Pakistan Army Order of Battle December 1971

The Pakistan Army launched Operation Searchlight on March 25th, 1971, to pacify which led to a prolonged conflict with the Bengali Mukti Bahini. Although conventional in nature during March–May 1971, it soon turned into an insurgency from June of that year. Indian army had not directly supported the Bengali resistance but had launched Operation Jackpot to support the insurgency from May 1971. The initial deployments of the Pakistan armed forces were to combat and contain the activities of the Mukti Bahini. This was changed over time and by December 1971, 3 Infantry and 2 ad hoc divisions were deployed to face the Mitro Bahini.

Background: Initial deployments against Mukti Bahini

Order of Battlle: Location of Pakistani and Mitro bahini units on December 3, 1971. Some unit locations are not shown. Map not to exact scale

Pakistan army started to work on a plan of defense against a possible Bangladesh attack from July 1971. At that time, 3 infantry divisions held responsibility for the province: the 9th (CO: Maj. Gen. Shaukat Riza, HQ Jessore) looking after the area south of the Padma River, the 16th (Maj. Gen. Nazar Hussain Shah, HQ Bogra) responsible for the area north of Padma and west of Jamuna rivers and the 14th (CO: Maj. Gen. Rahim Khan, HQ: Dhaka) looking after the rest of the province.[1] The original plan was based on a series of exercises, known as Titumeer, which were held during 1970–1971.[2] It was revised several times and approved in October 1971. General Niazi had created 4 ad hoc infantry brigade and 2 ad hoc infantry divisions before the final order of battle was devised.[3] The final order of battle prior to December 3, 1971, was:[4]

Eastern Command Headquarters Dhaka[5]
GOC: Lt. General A. A. K. Niazi
COS: Brigadier Baqir Siddiqi
Commander Artillery: Brig. S. S. A. Kashim
Commander Armor: Col. Bakhtier
Commander Engineers: Brig. Iqbal Sharif
Commander Signals: Brig. Areef Reza
Commander Medical Service: Brig. Fahim Ahmed Khan
Advisor: Maj. Gen. Rao Farman Ali
Units under HQ Control:
**6th Engineer Regiment
**10th Engineer Regiment – detached to various locations
**11th Engineer Regiment - Lt. Col Sarwar
** 43rd Light Ack Ack – Lt. Col. Mohammad Afzal
** 19th Signal Regiment
**3rd Commando Battalion (less elements)
**Army Aviation Squadron #4 – Lt. Col. Liakat Bokhari

Dhaka Defense Scheme (adhoc)

Brig. Kashim (North): Dhaka Cantonment & Tongi atea
Brig. Mian Mansoor (East): Munshiganj & Narayanganj
Brig. Bashir: Dhaka city proper

Pakistan Air Force CO: Air Commodore Enamul Huq
**No. 14 Squadron ‘’Tail-choppers’’: 20 F-86 Sabers
**Training unit: 3 T-33

Pakistan Navy CO: Commodore Mohammad Sharif

36 Ad hoc Infantry Division

GOC: Major General Muhammad Jamshed HQ Dhaka
Area of Operation: Dhaka, Tangail and Mymensingh districts

14 Infantry Division

GOC: Major General Abdul Majid Qazi, HQ Brahmanbaria
Area of Operation: Sylhet and Northern Comilla districts

Sylhet

Also: Wings of Tochi, Thal and Khyber scouts

Maulavibazar

Brahmanbaria

39 Ad hoc Division

GOC: Maj. Gen. Rahim Khan (replaced by Brig. Mian Mansoor) – Chandpur
Area of Operation: Comilla, Feni and Northern Chittagong

Comilla

Feni

Ramgarh

Chittagong

16th Infantry Division

GOC: Maj. Gen. Nazar Hussain Shah HQ: Bogra, then Natore
Area of Operation: Rajshahi, Bogra, Dinajpur, Rangpur and Pabna
Districts
**29th Cavalry less elements –Rangpur

Saidpur

Bogra

Nator

Rajshahi

9th Infantry Division

GOC: Maj. Gen HM. H. Ansari HQ Jessore
Area of Operation: Khulna, Jessore, Kushtia, Faridpur, Barisal and Patuakhali districts

Jhenida

Jessore

Khulna

References

  1. Salik, Siddiq, Witness to Surrender, p. 92
  2. Quereshi, Maj. Gen. Hakeem Arshad, 1971 Indo-Pak War: A Soldiers Narrative, p. 119-120
  3. Salik, Siddiq, Witness to Surrender, p. 126
  4. Jacob, Lt. Gen. JFR, Surrender At Dacca: The Birth of a Nation, p. 184-p. 188
  5. 1 2 Niazi, Lt. Gen. AAK, The Betrayal of East Pakistan, p. 184-p. 187
  6. Salik, Siddiq, Witness to Surrender, p. 133
  7. Salik, Siddiq, Witness to Surrender, p. 148
  8. Salik, Siddiq, Witness to Surrender, p. 138

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, September 09, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.