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The 1971 Indo-Pakistan War was the culmination of unresolved contradictions within Pakistan’s political structure. Explain this assertion and assess India’s diplomatic handling of the crisis.

Kartavya Desk Staff

Topic: Post-independence consolidation and reorganization within the country.

Topic: Post-independence consolidation and reorganization within the country.

Q1. The 1971 Indo-Pakistan War was the culmination of unresolved contradictions within Pakistan’s political structure. Explain this assertion and assess India’s diplomatic handling of the crisis. (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: TH

Why the question: The 1971 Indo–Pakistan War—a defining episode in post-independence India that arose from Pakistan’s internal political disintegration and tested India’s diplomatic maturity during the Cold War. Key demand of the question: It requires explaining how Pakistan’s structural contradictions—political, economic, and cultural—led to the crisis, and critically assessing how India’s diplomacy balanced humanitarian, strategic, and legal dimensions before intervention. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly set the context of Pakistan’s internal imbalance between East and West wings and how its breakdown culminated in the 1971 conflict leading to Bangladesh’s emergence. Body: Internal contradictions within Pakistan: Mention unequal representation, economic neglect of East Pakistan, cultural suppression (language issue), and denial of democratic mandate post-1970 elections leading to civil war. India’s diplomatic handling: Outline humanitarian diplomacy for refugees, Indo-Soviet Treaty of 1971, global advocacy by Indira Gandhi, and India’s adherence to restraint before military intervention under international law. Conclusion: End by emphasizing that India’s response fused moral legitimacy with strategic prudence, establishing its leadership in South Asia through responsible diplomacy.

Why the question: The 1971 Indo–Pakistan War—a defining episode in post-independence India that arose from Pakistan’s internal political disintegration and tested India’s diplomatic maturity during the Cold War.

Key demand of the question: It requires explaining how Pakistan’s structural contradictions—political, economic, and cultural—led to the crisis, and critically assessing how India’s diplomacy balanced humanitarian, strategic, and legal dimensions before intervention.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Briefly set the context of Pakistan’s internal imbalance between East and West wings and how its breakdown culminated in the 1971 conflict leading to Bangladesh’s emergence.

Internal contradictions within Pakistan: Mention unequal representation, economic neglect of East Pakistan, cultural suppression (language issue), and denial of democratic mandate post-1970 elections leading to civil war.

India’s diplomatic handling: Outline humanitarian diplomacy for refugees, Indo-Soviet Treaty of 1971, global advocacy by Indira Gandhi, and India’s adherence to restraint before military intervention under international law.

Conclusion: End by emphasizing that India’s response fused moral legitimacy with strategic prudence, establishing its leadership in South Asia through responsible diplomacy.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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