Defence
Indian Army personnel celebrate on top of a knocked out Pakistani Patton tank. (Image via Wikipedia)
On this day, in 1971, the Indian Army launched a corps-sized armoured thrust into Pakistan's heartland at the Shakargarh bulge, an engagement that would be widely known as the 'Battle of Basantar’.
The assault's main aim was to safeguard the road and rail communications between Pathankot and Jammu, which runs very close (sometimes even 5 to 15 miles) to the bulge, and vital areas like Akhnoor, Jammu, Samba, Madhopur, and Pathankot, and to make sure that Pakistan's 1st Corps gets committed early in the war, making it unavailable for further employment in other sectors.
Meanwhile, as the army's armoured and infantry columns moved into the Shakargarh Bulge, the Indian Air Force (IAF) maintained pressure and continued to bombard Pakistan's military installations in support of the Indian Army, including the bombing of the Attock refinery.
Most PAF fighter jets were moved deep into the rear on the western front, due to relentless bombings by IAF Canberras and Hunters of various airfields and military installations, including early-warning elements like radars.
According to the IAF, close to 150 sorties were flown on the western front, in the area opposite Sind, in support of army land operations, while another 93 sorties were flown in the east to hasten the rapid advance of the Indian army.
India's indigenously-made HF-24 Marut also scored its first air-to-air kill of a Pakistani US-made F-86 Sabre jet, marking a historical achievement.
The IAF provided support to armoured formations moving into Pakistan, with more than 44 sorties conducted for air-defence cover.
The 'Battle of Basantar' was one of the most significant tank-vs-tank battles of the war, which ultimately resulted in an Indian Army victory with 48 enemy tanks destroyed.
These attacks, coupled with the debilitating naval strikes of Operation Trident and sustained air raids, decisively shifted the war's momentum in India's favor.