Indo Pak War 1971 and the Anatomy of Strategic Failure

The 1971 Indo–Pakistan War was not merely a military defeat but a comprehensive strategic failure involving political legitimacy, flawed operational doctrine, alliance miscalculations, and civil–military dissonance. This paper offers a rigorous, analytical examination of the Eastern Theatre, the fall of Dhaka, and the decisions that narrowed Pakistan’s strategic options. By integrating operational analysis, doctrinal lessons, and civil–military dialogue, it presents 1971 as a strategic mirror—urging Pakistan to examine whether unresolved institutional patterns continue to shape national security thinking today.