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The Day Kashmir Stood Firm: India’s First Test of Sovereignty

Mehak Farooq by Mehak Farooq
October 28, 2025
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In the chill of an October dawn in 1947, a Dakota aircraft of the Indian Air Force descended on the makeshift airstrip at Srinagar. On board were troops of the 1st Battalion, The Sikh Regiment, commanded by Lt Col Dewan Ranjit Rai. Within hours, they would be fighting on the outskirts of the city. India had been independent for just seventy days. The State of Jammu and Kashmir had acceded to the Union barely a day earlier. Yet by the afternoon of 27 October 1947, the young nation was at war — defending not an annexation, but an act of lawful accession and the principle of its own sovereignty.

That landing is why the date is remembered as Infantry Day. It was India’s first military operation as a republic-in-the-making, and the first successful test of the Indian Army’s resolve to protect the country’s unity by force of arms if necessary.

The Political Hour

In the weeks after Partition, Jammu and Kashmir had tried to remain independent, with Maharaja Hari Singh hoping to balance between India and Pakistan. That ambiguity ended abruptly on 22 October 1947, when thousands of tribal raiders, armed and directed from Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province, invaded across the Muzaffarabad–Baramulla axis. The assault left towns pillaged and civilians massacred; Baramulla Mission Hospital, run by nuns and doctors, was overrun. With the invaders barely fifty kilometres from Srinagar, the Maharaja fled to Jammu and signed the Instrument of Accession on 26 October 1947.

Governor-General Lord Mountbatten accepted the accession the next morning, and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s cabinet ordered immediate military assistance. Within hours, the first elements of 1 Sikh were airborne from Palam Air Base in Delhi.

The First Airlift

The operation was logistically audacious. At that time, there were no transport aircraft dedicated to the Army, and Srinagar’s airstrip was little more than compacted earth. Pilots of No. 12 Squadron, Indian Air Force, flying Dakota DC-3s, ferried the troops under uncertain conditions and minimal navigation aids.

Lt Col Ranjit Rai’s men secured the airfield and immediately moved west towards Baramulla to delay the advance. On 28 October, while leading a fighting withdrawal to protect the capital, Ranjit Rai was killed in action — one of independent India’s first commanding officers to fall in battle. His sacrifice bought the time needed for additional battalions to arrive.

The Turning Point: Badgam

The raiders regrouped and launched a second drive towards Srinagar on 3 November 1947. At Badgam (Budgam), a small company of the 4 Kumaon Regiment, under Major Somnath Sharma, was positioned to intercept them. Outnumbered nearly seven to one, Sharma’s men fought from improvised defences until their ammunition was exhausted. His final radio transmission read:

“The enemy are only fifty yards from us. We are heavily outnumbered. We shall fight to the last man and the last round.”

By dusk, the company had been overrun, but the delay allowed reinforcements to reach the city. Major Sharma was killed, and for his courage he was posthumously awarded India’s first Param Vir Chakra. The battle at Badgam ensured that Srinagar airfield — the lifeline of the Valley — remained in Indian hands.

The Line That Held

Through the winter of 1947–48, Indian infantry battalions fought a series of grueling actions — at Poonch, Uri, Tithwal, and Zojila — gradually regaining territory. By the time the ceasefire took effect on 1 January 1949, nearly two-thirds of Jammu and Kashmir, including the Valley, was firmly under Indian control.

What began as an emergency deployment evolved into a long-term military posture. The Cease-Fire Line, later renamed the Line of Control, became the frontier that the infantry would defend for generations.

An Enduring Mandate

Since 1947, the infantry has remained the nation’s forward edge in Kashmir — through wars in 1965, 1971, and Kargil 1999, and through the decades of counter-insurgency that followed. Every conflict has tested its adaptability, from mountain warfare to urban operations.

That continuity was reaffirmed in 2025, when the Army responded to the Pahalgam terror attack with Operation Sindoor, the retaliatory campaign targeting terrorist infrastructure across the Line of Control. It was described by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh as “the largest and most precise counter-terror action in India’s history.” The spirit of 27 October — to act decisively when sovereignty is threatened — found new expression in that operation.

The Human Ledger

The infantry’s story in Kashmir is written as much in compassion as in combat. During the 2014 floods, more than 30,000 soldiers rescued over 90,000 people in the Valley within the first week. Under Operation Sadbhavana, launched in 1998, the Army has built or supported over 200 schools and health centres, spending more than ₹450 crore on community projects across Jammu and Kashmir.

These are not acts of charity but of continuity. The same institution that defended the airfield in 1947 has since helped rebuild roads, reopen classrooms, and reconnect families whenever disaster struck.

Why 27 October Matters

Infantry Day is not celebrated with parade-ground fanfare alone. It is an occasion to recall the first time the Indian state acted in defence of its constitutional promise. The men who flew into Srinagar did not fight for conquest; they fought to honour a legal accession and to protect citizens under assault.

Seventy-seven years later, that morning still defines the Army’s ethos: readiness without provocation, restraint without hesitation, and duty without rest. The soldier who today patrols a snowbound ridge at Gurez or Tangdhar walks in the footsteps of those who first landed at Srinagar.

The Legacy of a Morning

From the dust strip of Srinagar airfield to the precision operations of the Sindoor era, the thread that binds the Indian infantry is constancy — the conviction that the nation’s frontiers are not lines on a map but commitments to be kept.

When the bugles sound on 27 October, wreaths will be laid at war memorials across the country. Behind each ceremony lies a simple truth: in 1947, when India’s sovereignty was challenged for the first time, the infantry stood its ground — and with it, Kashmir stood firm.

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