Britain and the Indo-Pakistani conflict: The Rann of Kutch and Kashmir, 1965

Colman, Jonathan orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-1223-9679 (2009) Britain and the Indo-Pakistani conflict: The Rann of Kutch and Kashmir, 1965. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 37 (3). pp. 465-482. ISSN 0308-6534

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03086530903157664

Abstract

Britain mediated successfully in the Indo-Pakistani clash over the Rann of Kutch region in spring 1965, but when hostilities broke out over Kashmir soon afterwards, 10 Downing Street managed to alienate New Delhi with what was supposed to be an even-handed statement. The Indian government seemed to feel that the Labour government had violated some kind of historic special obligation to them, and the Anglo-Indian relationship was damaged. For his part Prime Minister Harold Wilson condemned the ‘pro-Pakistani faction’ in the Commonwealth Relations Office responsible for drafting the statement, although he had been warned of the likely consequences. Eventually, the Soviet Union, operating through the United Nations, mediated an end to the war. The article draws upon British government documents to fill a gap in the literature, and it ends with a few reflections on Britain's ‘decline’ as demonstrated by the failure to end the conflict over Kashmir in 1965.


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