বাংলাদেশের স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ দলিলপত্র (চতুর্দশ খণ্ড)/১৩১

 শিরোনাম  সূত্র   তারিখ
১৩১। যুদ্ধের গর্ভ থেকে একটি জাতির জন্ম টাইমস ২০ ডিসেম্বর, ১৯৭১

TIME MAGAZINE, DECEMBER 20, 1971
BANGLADESH: OUT OF WAR, A NATION IS BORN

 "Jai Bangla; Jai Bangla:" From the banks of the great Ganges and the broad Brahmaputra, from the emerald fields and mustard-colored hills of the countryside, from the countless squares of countless villages came the cry: “Victory to Bengal, Victory to Bengal". They danced on the roofs of buses and marched down city streets singing their anthem Golden Bengal. They brought the green, red and gold banner of Bengal out of secret hiding places to flutter freely from buildings, while huge pictures of their imprisoned leader. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, sprang up overnight on trucks, houses and signposts. As Indian troops advanced first to Jessore, then to Comilla, then to the outskirts of the capital of Dacca, small children clambered over their trucks and Bengalis everywhere cheered and greeted the soldiers as liberators.

 Thus last week, amid a war that still raged on, the new nation of Bangladesh was born. So far only India and Bhutan have formally recognized it, but it ranks eighth among the world's 148 nations in terms of population (78 million), behind China, India, the Soviet Union, the U. S., Indonesia, Japan and Brazil. Its birth, moreover, may be followed by grave complications. In West Pakistan, a political upheaval is a foregone conclusion in the wake of defeat and dismemberment. In India, the creation of a Bengal stale next door to its own impoverished West Bengal state could very well strengthen the centrifugal forces that have tugged at the country since independence in 1947.

 The breakaway of Pakistan's became a virtual certainty when the Islamabad govern ment launched air strikes against at least eight Indian airfields two weeks ago. Responding in force, the Indian air force managed to wipe out the Pakistani air force in the East within two days, giving India control of the skies. In the Bay of Bengal and the Ganges delta region as well, the Indian navy was in unchallenged command. Its blockade of Chittagong and Chalna harbors cut off all reinforcements, supplies and chances of evacuation for the Pakistani forces, who found themselves far outnumbered (80,000 vs. India's 200,000) and trapped in an enclave more than 1,000 miles from their home bases in the West.

 There were even heavier and bloodier battles, including tank clashes on the Punjabi plain and in the deserts to the south, along the 1,400 mile border between India and the western wing of Pakistan, where the two armies have deployed about 250,000 men. Civilians were fleeing from the border areas, and residents of Karachi. Rawalpindi and Islamabad were in a virtual state of siege and panic over day and night harassment raids by buzzing Indian planes.

 The U.N. did its best to stop the war, but its best was not nearly good enough. After three days of procedural wrangles and futile resolutions, the Security Council gave up  stymied by the Soviet “nyets,” the council passed the buck to the even wordier and less effectual General Assembly. There, a resolution caning for a ceasefire and withdrawal of Indian and Pakistan I forces behind their own borders swiftly passed by an overwhelming vote of 104 to 11.

 The Pakistanis, with their armies in retreat, said they would honor the ceasefire provided India did. The Indians, with victory in view, said they “were considering" the ceasefire, which meant they would stall - until they had achieved their objective of dismembering Pakistan. There was nothing the assembly could do to enforce its will. There was considerable irony in Indian's reluctance to obey the U.N. resolution in view of New Delhi's irritating penchant in the past for lecturing other nations on their moral duty to do the bidding of the world organization. Similarly, the Soviet Union, which is encouraging India in its defiance, has never hesitated lo lecture Israel on its obligation to heed U.N. resolutions calling for withdrawal from Arab territories.

Hopeless Task

 In any case, a cease fire is not now likely to alter the military situation in the East. As Indian infantrymen advanced to within 25 miles of Dacca late last week and as report circulated that 5.000 Indian paratroopers were landing on the edges of the beleaguered eastern capital, thousands fled for fear that the Pakistani army might decide to make a pitched stand. Daily, and often hourly, Indian planes strafed air-ports in Dacca, Karachi and Islamabad. Some 300 children were said to have died in a Dacca orphanage when a piston-engine plane dropped three 750 lb. bombs on the Rahmat-e-Alam Islamic Mission near the airport while 400 children slept inside. (Pakistan claimed the plane was India's. Some Bengalis and foreign observers believed it was Pakistani, but other observers pointed out that the only forces known to be flying piston-engine aircraft were (he Mukti Bahini. the Bengali liberation forces). Earlier in the week, two large bombs fell on workers shelters near a jute mill in nearby Narayanganj, killing 275 people.

 Forty workers died and more than 100 others were injured when they were caught by air strikes as they attempted to repair huge bomb craters in the Dacca airport runway. India declared a temporary moratorium on air strikes late last week so that the runway could be repaired and 400 U. N. relief personnel and other foreigners could be flown out. It was repaired, but the Pakistanis changed their mind and refused to allow the U.N.'s evacuation air-craft lo land at Dacca, leaving U.N. personnel trapped as potential hostages. The International Red Cross declared Dacca's Intercontinental Hotel and nearby Holy Family Hospital “neutral zones" to receive wounded and provide a haven for foreigners.

 For its part, the Pakistani army was said to have killed some Bengalis who, they believed, informed or aided the Indian forces. But the reprisals were not on a wide scale. Both civilian and military casualties were considered relatively light in East Bengal, largely because the Indian army skirted big cities and populated areas in an effort to avoid standoff battles with the retreating Pakistani troops.  The first major city to fall was Jessore. TIME'S William Stewart who rode into the key railroad junction with the Indian troops, cabled: Jessore, India's first strategic prize, fell as easily as a mango ripened by a long Bengal summer. It shows no damage from fighting. In fact, the Pakistani 9th Division headquarters, had quit Jessore days before the Indian advance, and only four battalions were left to face the onslaught,

 "Nevertheless, two Pakistani battalions slipped away, while the other two were badly cut up. The Indian army was everywhere wildly cheered by the Bengalis, who shouted: “Jai Bangla"; and “Indira Gandhi Zindabad." (Long live Indira Gandhi). In Jhingergacha, a half descried city of about 5,000 nearby people gather to tell of their ordeal. “The Pakistanis shout us when we didn't understand,” said one old man. “But they spoke Urdu and we speak Bengali".

Death Awaits

 By no means all of East Bengal was freed of Pakistani rule last week. Pakistani troops were said to be retreating to two river ports, Narayanganj and Barisal, where it was speculated they might make a stand or alternatively seek route of escape. They were also putting up a strong defense in battalion-plus strength in three garrison towns where Indian forces reportedly had encircled them. The Indians have yet to capture the major cities of Chittagong and Dinajpur. Neither army permitted newsmen unreserved access to the contested areas, but on several occasions the Indian military command did allow reporters to accompany its forces. The three-pronged Indian pincer movement, however, moved much more rapidly than was earlier believed possible. Its success was largely attributed to decisive air and naval support.

 Demoralised and in disarray, the Pakistani troop were urged to obey the “soldierto-soldier" radio call surrender, repeatedly broadcast by Indian Army Chief of Staff General Sam Manekshaw, “Should you, not heed my advice to surrender to my army and endeavor to escape,” he warned, “I assure you certain death awaits you". He also assured the Pakistanis that if they surrendered they would be treated as prisoners of war according to the Geneva Convention. To insure that the Mukti Bahini would also adhere to the Geneva code. India officially put the liberation forces under its military command.

 Pakistani prisoners were reported surrendering in fair numbers. But many others seemed to be freeing into the countryside, perhaps in hopes of finding escape routes disguised as civilians. “In some garrison towns stout resistance is being offered,” said an Indian spokesman, “and though the troops themselves wish to surrender, they are being instructed by the generals: “Gain time. Something big may happen. Hold on." He added sarcastically that the only big thing that could happen was that the commanders of the military regime in East Pakistan might pull a vanishing act.

 All week long, meanwhile, the Pakistani regime kept up a running drumfire about Pakistan's jihad, or holy war, with India. An army colonel insisted there were no Pakistani losses whatsoever on the battle field. His reasoning: “In the pursuit of jihad, nobody dies, he lives forever". Pakistan radio and television blared forth patriotic songs such as 'All of Pakistan Is wide Awake' and The Martyr's blood will not go wasted.' The propaganda was accompanied by a totally unrealistic picture of the war. At one point, government spokesmen claimed that Pakistan had knocked out 123 Indian aircraft to a loss of seven of their own, a most unlikely kill ratio of nearly 18-to-l. Islamabad insisted that Pakistani forces were still holding on to the city of Jessore even though newsmen rode into the city only hours after its liberation.

 Late last week, however, President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan's government appeared to be getting ready to prepare its people for, the truth, the East is lost. An official spokesman admitted for the first time that the Pakistani air force was no longer operating in the East. Pakistani forces were “handicapped in the face of a superior enemy- war machine" he said, and were outnumbered six to one by the Indians in terms of men and material-a superiority that seemed slightly exaggerated.

Sikhs and Gurkhas

 As the fate of Bangladesh, and of Pakistan itself, was being decided in the East. Indian and Pakistani forces were making painful" slabs at one another along the 1,400- mile border that reaches from the city heights of Kashmir through the flat plains of the Punjab- down to the desert of western India. There the battle was being waged by bearded Sikhs wearing khaki turbans, tough flat-faced Gurkhas, who carry a curved knife known as a kukri in their belts, and many other ethnic strains. Mostly, the action was confined to border thrusts by both sides to straighten out salient that are difficult to defend.

 The battles have pitted planes, tanks, artillery against each other and in fact both material losses and casualties apper to have run far higher than in the east. Most of the sites were the very places where the two armies slugged it out in their last war in 1965. Yet there were no all out offensives. The Indian army's lactic was to maintain a defensive posture, launching no attacks except where they assisted its defenses.

Old Boy Attitude

 The bloodiest action was at Chhamb, a Hat plateau about six miles from the ceasefire line that, since 1949, has divided the disputed Kashmir region almost equally between Pakistan and India. The Pakistanis were putting up “a most determined attack", according to an Indian spokesman, who admitted that Indian casualties had been heavy. But he added that Pakistani casualties were heavier. The Pakistani aim was to strike for the Indian city of Jammu and the 200-mile-long Jammu-Srinagar highway, which links India with the Vale of Kashmir. The Indians were forced to retreat from the west bank of the Munawar Rawi River, where they had tried desperately to hold on.

 Except for Chhamb and other isolated battles, both sides seemed to be going about the war with an “old boy" attitude: “If you don't really hit my important bases, I won't bomb yours". Behind all this, of course, is the fact that many Indian and Pakistani officers. Including the two countries' commanding generals, went school with one another at Sandhurst or Dehra Dun, India's commanding general in the east, Lieut. - General Jagjit Singh Aurora, was a classmate of Pakistan's President Yahya. “We went to school together to learn how best to kill each other,” said one Indian officer.  "To an outsider", TIME'S Marah Ciark cabled after a tour of the western front “the Indian army seemed precise, old fashioned and sane. The closer you get to the front, the more tea and cookies you get: one American correspondent complained. But things get done. Convoys move up rapidly, artillery officers direct their fire with dispatch. Morale is extremely high, and Indian officers always refer to the Pakistanis, though rather condescendingly, as “those chaps."

Abandoned Breeches

 On a visit to Sehjra, a key town in a Pakistani salient that pokes into Indian territory east of Lahore where Indian troops were advancing, Clark found turbaned men working in the fields while jets flew overhead and artillery sounded in the distance. “There are free leastalls along the road", he reported, “and teen-ages throw bags of nuts, plus oranges and bananas, into the jeeps carrying troops to the front, and shout encouragement. When our jeep stops, surround it and yell at us, demanding that we write a story saying their village is still free and not captured, as claimed by Pakistani radio."

 "As we come up on the border, the Indian commander receives us. Re recounts how his Gurkha soldiers kicked off the operation at 9 o'clock at night and hit the wellentrenched Pakistanis at midnight." “I think we took them by surprise" he said, “and an inspection of the hooch of the Pakistani area commanding officer confirms it. On his bed is a suitcase, its confusion indicating it was hastily packed. There are several shirts, some socks. And his trousers. Nice trousers of grey flannel made, according to the label, by M. Abbas, a tailor in Rawalpindi. The colonel, it is clear, has departed town and left his breeches behind." flannel made, according it is clear, has departed town and left his dreeches behind".

 South of Sehjra, Indian armored units have been ploughing through sand across the West Pakistan border, taking hundreds of square miles of desert and announcing the advance of their troops to places that apparently consist of two palm trees and a shallow pool of brackish water. Among the enemy equipment reported captured: several camels. The reason behind this rather ridiculous adventure is the fear that Pakistan will try to seize large tracts of Indian Territory to hold as ransom for the return of East Bengal. That now seems impossibility with Bangladesh, an independent nation, but India wants to have land in the west to, bargain with.

 The western part of India is on full wartime alert. All cities are completely blacked out at night, fulfilling as it were. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's warning that it would be a “long, dark December." Air-raid sirens waii almost continuously. During one IS-hour period in the Punjab there were eleven air raid alerts. One all clear was sounded by the jittery control room before the warning blast was given. The nervousness, though, was justified: two towns in the area had been bombed with a larger loss of life as Pakistani air force planes zipped repeatedly across the border. Included in their attacks was the city of Amritsar, whose Golden Temple is the honest of holies lo all Sikhs. At Agra, which was bombed in the Pakistans' first blitz, the Taj Mahal was camouflaged with a forest of twigs and leaves and draped with burlap because its marble glowed like a white beacon in the moonlight.  The fact that India is not launching any major offensives in the eastern sector suggests the New Delhi wants to keep the war there as uncomplicated as possible. Though the two nations have tangled twice before in what is officially called the slate of Jammu and Kashmir, neither country has gained any territory since the original cease fire line was drawn in 1949. There are several reasons why New Delhi is not likely to try to press now for control of the disputed area.

 The first is a doubt that the people of Azad Kashmir, as the Pakistani portion is called, would welcome control by India; in that case, India could be confronted with an embarrassing uprising. The second reason is that in 1963, shortly after India's brief but bloody war with China. Pakistan worked out a provisional border agreement with Peking ceding some 1.300 sq. miles of Kashmir to China. Peking has since linked up the old “silk route" highway from Sinking province to the city of Gilgit in Pakistani Kashmir with an all-weather macadam motor highway running down to the northern region of Ladakh near the ceasefire line, Should Indian troops get anywhere near China's highway or try to grasp its portion of Kashmir, New Delhi could expect to have a hustle with Peking on its hands.

Constant Harassment

 Pakistan, on the other hand, has much to gain if it can wrest the disputed province, particularly the lush and fabled Vale, from Indian control, Strategically, the region is extremely important, bordering on both China and Afghanistan as well as India and Pakistan. Moreover Kashmir's population is predominantly Moslem.

 Still, the war was also beginning to take its toll on the people of West Pakistan. “The almost constant air raids over Islamabad, Karachi and other cities have brought deep apprehension, even panic,” Time's Louis Kraar cabled from Rawalpindi: “It is not massive bombing, just constant harassment-though there have been several hundred civilian casualties. Thus when the planes road overhead, life completely halts in the capital and people scurry into trenches or stand in doorways with woolen shawls over their heads, ostrich like. Because of the Kashmir Mountains, the radar in the area docs not pick up Indian planes until they are about 15 miles away."

 "Pakistanis have taken lo caking mud all over their autos in (lie belief that it camouflages them from Indian planes. In nightly blackouts, the road traffic moves along with absolutely no lights, and fear has prevailed so completely over commonsense that there has probably been more bloodshed in traffic accidents than in the air raids. The government has begun urging motorists only to shield their lights, but peasants throw stones at any car that keeps them on. In this uneasy atmosphere, Pakistani anti-aircraft gunners opened up on their own high-flying Sabre jets one evening last week. At one point, the military stationed an antiaircraft machine gun atop the Rawalpindi Intercontinental Hotel, but guests convinced them it was dangerous",

Soviet Airlift

 In New Delhi, the mood was not so much jingoism as jubilation that India's main goal-the establishment of a government in Hast Bengal that would ensure the return of the refugees-was accomplished so quickly. There was little surprise when Prime Minister Gandhi announced to both houses of Parliament early last week that India would become the first government to recognize Bangladesh. Still members thumped their desks cheered loudly and jumped in the aisles to express their delight. “The valiant struggle of the people of the Bangladesh in the face of tremendous odds has opened a new chapter of heroism in the history of freedom movements,” Mrs. Gandhi said. “The whole world is now aware that Bangladesh reflects the will of an overwhelming majority of the people which not many governments can claim to represent."

 There was little joy in New Delhi, however, over the Nixon Administration's hasty declaration blaming India for the war in the subcontinent, or over U. N. Ambassador George Bush's remark that India was guilty of “aggression. Indian officials were also reported shocked by the General Assembly's unusually swift and one-sided Vole calling for a ceasefire and withdrawal of troops.

Call For Armaments

 Meanwhile, there was still the danger that other nations could get involved. Pakistan was reported putting pressure on Turkey, itself afflicted with internal problems, lo provide ships, tanks, bazookas and small arms and ammunition. Since Turkey obtains heavy arms from the U.S., it would be necessary to have American approval to give them to Pakistan. There was also a report that the Soviet Union was using Cairo's military airbase Alinaza as a refueling slop in flying of reinforcements to India. Some 30 giant Antonov-12 transports, each capable of carrying two dismantled MIGs or two SAM batteries, reportedly touched down last week. The airlift was said to have displeased the Egyptians, who are disturbed over India's role in the war. For its part, Washington stressed That its SEATO and CENTO treaties with Pakistan in no way bind it to come to its aid.

 If the Bangladesh government was not yet ensconced in the capital of Dacca by week's end, it did appear that its foundations had been firmly laid. As Mrs. Gandhi said in her speech to Parliament the leaders of the People's Republic of Bangladesh-as the new- nation will be officially known-"have proclaimed their basic principles of state policy to be democracy, socialism, secularism and establishment of an egalitarian society in which there would be no discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex or creed. In regard to foreign relations, the Bangladesh government has expressed their determination to follow a policy of non-alignment, peaceful coexistence and opposition to colonialism, racialism and imperialism."

 Bangladesh was born of a dream twice deferred. Twenty-four years ago, Bengalis voted to join to the new nation of Pakistan, which had been carved out of British India as a Moslem homeland. Before long, religious unity disintegrated into racial and regional bigotry as the autocratic Moslems of West Pakistan systematically exploited their Bengali brethren in the East. One year ago last week, the Bengalis thronged the polls in Pakistan's first free nationwide election, only to see their overwhelming mandate to Mujib brutally reversed by West Pakistani soldiers. That crackdown took a terrible toil: perhaps 1,000 000 dead, 10 million refugees, untold thousands homeless, hungry and sick.  The memories are still fresh of those who died of cholera on the muddy paths to India, or suffered unspeakable atrocities at the hands of the Pakistani military. And there are children, blind and brain-damaged, who will carry the scars of malnutrition for the rest of their lives. As a Bangladesh official put it at the opening of the new nation's first diplomatic mission in Delhi last “week: “It is a dream come true, but you must also remember that we went through a nightmare"

Economic Prospects

 How stable is the new nation? Economically. Bangladesh has nowhere to go but up. As Pakistan's eastern wing, it contributed between 50% and 70% of that country's foreign exchange earnings but received only a small percentage in return. The danger to East Bengal's economy lies mainly in the fact that it is heavily based on jute and burlap, and synthetic substitutes are gradually replacing both. But if it can keep all of its own foreign exchange, as it now will, it should be able to develop other industries. It will also open up trade with India's West Bengal, and instead of competing with India, may frame joint marketing policies with New Delhi. India also intends to help with Bangladesh's food problems in the next year.

 One of the main conditions of India's support is that Bangladesh organize the expeditious return of the refugees and restore their lands and belongings to them. The Bangladesh government is also intent on seeking war preparations from Pakistan if possible.

 What of West Pakistan? The loss of East Pakistan will, no doubt, be a tremendous blow to its spirit and a destabilizing factor in its politics. But the Islamabad regime, shorn of a region that was politically, logistically and militarily difficult to manage and stripped down to a population of 58 million, may prove a much more homogeneous unit. In that sense, the breakup could prove to be a blessing in disguise. Both nations, moreover, might be expected to get considerable foreign aid to help them back into their feel.

Leadership Vacuum

 Last week Yahya announced the appointment of a 77-year old Bengali named Nurul Amin as the Prime Minister-designate for a future civilian government, to which he has promised to turn over some of his military regime's power. Amin figured in last December's elections, which precipitated the whole tragedy. In those elections Mujib's Awami League won 167 of the 169 Assembly seats at stake; Amin, an Independent who enjoyed prestige as an order statesman, won one of the two others. But he is essentially a figurehead, and former foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was appointed his deputy, which means that he will probably have the lion's share of the power. That may come sooner than expected. There were reports last week that Yahya's fall from power may be imminent, Bhutto is a contemptuous, pro Chinese politician who was instrumental in persuading Yahya ill effect to set aside the results of the election and to keep Mujib from becoming Prime Minister of Pakistan.

 Bangladesh's main difficulty, is apt to come from a leadership vacuum, should Yahya refuse to release Mujib. the spellbinding leader who has led the fight for Bengali civil liberties since partition. All of the Awami Leaguers who formed the provisional government of Bangladesh in exile last April are old colleagues of Mujib's and have grown accustomed to handling responsibilities since he went lo prison. Bui running a volatile war-weakened new nation is considerably more difficult than managing a political party. The trouble is that none of them have the tremendous charisma that attracted million-strong throngs to hear Mujib. The top leaders, all of whom won seats in the aborted National Assembly last December by overwhelming margins, are:Syed Nazrul Islam, 40, acting President in the absence of Mujib, a lawyer who frequently served as the Sheikh's deputy in the past. He was active in the struggle against former President Ayub Khan, and when Mujib was thrown in jail, he led the party through the crisis. - Tajuddin Ahmed, 46, Prime Minister, a lawyer who has been a chief organizer in the Awami League since its founding in 1949. He is an expert in economics and is considered one of the party's leading intellectuals.Khandakar Moshtaque Ahmed 53. Foreign Minister, a lawyer who was active in the Indian independence movement and helped found the Awami League,

 The most immediate problem is to prevent a bloodbath in Bangladesh against non-Bengalis accused of collaborating with the Pakistani military. Toward this end, East Bengal government officials who chose to remain in Bangladesh through the fighting are being inducted into the new administration and caking over as soon as areas are liberated Actually, India's recognition came earlier than planned. One reason was to circumvent a charge reportedly budding in the U.N. that India had joined the battle to annex the province to India. Another was to enable the Bangladesh government to assume charge as soon as large chunks of territory were liberated by the army. Since New Delhi does not want to be accused of having exchanged West Pakistani colonialism for Indian colonialism, ii is expected to lean over backward to let the Bangladesh government to think its way.

The Walk Back

 Is there any chance that the Pakistanis may yet engineer a startling turn of the tide, rout the Indians from the East and destroy the new nation in its infancy? Virtually none, as Correspondent Clark cabled: “Touts who are betting on the outcome between India and Pakistan might ponder the fact that two of the TIME correspondents who were visiting Pakistan this week (Clark in the West, Stewart deep in the East) were there with Indian forces".

 And so at week's end the streams of refugees who walked so long and so far to get to India began making the long journey back home to pick up the threads of their lives. For some, there were happy reunions with relatives and friends, for others tears and the bitter sense of loss for those who will never return. But there were new homes to be raised, new shrines to be built, and a new nation to be formed. The land was there too, lush and green.

 "Man's history is waiting in patience for the triumph of the insulted man,” Rabindranath Tagore, the Nobel Prizewinning Bengali poet once wrote. Triumph he had, but at a terrible price. With the subcontinent at war, and the new-born land still wracked by bone-shattering poverty, the joy in Bangladesh was necessarily tempered by sorrow.

THE U.S.: A POLICY IN SHAMBLES

 The Nixon Administration drew a fusillade of criticism last week for its policy on India and Pakistan. Two weeks ago, when war broke out between the two traditional enemies, a State Department spokesman issued an unusually blunt statement, placing the burden of blame on India. Soon after that, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, George Bush, branded the Indian action as “aggression"-a word that Washington subsequently but lamely explained had not been “authorized.".

 Senator Edward Kennedy declared that the Administration had turned a deaf are for eight months to “the brutal and systematic repression of East Bengal by the Pakistani army,” and now was condemning “the response of India toward an increasingly desperate situation on its eastern borders" Senator Edmund Muskie and Hubert Humphrey echoed Kennedy's charges.

 The critics were by no meane limited to ambitious politicians. In the New York Times, John P. Lewis, one time U.S AID. director in India (1964-69) and now dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton, wrote: “We have managed to align ourselves I with the wrong side of about as big and simple a moral issue as the world has seen lately; and we have sided with a minor military dictatorship against the World's second largest nation. In Britain, the conservative London Daily Telegraph accused Washington of “a blundering diplomatic performance which can have few parallels."

 Since March, when the Pakistani army staged bloody crackdown in East Bengal, murdering hundreds of thousands of civilians and prompting 10 million Bengalis to flee across the Indian border, the U.S. has been ostentatiously mild in its public criticism of the atrocities and of Pakistan's military ruler President Yahya Khan-a man whom President Nixon likes. Washington wanted to retain whatever leverage it had with the Pakistanis. Moreover, the Administration was grateful for Islamabad help in arranging Presidential Adviser Henry Kissinger's first secret trip to China last July. India was shaken by Washington's sudden gesture toward its traditional enemies, the Chinese with whom it had fought a brief war in 1962. Behind the scenes, many State Department officials urged in vain that the Government take a harder line toward Yahya, for humanitarian as well as practical political reasons,

 In the past five years, China has displaced the U.S as Pakistan's chief sponsor. India, increasingly depended on the Soviet Union for military aid, finally signed an important treaty of friendship with Moscow last Summer, The U.S. was not solely responsible for driving the Indians into the Soviet camp, but its policy of not being beastly to Yahya, convinced the Indians that they could not count on the U.S. for moral support. The result of the treaty-U.S. influence in India was virtually neutralized.

 The Administration's current anger, however, stems from a more recent incident. During her trip to Washington last month, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi led President Nixon to believe that her country had no intention of going to war. Later, when the Indian army made what appeared to be a well-planned attack on East Pakistan.  Washington officials concluded the Mrs. Gandhi's trip had been a smokescreen for massive war preparations. Richard Nixon was furious and was behind the initial Government statements branding India the aggressor.

 Last week, in an attempt to justify U. S. policy Presidential Adviser Kissinger held a press briefing. (The remarks were supposed to be for “background use" only until Senator Barry Goldwater blew Kissinger's cover by printing a transcript of the briefing in the Congressional Record). Kissinger insisted that the U.S. had not really sided with Pakistan, but had been working quietly and intensively to bring about a peaceful political solution. Indeed, at the time of the Indian attack, he claimed, U. S. diplomats had almost persuaded Yahya Khan and the Calcutta based Bangladesh leadership to enter into negotiations, New Delhi had precipitated the 'fighting in East Pakistan, Washington believed, and refused to accept a ceasefire because ii was determined to drive the Pakistani army out of East Bengal.

 It can be argued, however, that Washington was guilty of an unfortunate naiveté by believing that a political solution was possible after the passions of the Indians and Pakistanis had become so aroused. Given the continued existence of a power vacuum in East Bengal, it may have been as unrealistic to expect the Indians lo refrain indefinitely from dealing their archenemy a crippling and permanent blow as to have expected the Israelis to halt their 1967 advance in the middle of the Sinai.

 It is true that the new U.S. policy toward China has further restricted Washington's room for maneuver with the Indians, but this hardly explains or excuses the Administration's handling of recent affairs on the Indian sub-continent. Because of blunders in both substance and tone, the U.S. has (1) destroyed whatever chance it had to be neutral in the East Asian conflict; (2) tended to reinforce the Russia-India, China- Pakistan line-up; (3) seemingly placed itself morally and politically on the side of a particularly brutal regime, which, moreover, is an almost certain loser; and (4) made a shambles of its position on the sub-continent.