Task Force 74: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 37: Line 37:
===US diplomatic initiatives===
===US diplomatic initiatives===
===Deployment of the Taskforce===
===Deployment of the Taskforce===

===


==Impact==
==Impact==

Revision as of 01:40, 17 June 2008

The US Task Force 74 was a US Navy task force of the 7th fleet that was deployed to the Bay of Bengal by Nixon administration in December 1971, at the height of the 1971 Indo-Pak War. Led by the Aircraft Carrier USS Enterprise, the deployment of the task force was seen as a Show of force by USA in support of the beleaguered East Pakistani forces, and was claimed by India as a vindication of US "tilt" towards Pakistan at a time that Indian forces were close to capturing Dhaka. The Task Force withdrew from the Bay of Bengal after reports of Soviet submarines dispatched to shadow the fleet.[1][2]

The Task Force number is now used by the Seventh Fleet's Submarine Force.

Background

The Indian Ocean had, in the post-colonial cold-war situation in the 1960s, a strong British presence which projected Western interests in the region, and carried out peacekeeping and security operations, as well as a deterrence against Soviet overtures in this area. US navy's role at this time was confined to a limited presence in Bahrain.[3]

Naval deterrence in the Indian Ocean

By mid 1960s, a failing economy, Britain began to roll-back her role in the region. In a situation of political instability in the region, the Soviet Union also began a strong diplomatic initiative in the littoral states and initiated limited naval deployments, prompting fears that withdrawal of western peacekeeping role would allow the Soviet Navy to fulfil it's aspirations in the region, threatening western economic and military interests in the region and leading to loss of this area from western-sphere of influence.[4] This lent a strong voice to the proponents of a strong US naval presence in the Indian Ocean, among the Elmo Zumwalt, as a diplomatic as well military deterrence against Soviet moves.[4] US security interests in the Indian Ocean were, however, initially restricted to the countries of Ethiopia, Iran and Saudi Arabia.[5]

The superpowers in the sub-continent

Both the United States and the Soviet Union had attempted to establish strong links with India following the Sino-Indian war of 1962, much to the disturbance of Pakistan especially since she was already in military alliance with the United states. India had obtained substantial millitary and economic assitance from the United states towards the end of the conflict, but remained committed to the Non-aligned movement. Following the end of the conflict, Soviet offers of Mig fighter aircrafts, as well as offers for transfer of technology and production facillities for military hardware confirmed India's preference for Moscow in terms of long-term security collaboration. In 1963,the The US Navy deployed it's first Carrier group in the Indian Ocean close to the Indian coast. However, since this was within a year of the end of the Sino-Indian conflict, where the US and Britain had offered substantial help to India, this was not interpreted as a diplomatic pressure or a show-of-force, and was in all probabillity training exercises to familiarise the navy with the Indian ocean area. India had also at this time allowed the US to install intelligence gathering devices in the Himalayan peaks close to china, on the conditions of intelligence-sharing.

By the end of the 1960s, the Vietnam war became the focus for the United States, with the Indian Subcontinent recieveing much less attention. Peace in the region was assumed by the US to be the responsibillity of the regional powers of Pakistan, India and China.[5]

Bangladesh Crisis

The Bangladesh crisis brought the Indian subcontinent back into the focus of the cold-war confrontations.

Pakistan civil war

The crisis had its roots in the economic and social disparities between the Eastern and Western wings of Pakistan and a dominance of the Eastern wing by the west since the creation of the nascent state in 1947 that increasingly divided the two wings through the 1960s[6] By the last quarter of 1971, Pakistan was in a state of civil war, its eastern arm locked in a ferocious battle for independence from the West. The crisis precipitated in March 1971 when rising political discontent and cultural nationalism in East Pakistan was met by Yahya Khan with what has come to be called Operation Searchlight[6][7][8] Majority of East Pakistani political leadership, including Mujibur Rahman, were arrested and, following brief confrontations and bloody battles between Bengali nationalists and some 40,000 strong Paskistani military, political order was forcibly and temporarily reimposed by end of April amidst strong protests from India, Soviet Union and other countries on the atrocities against the Bengalee civillian population[7]

Indian intervention

The massive and disproportionate crackdown by West Pakistan forces[9] engendered a sea of refugees (estimated at the time to be about 10 million)[7][10][11] who came flooding to the eastern provinces of India.[7][10] Facing a mounting humanitarian crisis, India started actively aiding and re-organising what was by this time already the nucleus of the Mukti Bahini.[7]

Diplomatic efforts

In the months before the war, both Pakistan and India attempted to shore up diplomatic support. On 9 August 1971, India signed a twenty-year co-operation treaty with the Soviet Union,[7] followed by a six-nation tour of Europe and USA by Indira Gandhi in October. This tour was intended to intended to demonstrate India's professed neutrality despite the Indo-soviet treaty, as well as to highlight the refugee problem faced by India.[12] Pakistan came under increasing criticism[13] from India, the Soviet Union, Japan, and Europe as the plight of the refugees and their impact on the Indian economy were highlighted by Indira Gandhi in the UN and on a number of global tours[11]. However, the United States and China showed little interest in the crisis and actively opposed aid, intervention or support to the Mukti Bahini[14][15] Zulfikar Ali Bhutto at this time led a high level delegation to Beijing to obtain commitment from China of support in case of Indian intervention while Pakistan pressed at the UN for an International Peacekeeping Force for the India-East Pakistan border.[12] The Pakistani efforts at the UN were however blocked by the Soviet Union in the Security council.[12] India's aid to the Mukti Bahini continued unabated, and fighting between the Mukti Bahini and the Pakistani Forces grew increasingly vicious. [16]

Taskforce 74

The Indo-soviet treaty had provided India with cover against any possible Chinese intervention in aid of Pakistan if and when the conflict precipitated. To the Pakistani leadership, it became clear that armed Indian intevention and secession of East Pakistan was becoming inevitable.[17]

3rd Indo-Pak war

On December 3, Pakistan launched Operation Chengiz Khan, marking the official initiation of hostilities of the Indo-Pak war of 1971. The Indian response was a defensive military strategy in the western theatre while a massive and coordinated and decisive offensive thrust into the Eastern theatre. On December 5, United States began attempts for a UN-sponsored ceasefire, which were twice vetoed by the USSR in the security council. India extended her recognition of Bangladesh on December 6.[12] It was in this situation that the United States despatched a ten-ship naval taskforce, the US Taskforce 74, from the seventh fleet off South Vietnam into the Bay of Bengal.

US diplomatic initiatives

Deployment of the Taskforce

Impact

References

  1. ^ Rais 1987, p. 46
  2. ^ Belchman & Kaplan 1978, p. 188
  3. ^ Rais 1987, p. 40
  4. ^ a b Rais 1987, p. 41
  5. ^ a b Rais 1987, p. 44
  6. ^ a b Belchman & Kaplan 1978, p. 176
  7. ^ a b c d e f Belchman & Kaplan 1978, p. 177
  8. ^ Adam Jones. "in Bangladesh, 1971". Gendercide Watch. Retrieved 2008-06-16.
  9. ^ Shanberg S.The Pakistani Slaughter That Nixon Ignored, Syndicated Column 1994, p. New York Times. May3, 1994
  10. ^ a b Crisis in South Asia - A report by Senator Edward Kennedy to the Subcommittee investigating the Problem of Refugees and Their Settlement, Submitted to U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, November 1, 1971, U.S. Govt. Press.pp6-7
  11. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Times13 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  12. ^ a b c d Belchman & Kaplan 1978, p. 178
  13. ^ India: The Soviet Stake in Stability. Donaldson R H. Asian Survey Vol. 12, No. 6. (Jun., 1972), pp. 475-492
  14. ^ War of Liberation, The . Banglapedia Encyclopedia Entry
  15. ^ Remarks of President Richard M Nixon on April 10, 1971 at State Depeartment Signing of Biological Weapon's Convention.

    Every Great Power must follow the principle that it should not directly or indirectly allow any other nation to use force or armed aggression against one of its neighbours.

    . USIS Text, pp 1-2.
  16. ^ Indo-Soviet Treaty and the Emerging Asian Balance. Kapur A. Asian Survey, Vol. 12, No. 6. (June 1972), pp. 463-474.
  17. ^ Cite error: The named reference TIME20 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Template:Pakistan Military Topics