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Battle of Asal Uttar
Major battle in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Major battle in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
| Field | Value | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| image | Vohra posing in front of a destroyed Pakistani Patton tank.jpg | |||||||||
| caption | An Indian officer poses in front of a captured Pakistani M47 Patton. | |||||||||
| conflict | Battle of Asal Uttar | |||||||||
| partof | Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 | |||||||||
| date | 8–10 September 1965 | |||||||||
| () | ||||||||||
| place | Asal Uttar, Punjab, India | |||||||||
| result | Indian victory | |||||||||
| combatant1 | India | |||||||||
| combatant2 | Pakistan | |||||||||
| commander1 | {{plainlist | |||||||||
| commander2 | {{plainlist | |||||||||
| * Maj. Gen. Nasir Ahmed<ref name | "Wilson83"/ | |||||||||
| * Brig. A. R. Shami<ref>{{cite book | last | Singh | first=Harbaksh | title=War Despatches | publisher=Lancer International | year=1991 | isbn=81-7062-117-8 | location=New Delhi | pages=108 | authorlink=Harbaksh Singh}} |
| units1 | India 4th Mountain Division | |||||||||
| units2 | Pakistan 1st Armoured Division | |||||||||
| strength1 | *42 x Centurion Mk.VIIs | |||||||||
| strength2 | *168 x M47 Pattons | |||||||||
| casualties1 | 10 - 32 tanks damaged | |||||||||
| casualties2 | 97 tanks destroyed |
()
- India Lt. Gen. Harbaksh Singh
- India Lt. Gen. J. S. Dhillon
- India Maj. Gen. Gurbaksh Singh
- India Brig. Thomas K. Theogaraj
- Pakistan Maj. Gen Hamid Khan
- Pakistan Maj. Gen. Nasir Ahmed
- Pakistan Brig. A. R. Shami
- 2nd Independent Armoured Brigade
- 3rd Cavalry (Centurion Mk7s)
- 9th Horse (Sherman 75s)
- 8th Light Cavalry (AMX-13s)
- 4th Cavalry (Pattons)
- 5th Horse (M4A1 76mm Shermans)
- 6th Lancers (Pattons)
- 24th Cavalry (Pattons)
- 12th Cavalry (M24 Chaffee)
- 19th Lancers (Pattons)
- 42 x Sherman Vs
- 42 x AMX-13s Total: 126
- 42 x Sherman 76s
- 42 x M24 Chaffees Total: 254
The Battle of Asal Uttar was one of the largest tank battles of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 fought from 8 to 10 September 1965 at Asal Uttar, a village in the Tarn Taran district of Punjab, India. When the Pakistan Army thrust its tanks and infantry into Indian territory, capturing the Indian town of Khem Karan 5 km from the India–Pakistan border, Indian troops retaliated, and after three days of bitter fighting, the battle ended with the Pakistani forces being repulsed near Asal Uttar. Factors that contributed to this were the fierce fight put up by the Indian Army, conditions of the plains, better Indian tactics and a successful Indian strategy.
It was one of the largest tank battles since the Battle of Kursk in the Second World War and is compared with it for how it changed the course of the Indio-Pakistan war of 1965 in India's favour. War historians, including Philip Towle, regard the Indian resistance near Khem Karan as one of the key turning points of the war, one which tilted the balance of the war in favour of India. Peter Wilson states that the defeat of the Pakistan Army in the battle of Asal Uttar was one of the greatest defeats suffered by Pakistani forces in the course of the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965.
Background
On September 5/6, Indian XI Corps (4th Mountain, 7th and 15th Infantry Divisions, 2nd Independent Armored Brigade) launched its three divisions against Lahore. 4th Mountain Division was on the southern axis, launching from Khemkaran towards Kasur, which lays 6–7 km from the international border. 7th Division was to the north of 4th Mountain Division, also aiming at Kasur from a different direction. But the Indian attack on Kasur was repulsed and the Pakistan army counterattack took the war inside the Indian territory.
Battle
The battle is described as one of the largest tank battles in history since the Battle of Kursk in World War II. Pakistan's invading force, consisting of the 1st Armoured Division and 11th Infantry Division, crossed the India–Pakistan border and captured the Indian town of Khemkaran. Considering the situation, GOC Indian 4th Mountain Division Maj. Gen. Gurbaksh Singh immediately ordered the division to fall back and assume a horseshoe shaped defensive position with Asal Uttar as its focal point. The battle strategy was the brainchild of Brigadier Thomas K. Theogaraj.
On 7 September, 6th Lancers squadron of Pakistan army captured Valtoha against stiff opposition but because of the lack of infantry they had to go back to their Khemkaran basecamp at night in the process a fierce tank battle ensued.
In the night, the Indian troops flooded the sugar cane field, and the next morning, the Pakistani tanks of the 1st Armoured Division, consisting mainly of M47 and M48 Patton tanks, were lured inside the horse-shoe trap. The swampy ground slowed the advance of the Pakistani tanks and many of them could not move because of the muddy slush. Over 97 Pakistani tanks (mostly Pattons, and a few Shermans and Chaffees) were destroyed, including 40+ captured. While the Indians, by their account, lost only 10 tanks during this counter offensive.
Conclusion

Despite the initial thrust of the Pakistani Army into Indian territory, the battle ended in a decisive Indian victory.
The commander of Pakistani forces Maj. Gen. Nasir Ahmed Khan was killed in action. According to military historian Steven J. Zaloga, Pakistan admitted that it lost 165 tanks during the 1965 war, more than half of which were knocked out during the "debacle" of Asal Uttar.
Pervez Musharraf, later Army Chief and President of Pakistan, participated in this battle as a lieutenant of artillery in the 16 (SP) Field Regiment, 1st Armoured Division Artillery. The battle also witnessed the personal bravery of an Indian soldier, Abdul Hamid, who was honoured with the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest military award, for knocking out seven enemy tanks with a recoilless gun.The Param Vir Chakra Winners' home page for Company Quarter Master Havildar Abdul Hamid . Indian Army.
.
After the victory at Asal Uttar, the Indian Army made multiple attempts to recapture the lost town of Khemkaran but these were unsuccessful. Khemkaran remained in Pakistani control till the end of the war and was returned after the Tashkent Agreement.
This battle led to the creation of Patton Nagar (or "Patton City") at the site of the battle. This is because a large number of Patton tanks fielded by the Pakistani forces were either captured or destroyed at the scene.
Battle honours
The honour Asal Uttar was awarded for the period 9 to 11 September to the following units-
Indian side:
- Deccan Horse
- 3 Cavalry
- 91 Mountain Regiment
- 40 Medium Regiment
- 4 Grenadiers
- 18 Rajputana Rifles (now 11 Mechanised Infantry Regiment)
- 1 Dogra (now 7 Mechanised Infantry Regiment)
- 2 Mahar
- 9 Jammu and Kashmir Rifles Pakistani side:
- 6th Lancers (Watson's Horse)
Published accounts
Documentaries
Battle of Asal Uttar – Largest Tank Battle Since World War II (2018) is an Indian TV documentary which premiered on the Veer by Discovery series, Mission & Wars.
Gallery
File:AMX-13 Tank. (31424627492).jpg|AMX-13 tank displayed at the Ahmednagar Cavalry Tank Museum in India. The AMX-13/75 was one of several types of armour fielded by the Indian Army during the battle File:AMX-13 Tank. (31455642351).jpg|Rear view of the same tank
Notes
References
Resources
- 1965 Official War History, Ministry of Defence, Government of India
References
- Prasad, Bisheshwar. (1975). "The Fourth Round: Indo-Pak War in 1965". [[Vikas Publishing House]].
- Sinha, L. P.. (2012). "Operation Cactus Lily: The Greatest Commando Operation Ever". Knowledge World.
- (1965-09-24). "World: The Curious Battle of Kasur".
- (1992). "History of the Indo-Pak War, 1965". History Division, Ministry of Defence, Government of India.
- Singh, Harbaksh. (1991). "War Despatches". Lancer International.
- (2017). "Tanks: a century of tank warfare". [[Casemate Publishers]].
- Dabas, Maninder. (Jul 6, 2017). "The battle of Asal uttar where the Indian army crushed Pakistan to avoid the capture of Amirtsar". India Times.
- Pradhan, R. D.. (2007). "1965 War, the Inside Story: Defence Minister Y.B. Chavan's Diary of India-Pakistan War". [[Atlantic Books.
- Chakravorty, B.. (1995). "Stories of Heroism: PVC & MVC Winners". Allied Publishers.
- Towle, Philip. (1982). "Estimating foreign military power". [[Routledge]].
- Cloughley, Brian. (2000). "A History of the Pakistan Army: Wars and Insurrections". [[Oxford University Press]].
- Riza, Shaukat. (1977). "The Pakistan Army War of 1965". Natraj.
- (2006-11-06). "The Battle for Assal Uttar: Pakistan and India 1965".
- (2020-09-06). "1965: A war".
- (18 January 2015). "Unsung hero". [[The Hindu]].
- "Brigadier Thomas Theograj".
- "Saga of Strategy & Courage".
- Nawaz, Shuja. (2008). "Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army, and the Wars Within". [[Oxford University Press]].
- Jaques, Tony. (2007). "Dictionary of Battles and Sieges". [[Greenwood Publishing Group]].
- Zaloga, Steve. (July 1999). "The M47 and M48 Patton tanks". [[Osprey Publishing]].
- Wilson, Peter. (2003). "Wars, proxy-wars and terrorism: post independent India". Mittal Publications.
- [[Ian Cardozo. Maj. Gen. Cardozo, Ian]] (2003). ''PARAM VIR''. New Delhi: [[Lotus Collection]]. {{ISBN. 81-7436-262-2
- (2021-10-23). "Wrong Timing: The Battle of Khem Karan And Afghanistan".
- Hamid, Major General Syed Ali. (2019-09-06). "Tank Battle at Khem Karan".
- Singh, Sarbans. (1993). "Battle Honours of the Indian Army, 1757–1971". [[Vision Books]].
- (4 May 2018). "Battle of Asal Uttar – Largest Tank Battle Since World War II Mission & Wars". [[Veer by Discovery]].
- (25 January 2018). "This R-Day, get ready for Discovery channel's 'Battle Ops'". [[The Hindu]].
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