Indo-Pakistan War of 1971 - Why it Happened?

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @samiurkhan
    @samiurkhan Год назад +1669

    This is a pretty sensitive topic so kudos to you for covering it.
    My mom and dad were kids during the Bangladeshi War and its pretty strange hearing from them how casually the Pakistani Army killed people. My parents both mentioned that the trains were a common source of violence. The PK army would board trains and at each station, fire at any civilians waiting there. People in Dhaka would regularly wave white flags on apartment roofs to inform Air Force pilots to not bomb them. My dad and his sisters would put uncooked rice in salt water and each it uncooked because power/gas were out. Resistance fighters would eat a similar diet and would often join regular families to eat. My mom and her sister had a dedicated guard who was responsible for taking them and running as far away as possible in case their house was attacked. My grandfather was a teacher at the local college so he was likely to be a target in case of an attack. What was most interesting was how casually my parents talked about it. Being born in the west, I think liberal norms and rules of engagement add a deeper impact to civilian violence but to my parents who were growing up with violence around them it's just another day.
    Unfortunately, I think this "violence is normal" mindset has impacted Bangladesh to this day and religious violence especially against Hindus is still common. The targeting of teachers and academics is also a problem since it hurts the next generation. I think Bangladesh only really recovered that loss of academic talent in recent years and hence you see recent economic boom.
    Great video mate cheers.

    • @oneshotme
      @oneshotme Год назад +42

      Sorry to hear your parents had to deal with that

    • @sebresludolf9611
      @sebresludolf9611 Год назад

      Violence against Hindus common? Beta pagol naki?
      Bangladesh e hindo der jeirokom facility dewa hoy Asia te onno kono minority ke dewa hoy kina giye khoj kor. Amader desher hindora valoi ase, amader thekeo valo. Tarporo toh Tara desher birudhe baire nalish kore jemon korsilo Priya Saha.
      Leftist naki?

    • @wiseowl820
      @wiseowl820 Год назад +23

      Wow an amazing story, this is what should be shown to the world

    • @stoneruler
      @stoneruler Год назад +80

      hope Bangladesh would become a more peaceful country after that, but it seems Islamists are on the rise.

    • @SkyGlitchGalaxy
      @SkyGlitchGalaxy Год назад +7

      That's an impressive story. Salute 🫡

  • @LeCharles07
    @LeCharles07 Год назад +888

    Kind of ironic how Pakistan, a former colony, had it's own colony in the form of East Pakistan for a while. The production to investment ratio and even the political balance of power were textbook colonial.

    • @Vajrapani108
      @Vajrapani108 Год назад +99

      Funny thing is that the push for an muslim Indian nation was spearheaded by people who later formed Bangladesh. Meaning the original leaders of Pakistan abandoned it as a failed project. Even the Jinnah wasn't a Punjabi

    • @sume151
      @sume151 Год назад +40

      Pakistani Punjabis are still doing the same to other Pakistanis till date

    • @AntiAnglo-Saxon
      @AntiAnglo-Saxon Год назад +60

      And they blame india for terrorism in kashmir when they invaded kashmir themselves that they joined India.

    • @purnp5897
      @purnp5897 Год назад +2

      @@stevej71393 read the oc's second sentence until it hits you.

    • @amuxpatch2798
      @amuxpatch2798 Год назад

      @@AntiAnglo-Saxon Anglo Saxon is a link to main land Europe ,thats all .Most Brits are pigmy whites .

  • @BjornCanute
    @BjornCanute Год назад +1332

    "Pakistani forces in east Pakistan would surrender in Dhaka bringing a quick end to the conflict. " Yeah, its a lot harder fighting an actual army using guns rather then just slaughtering civilians.

    • @rajath275
      @rajath275 Год назад +252

      ⁠@@bhattibrothers7053 but aren’t one of you supposed to be equal the martial powers of 100 kafirs? How did you surrender? Is the story of your racial/genetic superiority a lie? After all, you are the ones who bent to the foreign religion and powers instead of living proud like the indigenous people.

    • @bhattibrothers7053
      @bhattibrothers7053 Год назад

      @@rajath275 no we are never equal to 100 kafirs it is God who gives us power and strength and victory remember battle of uhud muslims were defeated why? Because they disobeyed prophet muhammad.Same case here we fought our brothers and killed them and india took advantage

    • @unnamed8698
      @unnamed8698 Год назад +15

      @@bhattibrothers7053 34k soldiers fighting meanwhile 93k soldiers surrendered. lol

    • @sandeepatwalspeaks
      @sandeepatwalspeaks Год назад

      ​​@@bhattibrothers7053ure BS you had 93K tall, white-skinned Punjabi soldiers who were acted as pussies when real men in form of Indian Army showed up and your leaders in UN at that time said that they will keep fighting on for thousand years, man one should appreciate the skill of a paki when he gets his ass handed down by those who he thought could beat in his sleep

    • @tibzig1
      @tibzig1 Год назад

      The West has done the same for centuries.

  • @Newdivide
    @Newdivide Год назад +1188

    Sadly, no one was ever tried for the atrocities that happened in Bangladesh

    • @plasticide4095
      @plasticide4095 Год назад +55

      Good news, some local collaborators were tried and hanged for their crimes.

    • @Newdivide
      @Newdivide Год назад +13

      @@plasticide4095when?

    • @plasticide4095
      @plasticide4095 Год назад +100

      @@Newdivide Qader Molla in 2011 and a few others alongside him as far as I know, it was a huge deal in here, and it caused violent protests from Islamist groups

    • @Newdivide
      @Newdivide Год назад +73

      @@plasticide4095 good they got what's coming

    • @rajatdani619
      @rajatdani619 Год назад

      The biggest Genocide Did by Pakistani army was Operating Searchlight.
      Google Operation Searchlight..It was the biggest Genocide Did by the army to its own people at that time.

  • @rajatdani619
    @rajatdani619 Год назад +657

    Funfact-- None of the Prime minister of Pakistan has completed its 5 years tenure in its 70years History😂😂..
    Because The Country is Controlled By Pakistani Supreme Army Chief.

    • @xmlthegreat
      @xmlthegreat Год назад

      Brother I'm not having any fun with this fact. :)
      The problem is that this military with a country attached to it, is constantly on the lookout for a way to blame India for the problems they have created for themselves. Any time their economic situation starts getting precarious they start rattling their sabres. And the worst part is these dumbasses have nukes, the password to fire them is most likely 1234, and the moment some renegade captain gets his hands on the controls he will get bright ideas of destroying India and getting promoted to general. This gives me sleepless nights.

    • @likydsplit8483
      @likydsplit8483 Год назад +44

      True. And very telling point about the nature of PAK society.

    • @Shubham_Bahirat
      @Shubham_Bahirat Год назад

      Even the current prime minister was kicked out and when he raised voice he was shot

    • @sunisyellow8517
      @sunisyellow8517 Год назад +6

      Right

    • @johndoe-vc1we
      @johndoe-vc1we Год назад +1

      Zardari? forgot him?

  • @RobinTheBot
    @RobinTheBot Год назад +798

    This whole series on conflicts is "Pakistan picks a fight it can't win at all for reasons that don't make sense, loses, and then agrees to not do it again while preparing to do it again". If they just lied a little less, all the things they were afraid of wouldn't have happened...
    Edit: it just keeps going! I thought Russia was the nation most talented at panicking and doing things to hurt itself, but Pakistan may be the real top dog there...

    • @tge2102
      @tge2102 Год назад +136

      Don't forget the constant threats of nuclear war even when they only have cold-war era missiles, no second strike capabilities and the strategic depth of wet cardboard while the other side has an ABM net up and running for major cities

    • @soham6649
      @soham6649 Год назад +29

      The next episode in this series comes up in 28 years with the Kargil conflict

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад

      The reason is that Pakistan is run by the intelligence services and unelected government. Usually known as the deep state. They had one long before America was taken over by its own version. Yes, the deep state will make decisions that are in its own interest while being solidly against the interests of its nation and people. That's why they're so harmful.

    • @EDD519
      @EDD519 Год назад +8

      sounds like the Gasa Strip & hesboloa ?

    • @Pl79807
      @Pl79807 Год назад +1

      💯

  • @JeepWrangler1957
    @JeepWrangler1957 Год назад +589

    This always puzzled me. India is the world’s largest democracy and was courted by the USSR. So the U.S. then favored Pakistan which only tolerated the U.S. while it received military assistance. Oh what a tangled web we conceive….

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 Год назад +74

      That is because India accepted that courting.They were a socialist country until the 90s.

    • @leonardwei3914
      @leonardwei3914 Год назад +177

      India leaned toward the USSR as a response to its economic and political position when it gaining independence from the British. Whether due to actual ill-intent or natural market forces, India suffered series of de-industrialization leading up to independence. So although seemingly democratic and officially part of the so-called Non Aligned Movement (initiated by Indian Prime Minister Nehru in 1961 at Belgrade, Yugoslavia) during the Cold War, India incorporated socialist mixed-market economic policies in an effort to build up the nation. Which is why India established strategic, military and trade ties to the USSR, especially during Khrushchev's de-Stalinist reform period who was eager to keep India in a so-called non-aligned status. Pakistan and the U.S. forged stronger ties due to the geo-political leanings of the ruling Pakistan class and their shared interest against the USSR and Communism.
      Of course I am simplifying a bit of what happened, but it's a start.

    • @saharatul
      @saharatul Год назад

      It was the reverse, Our PM first visited US for support but since Nixon and Kissinger were racist pieces of shit we had to resort to USSR help

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot Год назад +159

      Allying with America meant aligning with the British, who you'll remember, had just finished some of the worst atrocities in Indian History, and only left when they realized they were facing an outnumbered land war right after a world war. It's natural to side with the enemy of your enemy, especially since the USSR had an openly anti-colonial stance.
      Siding with Pakistan was a mistake, of course. The whole "war on terror" (truly just new age colonialism) was, as was the cold war in general.

    • @userre85
      @userre85 Год назад +5

      ​@@RobinTheBot what's your screen time on RUclips. You have so many subscriptions.

  • @orion7326
    @orion7326 Год назад +459

    My great grandfather fought in World War 2 in North Africa and Italy. He was captured by the Germans, lost his fingernails and toes to them, but managed to escape. He rejoined his unit and fought with them until he was again injured in 1945, and shifted to a hospital in Hove, Sussex. He stayed there for sometime and came back in 1947 to join the Indian army. He retired in 1957.
    He had setup a refugee camp in my home state of Odisha, India which is very close to Bangladesh by sea, but doesn't have a land border. In the 1960s, Shia Muslims and Hindus used to escape persecution in Bangladesh and come to his refugee camp. It didn't have many people, and it was quite easy to assimilate them in the Indian population. But in 1971, his camp was filled to the brim. Everyday Odisha's fishermen used to pull boatloads of refugees from the sea, and this time Sunni muslims were escaping too. He and my grandfather both were perplexed, as they couldn't put Sunni Muslims along with the previous Shia Muslim and Hindu refugees. It was a logistical nightmare. Most of these boats would just be wandering around on the sea, with people emaciated from hunger. God knows how many people just drifted away in the sea. At it's peak, his camp had 11,000 people. The condition of women and children was particularly bad. Kids as young as 14 were with child. Almost all of them had been victims of GBV. Feeding them and medically treating them was a nightmare, and so he called upon his old mates from the British army to help. They were denied entry as Britain had sent it's Eagle fleet against the Indian Navy to support the Pakistanis, and it wasn't received well in India. So they entered India through "cheaper" means (going to Malaysia and smuggling themselves in a cargo ship) in early 1972 and set to work in the refugee camp.
    By the 1980s, all of the camp's refugees had been either repatriated or had been resettled with jobs and businesses in India. All of the orphans were put up for adoption, both in India and in Britain. In 2002, the camp was officially shutdown by my grandfather (GG had passed away by then). My dad grew up with Bangladeshi kids. To this day, he gets very happy whenever he sees Bangladesh do well. India will always have a soft spot for Bangladesh, especially the Indians on the East Coast who were exposed to the conflict.

    • @KironManuelCards
      @KironManuelCards Год назад +13

      I have heard of such stories.Kindly bring peace soon.Anyone can contact me.

    • @kartikeykasniya6971
      @kartikeykasniya6971 Год назад +36

      Thank you for sharing your story. It was very emotional to read.
      I thank your great grandfather for his service to the humanity.

    • @rankingresearchdata
      @rankingresearchdata Год назад +23

      Great story... Glory to your grandfather

    • @IAMAVIKJORDAN
      @IAMAVIKJORDAN Год назад +12

      He needs to be popularized

    • @HimadriSekharGupta
      @HimadriSekharGupta Год назад +1

      Amazing. Salute to your Frand Father

  • @Lustanda
    @Lustanda Год назад +2356

    Oh boy the comment section will be calm, civil for this video

    • @Cecil97
      @Cecil97 Год назад +83

      im ready for the dumpster fire, my popcorn is ready

    • @stc3145
      @stc3145 Год назад +21

      Scary they have weapons of mass destruction

    • @YoureRatharStewpidMate
      @YoureRatharStewpidMate Год назад +6

      i have chicken nuggies

    • @surajkishan3837
      @surajkishan3837 Год назад +80

      @@stc3145 and we never used them unlike 'murica

    • @stc3145
      @stc3145 Год назад +72

      @@surajkishan3837 Do you know why the Americans used them? Or is your country too poor to offer history education?

  • @arkzbh
    @arkzbh Год назад +502

    I am from India, and I was born and brought up in a village right alongside current India Bangladesh border (Village name Gitaldaha, you can locate it on google map). My parents saw the atrocities that were committed by Pak soldiers to the Bangladeshi people and the horror of the migrants, it's still fresh in their minds. My family was originally from Bangladesh and my grandfather decided to move to India in 1946, a year before my father was born. He thanked God his whole life for not having to put his children through the 1947/48 massacre, and my parents thanks God that me and my sister didn't have to see or suffer 1971. 😢 Unspeakable atrocities were comitted by West Pak soldiers which will put Japanese soldiers at Nanking to shame. 😢 In Bengali literature, you can still find the glimpse of the pain and suffering. But it was so bad, the people actually had to suffer, won't even say anything, they just say "you don't want to know" and if you look at their face, you know what they are hiding.

    • @Indic-D
      @Indic-D Год назад +8

      It should be “atrocities” not “authorities”.

    • @sreyanshuchaterjee3962
      @sreyanshuchaterjee3962 Год назад

      Bangladesh created its own problems. First it demanded separate land for Muslims, a land to rule over and make non-muslims as dhimmis. Everything was going find and their cumulative hatred for Hindus kept them united, until the elections. Once the election results showcased that Bengalis will lead the new Pakistan, the punjabis and pathans looked down upon dirt dark bengalis, often equated as kafirs due to their affinity for a language local to the land (Bangla). They paid for their own sins, but again the Hindus suffered and 7million , mostly Hindus left East Pakistan. India had no other option that to intervene. Bangaldesis may easily absolve of themsleves and paint themselves as victim, but what unites Bangaldeshis and Pakistanis (the islamic mindset of bromance), is hatred of Hindus!

    • @StreetDrilla
      @StreetDrilla Год назад +2

      "On 13 December 1971 I gave the final orders of 'Last man-last round' which was virtually an order to die. No officer or man hesitated and the response was in the affirmative. These orders had to be changed to 'Surrender' on the orders of the President of Pakistan [Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan] advised by General Hameed [Abdul Hamid Khan] and persuaded by Dr Malik [Abdul Motaleb Malik], the Governor who told me that delay in surrender would cause difficulties in holding operations in West Pakistan. They wanted to cease hostilities in West Pakistan at all cost. The panic and stress was so great that the Govt. was hysterical to shed East Pakistan and save West Pakistan. So to save West Pakistan, our base, from disintegration and Western Garrison from further repulses I staked my reputation, my brilliant career, and the high traditions of Pakistan Army and agreed with a heavy heart to lay down arms when we were nowhere near defeat and tactically better placed than Indians at that particular time. More or less the same thing happened with the Japanese Forces deployed in the Pacific in World War II, who had about fifty-eight Army Divisions with sufficient aerial and naval support and tactically and strategically were in a better position than the Allies. The use of atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki forced the Japanese Pacific Forces to surrender unconditionally in order to save their motherland from further destruction."
      ~ Lt. Gen. A. A. K. Niazi, Lieutenant General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, Last Governor of East Pakistan

    • @sarinr8226
      @sarinr8226 Год назад +7

      ​@@StreetDrilla lol

    • @juliuscaesar564
      @juliuscaesar564 Год назад +22

      @@StreetDrilla niazi was coping from defeat here, also him using the example of the ww2 is hilarious because its a known fact that the americans had the japanese beat, and those 58 divisions had nowhere near as much oil to fight the americans anymore. Niazi ignores historical accuracy in order to downplay pakistani atrocities, and makes the defeat seem less humiliating

  • @dexterroy
    @dexterroy Год назад +412

    It was a massive logistical problem to manage all those 90,000 Pakistani PoWs.
    They had to be provided with food, clothes, medical care, accomodation. There were bureaucratic hurdles to be overcome. Their family members were worried, they were writing mails, sending parcels, which had to delivered to these PoWs. A system of making some payments to these PoWs had to be formulated by Indian govt so that they can buy certain things from Indian military canteen stores, as they were staying for an extended period of time. It took a few years before all 90K of them could be sent back home. 13 days of war resulted in this years of mess.

    • @krityaan
      @krityaan Год назад +130

      Let's not mince words - 24 years of Pakistani administrative incompetence, inhumanity and militaristic bloodlust caused this.
      And they still teach themselves that they won this war in their history books.

    • @stranger6797
      @stranger6797 Год назад

      ​@@krityaan Well history books of every country are made of lies.

    • @dexterroy
      @dexterroy Год назад +50

      @@krityaan I was not talking about the reasons that led to this war. I was talking about the issue with handling POWs.

    • @alihasanabdullah7586
      @alihasanabdullah7586 Год назад +8

      Bangladeshi. That's like the basics of conduct with Prisoners of War. Even the Nazis provided this much to the PoW they weren't exterminating. Or would you rather preach extermination?

    • @lakshaysingh9743
      @lakshaysingh9743 Год назад +63

      ​@@alihasanabdullah7586 yeah considering of what happened in the eastern front and east Pakistan, paxtanis were lucky that they didn't get captured by the mukti bahini.

  • @zt3gaming796
    @zt3gaming796 Год назад +201

    A recent shift i have seen in Pakistani society is the realization that we r on the wrong side in 71...this has coincided with rise in anti Pakistan army sentiment(due to military inference in democracy)

    • @tge2102
      @tge2102 Год назад +2

      When tf did Pakistan have democracy?
      Literally none of the "elected" PMs have escaped being overthrown/impeached/murdered and/or couped.
      Heck even when wikileaks happened, the pakistani president was caught begging foreign governments to rescue him from upcoming assassination lol

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Год назад

      Took you long enough, lol. Wonder how long before you realize how your ancestors were converted by the sword. I'd say at least 500 more years of being utterly outclassed by India ought to do it.

    • @eee9034
      @eee9034 Год назад +28

      Then all pakistanis should be thankful to indians, as it was India who showed The actual value of pakistani life towards pakistani army/government

    • @rishikeshwagh
      @rishikeshwagh Год назад +41

      It only took you 50+ years to realize that

    • @mosesracal6758
      @mosesracal6758 Год назад +6

      @@eee9034 To be grateful to the Indians is a bit of a stretch. Hindsight never truly changes things and by all intents and purposes - while India did the right moral thing to support Bangladesh, it still is technically part of Pakistan and as part of joining the UN is to sign the declaration of non-intervention into the internal affairs of other sovereign members.
      Pakistan had every right to declare the war but if one had to be grateful to someone, it was that the war ended so quickly and decisively.
      People never should be grateful to receive violence but lessons can be learned.

  • @CrayogenicDeath
    @CrayogenicDeath Год назад +62

    I'm Indian. Well done on the maintenance of neutral language and factual reporting. This is why you're one of my favourite channels on YT.

  • @LeCharles07
    @LeCharles07 Год назад +150

    11:09 "Our government has failed to denounce the suppression of democracy. Our government has failed to denounce Atrocities. Our government has failed to take forceful measures to protect it's citizens while at the same time bending over backwards to placate the West Pak dominated government and to lessen likely and deservedly negative international public relation impact against them. Our government has evidenced what many will consider moral bankruptcy."
    Should someone tell him? I feel like someone should tell him.

    • @xmlthegreat
      @xmlthegreat Год назад +10

      Nah let him cook

    • @arnavsadhu
      @arnavsadhu Год назад +21

      Even today, Imran Khan the last PM and the opposition leader of pakistan was literally kidnapped and dragged from his house by military police. Supreme court intervened then only he was released after a week, just cause he spoke against the constant threat of Pakistani Army. And even today his supporters and other leaders are being charged in military courts. Yet the US keeps supplying the Pakistan Army with fresh F16 spares to fight "terrorism"😂

    • @StreetDrilla
      @StreetDrilla Год назад +1

      "On 13 December 1971 I gave the final orders of 'Last man-last round' which was virtually an order to die. No officer or man hesitated and the response was in the affirmative. These orders had to be changed to 'Surrender' on the orders of the President of Pakistan [Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan] advised by General Hameed [Abdul Hamid Khan] and persuaded by Dr Malik [Abdul Motaleb Malik], the Governor who told me that delay in surrender would cause difficulties in holding operations in West Pakistan. They wanted to cease hostilities in West Pakistan at all cost. The panic and stress was so great that the Govt. was hysterical to shed East Pakistan and save West Pakistan. So to save West Pakistan, our base, from disintegration and Western Garrison from further repulses I staked my reputation, my brilliant career, and the high traditions of Pakistan Army and agreed with a heavy heart to lay down arms when we were nowhere near defeat and tactically better placed than Indians at that particular time. More or less the same thing happened with the Japanese Forces deployed in the Pacific in World War II, who had about fifty-eight Army Divisions with sufficient aerial and naval support and tactically and strategically were in a better position than the Allies. The use of atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki forced the Japanese Pacific Forces to surrender unconditionally in order to save their motherland from further destruction."
      ~ Lt. Gen. A. A. K. Niazi, Lieutenant General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, Last Governor of East Pakistan

    • @reddragon771
      @reddragon771 11 месяцев назад

      ​​@StreetDrilla yeah he is the same guy who used to cry like a girl the moment he got the news that the Indian advance towards Dhaka was coming for him and his 93000 men...you should be ashamed of yourself and your army to even think that an army that was gleefully conducting the genocide and rape of unarmed men women and children in Bangladesh was a moral and noble army. To insinuate that they were in better tactical position than the Indians even after being surrounded on all sides and 93000 of his troops surrendered for a noble cause..what a joke..pakistan during the 1965 war when India was close to Lahore ran to their masters in the white House begging for a ceasefire ..you know what the Americans told them ..they bluntly told them that the Indians got you by the throat .all that i mentioned is not some top secret but publicly available information...but you Pakistani clowns still celebrate your humiliating defeat in 1965 as defence day ...well to emphasize how deceitful and dishonest your phony army is to its own citizens here is one small anecdote...the day before pakistan surrendered in Bangladesh the headlines in your national newspapers read...pak fauj is on the charge and this time it is going for complete victory...thousands of Indian troops and their Bengali collaborators lose their lives in combat...and the very next day they surrendered like the cowards they are...No general in human history has given up a better tactical position let alone surrender just because he was questioning his conscience and morality...but you clowns to this day believe all the lies and misinformation your millitary keeps feeding you after every debacle they suffer at the hands of India..what has your army done for you since the day you gained indepence in 1947anyways....lost half of your country just 25 years into its existence, dictatorial generals,coups,martial law,political instability and anarchy ,defeat after defeat in every war it started without any provocation from the Indian side,terrorism along the Afghan border and inside your major cities perpetrated by groups that were trained and equipped by your own army,bombed its own people in nwfp and Waziristan,allowed a foreign country to use its territory to attack its own people, seccesionist groups like bla in Balochistan that came into existence due to the brutal persecution of balochis that was perpetrated by your army.,record numbers of trips to the imf china,Saudi Arabia,uae,america ,sco aiib with a begging bowl you call kashkol to beg for money. They have made the same people they were supposed to protect to suffer this cycle of unending humiliation and shame and for what... just because your corrupt Army wants to stay on par with India militarily despite the fact that Indian economy is the fourth largest economy of the world and your economy has been in tatters for the last 25 years to the point that you need to beg for basic food items like rice and wheat..your army promotes and protects it's financial interests by defending Chinese financed vanity projects that are being build by taking loans from the Chinese that come with huge interest rates making your country sink into a debt trap that is of its own making,...I mean the only purpose of an army in a democracy is to maintain the sanctity of its borders but your army failed miserably in the one job they were being paid for the day they surrendered half of your country and population to the Indians in record numbers without even putting up a fight... Let me make it perfectly clear to you fools that all India needs to keep your economy in a constant state of unending downfall is build weapons they can afford and sit down to watch your army try to match India's defence spending something that your country cannot afford...other then that what threat does India pose to you clowns when it was your army that forced India's hand by dragging it into wars that were initiated by them in the first place...India has nothing to gain by occupying any part of your country . This threat that stays ever present in every Pakistanis mind is the result of the fear mongering your army employs to keep justifying the insane defence spending of your country that is then utilised by corrupt generals in escaping your banana republic and leaving it to its own devices by shamelessly migrating to america and Europe ,sending their kids to ivy league foreign institutions and buying pizza chains like papa Johns.. In our country even the highest ranked generals are considered lucky if they somehow manage to save enough money after retirement so that they can build a house of their own let alone migrating to first world countries for better opportunities something your generals are guilty of.I mean had the people of your country forced your governments to cut the mindless defence spending your army was involved in the very day your country successfully tested its nuclear device trust me your country would have been on a completely different trajectory of growth and development than what it finds itself on right now. A country having nuclear weapons in its arsenal means deterrence and if by some misfortune things spiral into complete chaos it means mutually assured destruction. So why does your every govt keep increasing your defence budget when India has no reason to attack your hellhole of a country. Trust me we have better things to do rather than dragging our military into a never ending regional conflict that is a huge drain on the economy and resources of both the parties involved . The only reason we have to maintain such a large military presence on our borders is number one the Chinese who have made their imperialistic intentions clear by trying to creep into and occupy specific strategically placed tactical points on our side of the lac by deploying 50000 troops supported by their artillery,mechanized forces,rocket force,air force and air defence systems on their side of the border. The second reason is the countless terror groups like jamat e islami,lashkar e jhangvi,jaish e Mohammad,lashkar e toiba, Indian Mujahideen,hizbul Mujahideen flourishing on your side of the line of control... Your cowardly army that is shit scared of engaging in a direct confrontation with the highly motivated Indian troops keeps using the above mentioned groups as proxies in their fight against our armed forces by offering those piss poor,brainwashed wannabe jihadis bundles of cash ,equipping them with automatic weapons and helping them to infiltrate into Kashmir by providing them with cover fire so that if they somehow succeed in getting inside our border without getting their brains blown out by Indian snipers can keep killing our armed forces and innocent civilians. But unfortunately for you and your army what ends up happening after all this mindless wastage of your hard earned money your army is constantly involved in is that the moment those terrorists enter our borders with nefarious designs they are hunted down and sent straight to the 72 hoors that await them in heaven courtesy our ever present and ever vigilant armed forces.Till the day you disband these countless terror groups voluntarily nothing is going to change for the citizens of your country ..on the contrary your condition will just keep on worsening day after day ,year after year ultimately spiralling down into an unending cycle of chaos,violence,bloodshed and anarchy...attributes that will one day result in your country being declared a failed state and trust me right now you people are at the deep end of that spiral with not a single conscientious soul in your government and army interested in and capable of stopping your decline into the depths of eternal doom and complete annihilation that is rubbing it's hands in excitement desperately waiting for your now foretold arrival. If any one of you cowards still believe in the concept of jihad and ghazwa e hind perpetrated by your resident lunatic defence experts like the great Mr. Zahil Hamid and the unabashedly suave and swashbuckling Mr.orya maqbool jaan then let me warn you that it's not the 72 hoors those two keep telling you about who are desperately waiting for you in heaven but what really awaits to welcome you at the gates of hellfire is the devil's minions who are experts in every torture tactic you can think of like,boiling alive in burning hot oil,drawing and quartering and then feeding your intestines to you keeping you conscious as it progresses so that you can not just see yourself getting mercilessly butchered but can also feel every second of the pain that accompanies such unspeakable and inhumane methods of torture.

    • @ElectronFieldPulse
      @ElectronFieldPulse 5 месяцев назад

      @@arnavsadhu- You should read discussions among average Pakistanis. They are largely uneducated and extremely religious and extremely aggressive about Islam. It isn’t a “terrorist” threat as if it’s a joke. It’s a very very real threat. If the Pakistani army were to lose control of its nukes to its population, they would almost certainly do something stupid like nuke Israel. People just have no clue how different cultures view life. So many Muslims don’t care about anything above Islam, and in a way which makes fundamental Christians look like liberals. There is a reason so many Arabic or Muslim countries have hardline dictators, their populations are seriously regressive and seriously dangerous. I wish people would just read conversations between average citizens in these countries and they would quickly realize why things are the way they are

  • @firstsparkle5378
    @firstsparkle5378 Год назад +330

    You should have included the part of war strategy in 1971 in which US sent its nuclear 7th fleet to assist Pakistan against India but presence of Russian Navy averted any US advance in Bay of Bengal.

    • @OSTemli
      @OSTemli Год назад

      It's against western narrative they won't show it

    • @vir1great
      @vir1great Год назад +3

      I wish USA would hv involved. That would hv made world diff what we know.. interesting world when china+india+russia would clearly compete with USA and its ally

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari Год назад +59

      @@vir1great u were involved, u were equally part of Bangladeshi genocide

    • @rjmania
      @rjmania Год назад +29

      ​@@vir1greatchina was usa ally back then.. Just around that time they fought a war as well with russia.. search sino-soviet split.

    • @rahulkumarsingh676
      @rahulkumarsingh676 Год назад +19

      @@vir1great your wishing does not changes the history. USA, back then, had sent its 7th fleet just to terrorize india. Britain had also done the same by sending its HMS (i cant remember its name) .
      Also, is it not good to compete?? every developing nation aims to become a developed nation like USA, France, or UK. Why does it bother you so much?

  • @hansspiegl8684
    @hansspiegl8684 Год назад +126

    Thank you! I was a child in the early 1970s. The first time I understand what I have seen on the TV-news watching with my parents.
    I never knew the massacres in this language-conflict and riot.
    It's so shameful for the human race that we are so inhuman 😢

    • @mercedesbenz3751
      @mercedesbenz3751 Год назад +4

      It was not just language,
      it was about ethnicity too,
      Punjabi Pakistani vs Bengali Bangladeshis.

    • @shubhampatel7437
      @shubhampatel7437 Год назад +3

      The artocrities that had been done by Pakistani army is hard to imagine, whenever I hear the stories of East Pakistan I got goosebumps and tears.

    • @kunalsaxena20
      @kunalsaxena20 Год назад

      Disasters happen , atleast some people are brave enough to acknowledge it

    • @FilesdocumentsAndreposit-kr3vb
      @FilesdocumentsAndreposit-kr3vb Год назад

      90% of r$ pe victims were Hindu women and perpetrators were muslim men

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke 10 месяцев назад

      Лучший способ управлять людьми - это стравить их друг с другом по религиозному или национальному признаку. Чтобы они не могли изменить ничего в политическом и экономическом строе. Для усиления власти капитала. Именно так и происходит в Индии.

  • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
    @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Год назад +127

    I remember when this happened. Even national geographic covered this war. I knew of the atrocities but not on this level one thing that should be kept in mind, it was an India's best interest to sever East Pakistan at West Pakistan and allow the formation of a third state. This greatly weakened Pakistan from a military and economic standpoint.

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 Год назад

      As the video said, it's cheaper for Indira Gandhi to go outright to war than to feed millions of refugee.

    • @rajasmr156
      @rajasmr156 Год назад +19

      Not to mention psychologically as well. In 60's and 70's, they actually had a doctrine that stated that only muslims deserved to rule the Indian subcontinent, and Hindus around the subcontinent must be subjugated and converted, as part of their 1,000 year old jihad called 'Ghazwa-e-Hind'. During 65 & 71, they even managed to fool their population by proclaiming that ''1 muslim man equals 10 infidel hindus'.
      Imagine the humiliation they went through after this war, because of which, they later realized that its impossible to defeat India militarily, so they must adopt guerilla tactics, which they called 'death by thousand cuts'. As part of this, they would overwhelm India through 1000s of terror attacks, which they believed would soften the ground for an actual invasion.

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 Год назад +19

      @@rajasmr156 Correction : terror tactics. Not guerilla tactics. Never guerilla tactics.

    • @Shubham_Bahirat
      @Shubham_Bahirat Год назад +10

      ​@@rajasmr156🤣🤣 they used to think superior pathans can push back indian army. The indian army showed them their place

    • @juliuscaesar564
      @juliuscaesar564 Год назад +5

      You make it seem like india intervening was bad, lots more people would have died in the atrocities if india didnt intervene, also the influx of refugees from east pakistan strained india's fragile economy ( a piece of information u seem to ignore)

  • @ELMS
    @ELMS Год назад +47

    I’m glad you did a “Why” video. When I was watching ‘The Operations Room’ I kept thinking “Why are these people fighting each other?”

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari Год назад +9

      The answer to all WHY for every Indo Pak war is
      Pakistani generals wanted to write cheques their country couldn't cash out

    • @emberfist8347
      @emberfist8347 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@hiteshadhikariNo it is the answer to every war in general someone gets too greedy or too big for their britches and makes a mistake that forces them to be taken down a few pegs.
      More specifically, I feel the Operations Room summed it up nicely that Bangladesh didn’t want to be part of Pakistan anymore and the Indian government was for Bangladesh independence because any chance to undermine their enemy was a chance they needed to take.

    • @jadeidkabir5395
      @jadeidkabir5395 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@hiteshadhikarithat's a very India centric take and that's coming from a Bangladeshi. Both of the armies and politicians of both countries are extremely trigger happy and extremely racist towards the other country. Do not blame only Pakistan when India has equal blame in everything.

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari 6 месяцев назад

      @@jadeidkabir5395 buddy, u got independence thanks to India
      2nd remind me when india started any war? Oh you cant 🙂

    • @hiteshadhikari
      @hiteshadhikari 6 месяцев назад

      @@emberfist8347 another major factor was the millions fleeing into india and the migration crisis
      India already has enough people
      Also the hindus in Bangladesh were being massacred by Pakistani army, this also pushed us into war

  • @amitbajwa6808
    @amitbajwa6808 Год назад +133

    Western countries led by USA , kept supporting pakistan's atrocities implicitly. While threatening India with military forces . Nixon and kisinger's shamefull conduct during this time is well documented.

    • @Igzilee
      @Igzilee Год назад +29

      Hopefully the US politicians can come to their senses and stop supporting Pakistan. Supporting India would be preferable, but staying neutral would be the most viable option. This coming from an American. India would be a vital ally, and it's a shame that the US and India have relatively poor diplomatic relations.

    • @quissbird-10
      @quissbird-10 Год назад +1

      I will be willing to see the US in a new light if their media stops portraying Porkistanis as the victim.

    • @Shubham_Bahirat
      @Shubham_Bahirat Год назад +1

      ​@@Igzileesometimes USA gives reasons to hate them. USA gave 8 F16 jets to Pakistan which missiles and it's gear. Everyone knows they'll use it against India

    • @Ihavpickle
      @Ihavpickle Год назад +2

      I don't think we do that anymore

    • @gogadev
      @gogadev Год назад +13

      ​@@Igzilee Since Trump came to power a lot of funding towards pakistan was stopped.

  • @humanityk2423
    @humanityk2423 Год назад +93

    I m from Bangladesh🇧🇩 thanks our big brother india🇮🇳😊

    • @aanav.vashisht
      @aanav.vashisht 2 месяца назад

      I’m from India and don’t thank me thank America

    • @GoluKr-hn3lb
      @GoluKr-hn3lb 10 дней назад

      Thanks brother ❤

  • @vishalsheth1888
    @vishalsheth1888 Год назад +154

    Footnote: US sent her Navy's 7th fleet with an aircraft carrier to intimidate India and to show support for Pakistan during 1971 war. Soviets came to rescue with their own fleet. Big reason why people of my parent's generation view America with suspicion and Russia as a friend. Pakistan was always armed with modern American jets, tanks etc. and India fought with her vintage WW2 era weapons left by the British. Moving closer to Soviets was inevitable.

    • @ahhno4662
      @ahhno4662 Год назад +3

      We know. Comment this on a video that doesn’t cover the *lead-up* but the *war itself*

    • @Igzilee
      @Igzilee Год назад +32

      As an American, I've always been curious as to why we support(ed) Pakistan instead of India, especially when India seems more democratic. The more I've learned recently, the more idiotic the decision seems to me. Unfortunately it seems based off of suspicions that due to the alliance with the Soviets that India would also become a communist nation. This taking place in a period of deep anti-communism sentiments in the US. Hopefully our politicians can come to their senses. India would be a powerful ally, not only in hopefully softening up tensions in southeast Asia but also helping to counter China's recent aggression

    • @Ihavpickle
      @Ihavpickle Год назад +2

      Don't care

    • @amandeep9930
      @amandeep9930 Год назад +22

      ​@@IgzileeUS supported Pakistan because of its geography. It wanted to use Pakistan to control the expansion of Russian influence in Afghanistan.

    • @FilesdocumentsAndreposit-kr3vb
      @FilesdocumentsAndreposit-kr3vb Год назад

      Igzilee because the US is run by elites your presidents and politicians are all puppets at best

  • @SoumalyaBarai
    @SoumalyaBarai Год назад +137

    My forefathers were evicted from Bangladesh, their first child, a girl, was taken by the pak army, and was probably raped and killed..
    All of my grandparents came to India, and my parents were born here, staring a family.. i know the events of torture by heart, hearing the stories of pak armies atrocities throughout childhood from my grandmother..
    I would have requested you to take a look at the atrocities done there, but since you post on tactics and battle order, i would suggest discussing the international response, economic sanctions, incidents outside bay of bengal (with US and UK fleet and Russi navy), and the battles that Indian Army heroically won on the east and west side of the country.

    • @babutara7374
      @babutara7374 Год назад +8

      Yes my friend it's very very terrible , the Pak army soldiers did every kind of torture known to human with d bengali people, kidnapping raping murder, the infamous chuknagar ganahatya.

    • @SoumalyaBarai
      @SoumalyaBarai Год назад

      I know.. their scorched earth policy for ethnic cleansing of Hindus brought hell on so many people.. i have heard so many stories from our grandparents and their friends.. almost every family lost someone or other.. smae happened on the western side as well.. so many families had to suffer the ruthlessness..

    • @Thehistory2021
      @Thehistory2021 11 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/Ac6K72GL-_Q/видео.htmlsi=Eck8lVGmOucH7Z3U
      The Bangladesh Liberation War Of 1971

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke 10 месяцев назад

      ​​​@@babutara7374 Ну нет, конечно. Немцы были более изобретательны. Они смогли использовать евреев для удобрения полей с картошкой. Европейцы всегда были более современны в методах геноцида! Первые концлагеря придумали именно власти Англии, для буров в Африке.

    • @babutara7374
      @babutara7374 10 месяцев назад

      @@kotnapromke I don't know Russian, I don't understand your language.

  • @kg14
    @kg14 Год назад +237

    You missed covering the role of the USA, UK and USSR in this military conflict. The fact that US and UK both sent their carrier groups to attack India to help Pakistan, which forced India to sign a defence pact with USSR.

    • @CEOofCulturalMarxism
      @CEOofCulturalMarxism Год назад +17

      Can you Provide a source for the carrier group having orders to attack. It´s well documented that the US armed parkistan in the relevant period directly and through allies. It does not seem out of character for to the United states to intervene directly, I however never found a reliable authority to show that such orders existed.

    • @tictacdude3468
      @tictacdude3468 Год назад +41

      @@CEOofCulturalMarxismhe US and supposedly the UK had carrier groups in the Bay of Bengal - which the Soviets also supposedly sent two groups to tail.
      I don’t know if kg14 is saying that they were sent to attack or sent to the area to be able to attack but there are no records that they ever were directly involved in the conflict.
      Ultimately, they were there as a show of force/capability because of American concern of growing Indian influence in the region. Remember again that the US thought the Soviets had a secret alliance with India and India was effectively gaining control of Bangladesh in the conflict - taking place at the same time as Soviet Containment and Nixon’s reapproachment with China.

    • @eldorados_lost_searcher
      @eldorados_lost_searcher Год назад +47

      ​@@tictacdude3468
      So by trying to pressure India into not being friendly with (or at least as influential and tied to) the USSR, the US pushed India into openly siding with the USSR?

    • @kg14
      @kg14 Год назад +37

      @@CEOofCulturalMarxism @thejudeobolshevik6406 You are right, there are no concrete sources that the carrier groups had explicit orders to attack (Will have to probably wait multiple decades for that to get declassified). But the intent to support Pakistan was there. US was already arming Pakistan even after an arms embargo due to the genocide. Had the war not ended as quickly as it did, there were high chances of US intervention or even Chinese as Nixon was also encouraging the Chinese to intervene militarily.

    • @tictacdude3468
      @tictacdude3468 Год назад +2

      @@eldorados_lost_searcher
      Don’t know for sure, that’s something to ask a historian who studies that era/conflict.

  • @Interdictiondeltawing
    @Interdictiondeltawing Год назад +46

    Finally someone made this. This was overshadowed by infamous wars that happened around the world during the whole cold war

    • @nicholastreat6720
      @nicholastreat6720 Год назад +7

      I think that's largely because it doesn't fit nearly in with many of the other conflicts of the era as it was other ethnic difference and had little to do with either communism or the eastern block.

    • @krityaan
      @krityaan Год назад +13

      ​@@nicholastreat6720 The US 7th fleet was deployed in support of Pakistan and the Soviets responded in kind. The war ended before either player could arrive. This was absolutely a Cold War conflict.

    • @nicholastreat6720
      @nicholastreat6720 Год назад +1

      @@krityaan I'm not saying that the great powers of the time didn't have interest in either country, just that it wasn't over political systems.

  • @shinchan1873
    @shinchan1873 Год назад +57

    We as residents of the state of Assam fell the effects of the war till today still there is a extremely high number of illegal bangladeshis living here causing communal and socio economic tensions

    • @OSTemli
      @OSTemli Год назад +9

      They create problem in Arunachal too, calling themselves as Assamese 🤦🏿

    • @7hutsangels360
      @7hutsangels360 6 месяцев назад +2

      Same here in our Meghalaya state

    • @SlimJim3082
      @SlimJim3082 5 месяцев назад +1

      It's the same everywhere in the NE.

  • @AbuctingTacos
    @AbuctingTacos Год назад +25

    Second best channel on youtube just behind that operations room guy

  • @SANJAYWILLIAMS1975
    @SANJAYWILLIAMS1975 Год назад +14

    My Dad was a radar operator in IAF he was posted in one of the forward bases near the border of Bangladesh and saw the birth of the nation

  • @sebresludolf9611
    @sebresludolf9611 Год назад +68

    *Fun fact The freedom Fighter Ziaur Rahman became president of Bangladesh. He is the second most popular leader of Bangladesh after Sheikh Mujibur Rahman*

    • @raisul_raj
      @raisul_raj Год назад +6

      Actually he's 1st and more popular than Mujibur Rehman.

    • @sebresludolf9611
      @sebresludolf9611 Год назад +4

      @@raisul_raj actually you are right. Shaheed President Ziaur Rahman beshi popular chilo

    • @raisul_raj
      @raisul_raj Год назад +3

      ​@@sebresludolf9611 জি কারণ জিয়ার জন্য এখনও আমি লোকদের আক্ষেপ করতে দেখি এবং অনেক কে কাদতে ও দেখেছি। কিন্তু একই কথা মুজিব কে নিয়ে বলা যায় না।

    • @sebresludolf9611
      @sebresludolf9611 Год назад

      @@raisul_raj এর কারণ বর্তমান সরকারের দূর্ণীতি আর ভ*রতপ্রীতি, আর শেখ মুজিবের বাকশাল।
      অন্যদিকে জিয়াউর রহমান ছিলেন সত্যিকারের দেশপ্রেমিক নেতা।

    • @sammy57533
      @sammy57533 Год назад

      @@sebresludolf9611 i am an indian and i have heard about this legend, can you tell some more, how did he managed bangladesh after independence?

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Год назад +48

    Excellent, neutral, and to the point...as usual. Good report there, and Thanks!

  • @tge2102
    @tge2102 Год назад +40

    So what led to east Pakistan becoming free was:
    - Funding and resources diverted from one province to another
    - Horrendus atrocities against locals like rape, forced disappearance and good old murder
    - The former factors contribute to discontent and hatred towards Pakistan leading to active insurgency which is opportunistically supported by foreigners
    Looks like Baluchistan is next😉

  • @ricklyle3739
    @ricklyle3739 Год назад +11

    . Being a history nerd this conflict was an obvious blind spot for me. Thank you for enlightening me on this subject.

  • @SpaceMarine500
    @SpaceMarine500 Год назад +95

    My grandfather was part of one of the first East Pakistan Rifles battalions to defect and join the separatists. He faced combat throughout much of south-western Bangladesh.

    • @lmaonoobs3779
      @lmaonoobs3779 Год назад +2

      It must've been hard for him knowing that he will be executed without any mercy for treason but still fought for his motherland.

    • @Thehistory2021
      @Thehistory2021 11 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/Ac6K72GL-_Q/видео.htmlsi=Eck8lVGmOucH7Z3U
      The Bangladesh Liberation War Of 1971

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke 10 месяцев назад

      Мне больше нравятся партизаны наскалиты. Вот кто действительно герой.

  • @waitingfordaybreak8485
    @waitingfordaybreak8485 Год назад +23

    Thank you for this report - I never knew this history of Bangladesh.

  • @willo7734
    @willo7734 Год назад +59

    Thank you for covering this. This is sadly something that hasn’t been mentioned much in the US and I am glad that you’ve taught me more about this conflict and the sad atrocities that accompanied it.

    • @counterfit5
      @counterfit5 Год назад +2

      Post WW2 history is very Cold War focused

    • @anonymouslyopinionated656
      @anonymouslyopinionated656 Год назад +5

      @@counterfit5 There was a Cold War angle to this - The US sent in a carrier group to assist on the side of Pakistan (I think the UK too was planning something similar), but Soviet subs in the Indian Ocean surfaced as a warning, and the US backed off.
      So... it really could've been something.

    • @xmlthegreat
      @xmlthegreat Год назад +14

      The reason is primarily that the US doesn't like to point out that it supported genocidal dictators. Even though most of the people the US was working with throughout the cold war were horrific dictators. Fulgencio Batista, Augusto Pinochet, the Shah of Iran, the dictator of South Korea, the guy in charge of south Vietnam, the government of Pakistan that was and still is always one step away from being couped by their army, the list is practically endless. Everyone the US supported or allied with has been as bad or worse than, the Soviet union.

    • @mjanny6330
      @mjanny6330 Год назад

      @xmlthegreat lol just because you don't know about them doesn't mean they're better.

    • @xmlthegreat
      @xmlthegreat Год назад

      @@mjanny6330 did I say better? Learn to read. I said worse. It's degrees of assholes. It's assholes all the way down. The americans love to pretend "freedom" and "democracy" won while they were inventing using helicopters to kidnap and throw dissidents to their deaths. From MACV-SOG to Pinochet's cultist torture camps.

  • @DevRocking
    @DevRocking Год назад +97

    Few points - US armed Pakistan. Pakistan used those arms to kill Bangladeshi people (Genocide). US supported dictator army general of Pakistan against democratic Indian govt. The genocide of Bangladeshi people is not even discussed openly. It was not limited to killing, but also included race change (digest this!)

    • @TheIntelReport
      @TheIntelReport  Год назад +13

      Did you watch the video carefully?

    • @kapasayskonichwa6646
      @kapasayskonichwa6646 Год назад +32

      ​@@TheIntelReportwe all know how Pakistan got the nuclear weapon.

    • @skylinelover9276
      @skylinelover9276 Год назад +1

      Pakistan vassal state of US
      Indian vassal state of USSR.
      It's typical geopolitics game

    • @yashasvisingh6694
      @yashasvisingh6694 Год назад +45

      @@skylinelover9276 India was never a vassal state, infact India was one of the founding members of non-aligned movement

    • @skylinelover9276
      @skylinelover9276 Год назад

      @@yashasvisingh6694 yes but it's secretly controled by USSR.. because India is not yet economically powerhouse Before

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Год назад +10

    I like how this channel covers subjects not much talked about. Subject most would wouldn't care about. So great job.

  • @olejnik5165
    @olejnik5165 Год назад +37

    OMG, Please make more videos about forgotten or lesser known wars here in the west, Im really interested in those kind of wars that aren't as interesting for others but Indo Pakistani wars are quite interesting one of the biggest tank battles after ww2! My suggestions would be Cenepa war between Peru and Ecuador or war in Transnistria but Chechen wars in detail would be freaking awesome especially the second one hardly covered on youtube.

  • @leaveme3559
    @leaveme3559 Год назад +7

    Thankyou no one ever covers indo-pak wars plz cover other indo-pak wars as well

  • @ashifabedin
    @ashifabedin Год назад +6

    As a Bangladeshi..i thnak you for make this video

  • @madzen112
    @madzen112 Год назад +10

    To have those two countries under the same government seems like a wildly optimistic endeavour tbh

  • @raoulduke2625
    @raoulduke2625 Год назад +11

    More top notch content . Thank you Guvnor ! Salut from the States

  • @Aurpon
    @Aurpon Год назад +4

    That's a pretty brief but accurate description of our liberation war..
    It's the first time I saw a westerner impartially discuss our history. Well done

  • @thesnakehunter2137
    @thesnakehunter2137 Год назад +134

    Pakistan army vs Innocent civilians: "We are heroes!" vs Pakistan Army vs an actual army "Run, run and surrender"

    • @khalistanifreedomfighter3056
      @khalistanifreedomfighter3056 Год назад

      And Your indian army surrender in aksai chin 1962 and 2020 surrender in galwan and 2023 surrender tawang against china

    • @khalistanifreedomfighter3056
      @khalistanifreedomfighter3056 Год назад

      And Your indian army surrender in aksai chin 1962 and 2020 surrender in galwan and 2023 surrender tawang against china

    • @Goeatabone
      @Goeatabone Год назад +23

      @@khalistanifreedomfighter3056 Average Pakistani

    • @sammy57533
      @sammy57533 Год назад

      khalistan taking side of pakistan, i knew it, pakistan is the father of khalistan, too bad both dad-son are in shambles right now XD@@khalistanifreedomfighter3056

    • @WorldofJune02
      @WorldofJune02 Год назад

      ​@@khalistanifreedomfighter3056average Canadian terrorist and immigrant

  • @Indo23Spartan-pg6uw
    @Indo23Spartan-pg6uw 10 месяцев назад +3

    My maternal grandfather had fought in this war.He was a major in the Indian army.he died much before I was born.i wished I could have heard of his experiences.i have a letter of him he wrote from Dacca during the war and he said he wrote that sitting on some big generals table.Jai hind and love to all.

  • @Guardias
    @Guardias Год назад +60

    Shocking that Muslims would want a separate state and fear living under Hindi rule. Not like their brutal Mughal dynasty and its predecessors had inflicted untold horrors onto the subcontinent for centuries.

    • @heatengine9283
      @heatengine9283 Год назад +2

      They were expecting full on reprisals post independence from the Indian religions. None of that really materialized though.

    • @syedahmed8650
      @syedahmed8650 Год назад +1

      How did Muslim dynasties rule as a minority over a majority? And why does PM India bow to red fort built by Islam on Independence Day.
      Seethe harder

    • @mdjawaideqbal2941
      @mdjawaideqbal2941 Год назад +9

      @@syedahmed8650 Nobody "bows" to red fort here in india. We have wonders of modern world like the space program to admire.

    • @syedahmed8650
      @syedahmed8650 Год назад

      @@mdjawaideqbal2941
      Your Prime minister does every 15 Aug and cries about 1000 years of slavery. Check his speech. He hates people with your name

    • @sammy57533
      @sammy57533 Год назад +7

      @@syedahmed8650 its an old custom and he does not bow, indian flag proudly put on the red fort and it waves showing our struggles and success and also, it was built by hindus only, the architecture was islamic but workers, material and major planning was done by hindus only

  • @Edward4Plantagenet
    @Edward4Plantagenet Год назад +14

    Always remember, Pakistani Pathan & Punjabi did this & they are still doing it to Balochistan Sindhudesh Pakhtunistan and POK people.

    • @fattiesunite2288
      @fattiesunite2288 Год назад +1

      And then you wake up. Because your sources are :timesofindia/zee news etc.

    • @fattiesunite2288
      @fattiesunite2288 Год назад

      Kashmiris/ khalistanis assamis etc and all non hindus who eat meat.

    • @whysoserious7553
      @whysoserious7553 Год назад +4

      ​@@fattiesunite2288come out of pakistani madrasas

    • @sammy57533
      @sammy57533 Год назад

      @@fattiesunite2288 so what if they eat mean?

    • @gouthamkrishnan6718
      @gouthamkrishnan6718 5 месяцев назад

      @@fattiesunite2288 Most hindus eat meat for your info

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395 Год назад +38

    That’s brutal how those people were neglected, murdered, and treated. I’m glad Bangladesh became independent, but it should not have taken that much awfulness, and the moral abrogation of the US government was despicable.

  • @rajr1032
    @rajr1032 Год назад +7

    It is incredible, even for us Indians, that there is no official record of this war in the National Archives of India; and for the matter none for the previous wars fought wth China and Pakistan, since Independence 1947 !

  • @nadpor68
    @nadpor68 Год назад +13

    In 1972, Bangladesh was a devastated and destroyed nation. Pakistanis ran away with almost all assets. For years so called experts forecast that population and poverty will render the land inoperative including the highly controversial Kissinger who had ignored the genocide in 1971. Today, due to the resilience and hard work of its people, Bangladesh is considered a tiger economy with high levels of education and gender equality, and a per capita gdp possibly the highest in South Asia and forecast by the World Bank to be a middle income economy by 2030

    • @captainnemo8072
      @captainnemo8072 3 месяца назад

      Thanks to a peaceful neighborhood and good leadership.

  • @voicysanju
    @voicysanju 7 месяцев назад +7

    Pakistani army has lost all the wars but won all the elections.

  • @itr8247
    @itr8247 Год назад +30

    Pakistan was supported by USA, China, Canada, UK, Germany, Saudis, Malaysia, UAE, Iran, Egypt, etc. but still couldnt save Bangladesh.

    • @TheIntelReport
      @TheIntelReport  Год назад +1

      Save?

    • @itr8247
      @itr8247 Год назад +6

      @@TheIntelReport I meant save for Pakistan. Bangladesh became independent.

    • @anwarsentinel1752
      @anwarsentinel1752 Год назад +1

      ​@@itr8247 Pakistan had no intention of saving Bangladesh as Mr Bhutto and gen yayhya planned to cut it off. Look up the larkhana conspiracy. Lord Mountbatten himself predicted in 1947 that Mr. Jinnah's Pakistan would last up to 25 years.

    • @watanabe00738
      @watanabe00738 Год назад

      ​@@anwarsentinel1752nah! We dont belive you. Grapes are sour logic wont work sorry 😊 u army faught with everything they had. Its just that ur fake islamic army is incompetent to fight so called hindu kafer army. And surrendered within 6 days lol.

    • @rodgerhargoon3402
      @rodgerhargoon3402 3 месяца назад

      Churchill hated gandhi..... calling Indians a beastly people with a beastly relegion ....calling Indians animals after 300 years .....how arrogant is that ????.

  • @Tempuslight
    @Tempuslight Год назад +10

    Very interesting topic, as someone from "the West", I have little to no idea about the political strife, causes of grievances, war etc... on many other parts of the world. Very informative!

  • @dragonstormdipro1013
    @dragonstormdipro1013 Год назад +9

    Oh my God this is such a great video. Love from India.

  • @brettd2308
    @brettd2308 Год назад +2

    I *love* seeing lesser known conflicts get coverage like this.

  • @mjanny6330
    @mjanny6330 Год назад +9

    Imagine picking up a rifle, firing it at a group of civilians, then pointing at an old oil painting or a distant ship on the horizon and saying
    "It's their fault" lol

  • @tommymock4600
    @tommymock4600 Год назад +26

    an idea for a video you could make is the siege of kohima during the second world war. i was just reading the book and looked up some videos about it and theres very little about it on youtube and it was such an important and interesting battle. they call it the stalingrad of the east

    • @markstott6689
      @markstott6689 Год назад +3

      I second the motion. Coverage of Kohima and Imphal would be very welcome.

    • @cogman62
      @cogman62 Год назад +3

      World War 2 in real time (aka the Time Ghost Army) does a wonderful job of outlining the campaign in Kohima and Impala. It really kicks off in 1943-44.

    • @markstott6689
      @markstott6689 Год назад

      @Jeff Coghill yeah I watched, but they don't do the battle maps on a granular scale like The Operations Room.

    • @cogman62
      @cogman62 Год назад +1

      @@markstott6689 true dat. But, if you watch both, you get 2 really good sources of the operational theatre. I can’t seem to get enough of either channel.

    • @markstott6689
      @markstott6689 Год назад

      @@cogman62 That's fair 😊😊😊

  • @MagiconIce
    @MagiconIce Год назад +10

    Interesting and good to see you covering some conflict, that in European and North American Circles is not so well known!

  • @BenDavies1977
    @BenDavies1977 Год назад +16

    Great video. Very interesting. Just one thing that confused me was the mention of "300 years of British colonial rule". In the early days (16th C) there were also the Portuguese, Dutch, French, and Danish in the region, and I thought that the British East India Company only properly took control in 1757, and the British governmant took over administration in 1858. So I guess you're looking at about 190 years of total rule (or Raj) with only 90 being under the British Crown.

    • @aragonchi4191
      @aragonchi4191 Год назад +1

      The Maharaja's were in control of alot of day to day issues and only really declined in 1858. In reality, the Mughals should have resumed rule over their territories in 47.

    • @kuldeeprana1908
      @kuldeeprana1908 Год назад +10

      mughals were nothing when britishers took power in india at that time biggest powerful empire was maratha empire which was running on Confederacy and eventually fight broke out between maratha chiefs for superiority and british took advantage of that and took control of india and mughals were only limited to delhi at that time and they were themselves vessel state for maratha empire

    • @abhilash9918
      @abhilash9918 Год назад +6

      ​@@aragonchi4191last Mughal ruler ruled over a street in Delhi.
      Marathas and others had dealt enough blows.
      If it wasnt for British who planted congress leaders like nehru and Gandhi to pacify large section of Hindus the geographical boundaries and demographics would have been completely different today.
      Well 70 yrs is not too long for civilizations. This will be corrected.

  • @celsorostom2717
    @celsorostom2717 Год назад +51

    Triste saber que esses países passaram por esses conflitos.Paz a todos 🙏🇧🇷

    • @foxtrot5850
      @foxtrot5850 Год назад +1

      Well In Bangladesh there many fans of Brazils Football team.

    • @celsorostom2717
      @celsorostom2717 Год назад

      @@foxtrot5850
      Thank you sir.

    • @celsorostom2717
      @celsorostom2717 Год назад

      @@foxtrot5850
      Pakistan and India have good cricket players.

  • @mostofajawaditmumrhythm3817
    @mostofajawaditmumrhythm3817 Год назад +5

    As a Bangladeshi ,thank you for covering this.

    • @aryanshukla7305
      @aryanshukla7305 Год назад +3

      It is weird isn't it how the Vietnam war was such a big deal that they have tons of content but the liberation war s almost non existent

    • @addyred1861
      @addyred1861 Год назад +1

      Why thank him he is calling it India pakistan war it is the Bangladeshi war of independence.

    • @aryanshukla7305
      @aryanshukla7305 Год назад

      @@addyred1861 Agreed our intervention is barely mentioned

  • @mosesracal6758
    @mosesracal6758 Год назад +11

    The Partition shouldnt have happened. While the Indian subcontinent is vast and wide - it is a nation that had always managed to be multicultural and multireligous. Centuries of being under the British yoke had forced what wouldve otherwise been bitter enemies to become partners into a united India. The partition was a very unnatural solution and to a people desperate for independence, they had accepted without realizing that their brother yesterday was going to be an enemy tomorrow.
    For all the faults of colonialism - its one silver lining is that it forced people, no matter the background to cooperate and work together. As someone who came from a nation birthed into existence because of colonialism (because if not for the Spanish, we literally wouldnt have been united; so much so that we didnt even change our name from the time of being a colony) - the tragic fate of the Indian subcontinent breaks my heart. I know for a fact it can be done, as we have done ourselves but the British - in their reckless and out-of-touch sensibilities have forever plunged what wouldve otherwise been a truly magnificent multicultural union rivaling the United States of America.
    Our past had always looked up to the Indian subcontinent and it was its traders that brought culture and religion to the disparate islands of Southeast Asia. I still dream of a united India, even if I am not Indian myself.

    • @HemantKumar-id3jg
      @HemantKumar-id3jg Год назад +3

      Ah! Internet, what an unpredictable place it is. All the deplorable shit I see on here are all worth it for moments/comments like these.
      Hopefully the India that has remained will prove itself worthy to you and give people across the globe hope that a civilisation as diverse as ours can survive and thrive as Democratic nation state.

    • @Igzilee
      @Igzilee Год назад +1

      I'm not supporting the partition, but unfortunately it seems there weren't many other options. A region as diverse as India would have likely struggled under a single government as shown in the conflicts between difference cultures and religions, and splitting up the region even further would have probably caused more chaos. From my perspective, it was about the only option Britain had at the time other than A.) Leaving the country in anarchy or B.) Keeping control of India.

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 Год назад +7

    Very educational. Thanks for this.

  • @hasansalihaktas
    @hasansalihaktas Год назад +7

    Cant wait for the main channel video

  • @johnnotrealname8168
    @johnnotrealname8168 Год назад +2

    YYYYEEEESSSS! My suggestion was accepted. Thank You!

  • @crystallineentity
    @crystallineentity Год назад +4

    Fascinating video man thank you. I know so little about this period of history

  • @LukeBunyip
    @LukeBunyip Год назад +8

    Oh please apply your animated magic cartography to some of the battles which have raged across the Subcontinent since Partition.

  • @govind.m86
    @govind.m86 Год назад +6

    Calling it two sovereign nations: Hindu majority India and Muslim majority Pakistan is fine but you must also take care to note that India was to be a secular state while Pakistan was intended as an Islamic state.

  • @spingebill8551
    @spingebill8551 Год назад +10

    You left out the fact that shortly after the outbreak of the war, allah supplied Pakistan with around 3000 black fighter jets.

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 Год назад +2

    Excellent! First time I ever saw this war explained in detail. Always was curious about it. Thanks.

  • @Rokaize
    @Rokaize Год назад +30

    It’s good of you to not just cover conflicts that are well known in the west.
    I’d recommend the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    • @GeorgeEstregan828
      @GeorgeEstregan828 Год назад

      Fuck those 2 assholes, they're no better than Russia and Ukraine

  • @user-ur5yg3cx8t
    @user-ur5yg3cx8t Год назад +5

    Never won a war but never lost an election, thats pak army for you

  • @yohannvt31
    @yohannvt31 Год назад +5

    After this, you guys must surely do the Kashmir war of 1947, battle of badgam, shalateng, baramullah and Uri.. including the defense of Uri bulge. .. This is such a fascinating war, noone has ever covered..

  • @un-Adi
    @un-Adi Год назад +58

    USA : We will lecture the world on democracy and Human rights
    Also USA : huh, genocide and rape of millions, that's minor issue, the important thing is that we support Pakistan.

    • @atanudebbarma2509
      @atanudebbarma2509 Год назад

      They tried to help pakistan by moving 7th fleet into the bay of bengal. Scumbags look at them now fighting among themselves over gender,LGTVHDMI and other bs

    • @nathanrose3523
      @nathanrose3523 Год назад

      Ehh don't blame the US because your own citizens turned and brutally raped and butchered their own citizens. That's on you lot no one else . Pathetic take .

    • @hrushikeshsawant6193
      @hrushikeshsawant6193 Год назад +3

      Hypocrisy at it's peak

    • @Ihavpickle
      @Ihavpickle Год назад +2

      Don't care

    • @jinfin221
      @jinfin221 Год назад +1

      @@Ihavpickle BooHoo

  • @SlavicCelery
    @SlavicCelery Год назад +2

    Thank you for covering such a delicate issue. I certainly learned some new things. I hope we all do.

  • @gimmethegepgun
    @gimmethegepgun Год назад +3

    For a point of comparison, going around India and Sri Lanka to get from Karachi to the coast of Bangladesh is roughly the same distance as from London to Newfoundland.

  • @bowenisland100
    @bowenisland100 Год назад +4

    A trivial comment, but the relentless repeating background music is distracting. Otherwise a great channel!

  • @adrianybas778
    @adrianybas778 Год назад +10

    ah yes, Sam Bahadur's moment

  • @stevenmacdonald9619
    @stevenmacdonald9619 Год назад +14

    Bangladesh is still an impoverished nation to this day, but thanks to this education, my respect for this country could not be higher. It truly hurts to know how many good people were murdered for their bravery in standing up to form nations in this way. Thankfully, since the age of the internet, the world now gets to finally learn the details of just how harsh these times were. I was born in 1974, and I thought I knew what 'partition' meant, but it now turns out, I knew nothing. I will also take this opportunity to lambast the BBC, for an episode of Doctor Who, in it's darkest Jodie Whittaker days, for placing all of the blame for partition upon the British, and for it having race at its centre. This is clearly untrue, since independence comes with choices to be made by those fledgling nations. To expect the crown to not aid and stand alongside India after 300 years is insane, and had nothing to do with religion. Partition was made simpler by religious division based only upon numbers. Again, a Christian nation, as with any Muslim nation, could not be expected to side against India, which does contain a considerable amount of Christians. I won't apologise for this simplification, as it only goes to emphasise the horrors that followed, when people decide to kill each other over territory. It is yet another example of how religion is almost always responsible for deadly conflict. I am grateful at least, that today, we have learned this, and it is the main reason that so many choose to distance themselves from religion. That brings it's own consequences, as those same people are now constantly hit by those in power by anything else they can throw to divide people. Anyone who still thinks the LGBT does anything but divide, are the ones who are the fall guys for the exact same way of thinking. If any decision taken divides any people, it is never a good decision. Partition therefore was the best available at the time, but nobody would ever consider it a good decision. My respect is for all those who have made the best from the worst off times. Pakistan, India and Bangladesh still all exist. Perhaps one day, when all the people of the world realise the sole futility of division, three nations might become one. I would say the same for Ireland, though those I speak to believe that to be impossible. I believe nothing is impossible.

    • @dragonstormdipro1013
      @dragonstormdipro1013 Год назад +1

      Excellent comment

    • @Anmeteor9663
      @Anmeteor9663 Год назад +3

      Another piece of excellent decolonisation and nation building by the British. Drawing lines on inaccurate maps in London worked so well. Did the same in the middle east and that's been no trouble at all😢

    • @stevenmacdonald9619
      @stevenmacdonald9619 Год назад

      @@Anmeteor9663 I'm sorry you seemed to have had two problems here. You watched a different video, and you've allowed yourself to be taught by lying Liberals. You gave yourself away by mentioning London by the way. That political bubble is the next line that should be drawn. London acts like it's a totally separate country, and does nothing to reflect the United Kingdom at all. If anything, it does nothing but hurt our country, and those who speak like you, need to travel more. Born in Manchester, lived in London, travelled to India. I assure you that what you think you know, is in fact bull. Take your pick from these two options..... 1) No independence for India or 2) Civil war (because that was what this really was) that always happens when a power vacuum exists, after a major power leaves any situation. Are you going to blame Britain for Hong Kong too? You'd think you would stfu when you have a video full of facts to watch. It's more likely you didn't actually watch it all, and just trolled the comments. Nick Meteor? Your world is fantasy.

    • @stevenmacdonald9619
      @stevenmacdonald9619 Год назад

      @@dragonstormdipro1013 Thank you. I'm so annoyed that i was misled for so long. Bangladesh has horrible circumstances, but the people there live free, by their own choice. I know that's easy to say for me, but given the attitude of the west to power right now, I'm not sure that we live as freely as we think, and faced with any sort of similar situation, I'm not sure we would fight at all. Today, people don't stand together. They are all about themselves, so when I get a comment like yours, I'm so glad to find people still think alike. Faith in humanity restored. Oh wait, I just read Nick Meteor's comment 🙈 He'll tell me that Britain created forced slaves next. Only African tribal leaders created slaves, not any white man. People bought slaves when it was legal to, and I'm pretty sure the British Empire did not exist at the time slavery first became in human history. We did stop the trade and it cost us 70 years of money. We also fought alone twice in World Wars until backup arrived (we paid for every bullet the U.S gave us) The total cost of those two world wars was equal to every penny gained in Empire. So you could look at it like this. The British Empire spent every last penny to save the world, whilst the United States was getting it's big boy pants on. You're welcome 👍🏻 I will take the hit on exchanging tea for opium in China though, and then threatening invasion if the trade didn't continue. That was a shitty call in any history.

    • @dragonstormdipro1013
      @dragonstormdipro1013 Год назад +3

      I think people tend to blame common people of a country for the wrongdoings done mainly by select politicians. British Raj had it’s pros and cons like any civilisations. It's really unwise to dwelve too much into the past in many cases cause up until 1945, humanity as a whole, was much more brutal than today. In modern times, people have struggled a lot to make their lives better, and to a large part, they succeeded. Be it British, Indians, Bangladeshis.

  • @Michael-ws7rc
    @Michael-ws7rc Год назад +1

    I didn’t know any of this. Thanks for putting it together friend.

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 11 месяцев назад +1

    Very informative. Thank you for its production.

  • @alanaldpal950
    @alanaldpal950 Год назад +5

    Being a politician or political leader has more often then not been the cause of a shortened life expectancy in the “sub continent” since the end of WW2

  • @Real-Lord
    @Real-Lord Год назад +6

    That day a lot of katmullas went to space instead of jannat😂😂😂

  • @saturnv2419
    @saturnv2419 Год назад +11

    "We used to be in peace but the British came and made a mess. "
    "You have any idea how much that narrows it down?"

    • @SkyGlitchGalaxy
      @SkyGlitchGalaxy Год назад +5

      Please tell me the time before the British when the indian subcontinent was a peace.
      One thing that's pretty unique about the Brits is that they gave up their empire without destroying the lands they lost. Mostly.

    • @krityaan
      @krityaan Год назад +9

      ​@@SkyGlitchGalaxy my guy...did you ignore the start of the video?
      The Partition of India was the greatest humanitarian crisis the world has EVER seen. Indian independence leaders spent years telling the British that if they partition, the resulting mass migrations and population transfers would need British protection lest violence spiral out of control (and the Muslim League was *very* interested in seeing it spiral out of control)
      The British promised protection, and then gave none and ran. Then they came back to play soldier soldier while commanding the Pakistani armies in the '47 war.
      Let's not start on the century of economic extraction they committed to.
      The worst part? Despite seeing the disaster that was partition in India, they went and did it for Israel. And then they went and did it for Cyprus
      The British were the Indian government - and they abdicated all responsibility and welfare for it's subjects.

    • @krityaan
      @krityaan Год назад +7

      ​@@SkyGlitchGalaxy also I'd love to see what parts of their empire they gave up peacefully?
      Malaysia? Read about the Malayan emergency
      Egypt? Read about the Suez crisis
      Kenya? Read about the Mau Mau rebellion
      South Africa? Let's not even begin with the mess that was Rhodesia and it's wars
      Nigeria? Read about the Biafra Civil War
      "Left the land intact" probably in some fantasy dream land - the same one that made them think Brexit was a good idea

    • @ritikshaw5868
      @ritikshaw5868 Год назад +6

      @@SkyGlitchGalaxy barring a few exceptions.. Every place you left has been a mess.

  • @terryangami2098
    @terryangami2098 7 месяцев назад +2

    Very informative.

  • @ryand2529
    @ryand2529 Год назад +2

    Very well produced video. Thank you, sir.

  • @gadde2774
    @gadde2774 Год назад +5

    Fun fact: Today Bangladesh's GDP is greater than pakistan's GDP

  • @adityashukla440
    @adityashukla440 Год назад +5

    Thanks!

  • @zorodaboss11212
    @zorodaboss11212 9 месяцев назад +13

    we indians were the first to recognize bangladesh and support them by heart, but these days , sadly the same bangladeshis whom we consider our brothers and sisters started to hate us and also they started india out campaign...

    • @Akash-oi7jm
      @Akash-oi7jm 9 месяцев назад +2

      Main rain is ourselves

  • @mrs3188
    @mrs3188 3 месяца назад

    I am from South India, born in the 90s. My grandfather worked for the Defence Ministry and was posted in Bengal in '71. My grandma donated most of her jewelry to the relief fund for the refugees pouring in from Bangladesh.

  • @sudank2906
    @sudank2906 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for the objective observation and unbiased content... Appreciate it🥂

  • @s80heb
    @s80heb Год назад +3

    My mother told me stories about this when I was young, she was bought up in Birmingham whilst her family was in sylhet, her uncle was Muhammad Osmani who I heard great stories when I was in her family village of Duiamir, it's sad what happened, what some my mums family went through, if she wasn't leaving with her family in Birmingham then she believes we wouldn't be here. I have many British Pakistani friends, I have told them stories and they know how bad Pakistan was, even currently with what they are doing with the honorable Mr Khan, o ya Bangladesh is just as bad. On both sides its not the people, its the officials

  • @akp3097
    @akp3097 Год назад +4

    Jinnah- no one can undo Pakistan…
    Bengali- jay bangla😂😂

  • @sams6090
    @sams6090 Год назад +10

    Kinda funny that the URL of this video has basedpk at the end of it lol

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Год назад +2

      Would have been better if it had been pkmkb. BTW, its not basedpk for me, it is SedPk.

    • @sams6090
      @sams6090 Год назад +1

      @@death_parade look at the letters before sedpk

  • @mirzakibria744
    @mirzakibria744 5 месяцев назад

    Wow! Started from Nov’71!! But it all started from Dec ‘69. What a distortion of history!!!

  • @talhabintariq786
    @talhabintariq786 5 месяцев назад +2

    Oh don't mind me, I'm just taking a break from work and browsing the comment section 😂

  • @sebresludolf9611
    @sebresludolf9611 Год назад +93

    *The 1971 war was actually Bangladeshs war of independence, we Bangladeshis fought bravely against Pakistan because of their political, economic and military discrimination. We Bangladeshis made up 54% of the population yet we weren't given adequate representation. We were the most vocal supporters in the creation of Pakistan in 1947, many of our people fought in the Pakistan army in 1965 to defend Pakistan, our legendary pilot Sir Saiful Azom fought as a Pakistani pilot, my father's uncle fought in the Battle of Chawinda against India. But because of political dishonesty of Bhutto, Yahya Khan and Ayub Khan we were marginalised. That's why we fought to gain our independence. Some of my relatives fought in the war of liberation. I don't hate Pakistani people but I hate Bhutto and the Pakistani administration of that time for what they did.*

    • @AB-bg7os
      @AB-bg7os Год назад +38

      You dont have to yell you know

    • @sebresludolf9611
      @sebresludolf9611 Год назад +4

      @@AB-bg7os ok

    • @madeinmacau97
      @madeinmacau97 Год назад

      You do a video next time

    • @paulreilly3904
      @paulreilly3904 Год назад +4

      Yeah no yelling please 😁 get over it. 😂

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims Год назад +21

      *By making the text bold it makes your statements more factual according to Abraham Lincoln*

  • @calvinliang8899
    @calvinliang8899 Год назад +7

    WHERE IS THE OPERATIONS ROOM VIDEO?!? WHERE IS IT!?

    • @MM22966
      @MM22966 Год назад

      In the Ops Room. We didn't give you the key.

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 7 месяцев назад

      WHERE'S YOUR VIDEO?! YOU'D NEVER GIVE IT TO AN ORDINARY CITIZEN!

  • @Shakir_Raza
    @Shakir_Raza 10 месяцев назад +3

    Indian armed forces is capable of changing Maps😉😉.

  • @KailamiMwiinga
    @KailamiMwiinga 9 месяцев назад +2

    Pretty sure if it wasn't Indira Ghandi, India would have annexed West Pakistan in 1971..
    West Pakistan always mistreated East Pakistan like a colony..

  • @arindamkumar7725
    @arindamkumar7725 Год назад +1

    Thanks Intel report for covering this