as yet find a link to them. I’ll let you know if I do.

      All the best,

      Bob

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  7. Fantastic talk Bob, thanks for posting the details here - absolutely fascinating!

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    1. Geordie an Exiled FoG,

      Cheers! Having wargamed Operation Vijay, I really ought to recreate Operation Polo … possibly for COW2024.

      All the best,

      Bob.

      Delete

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