Moneycontrol
HomeDefence8 Sikh at Ichhogil Canal: The charge that became legend (1965)

8 Sikh at Ichhogil Canal: The charge that became legend (1965)

An infantry action on the Lahore front where the Ichhogil Canal’s prepared defences forced men into close-quarter rushes against bunkers and machine guns, leaving behind a trail of casualties, gallantry awards, and stories that outlasted the official record and became part of Sikh regimental memory.

December 23, 2025 / 16:14 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
General J.N. Chaudhuri with jawans on the bank of the Ichhogil Canal. (Image: Bharat Rakshak)

The Ichhogil Canal, formally the Bambawali–Ravi–Bedian (BRB) Canal, was the most formidable man-made obstacle on the Lahore front in September 1965. Conceived by Pakistani planners as a defensive barrier against an Indian armoured thrust, it combined a wide water channel with raised banks, concrete bunkers, and interlocking machine-gun fire. Indian Army official histories describe it not as a simple canal crossing problem, but as a prepared defensive system meant to bleed attacking infantry before armour could even come into play.

When Indian forces crossed the International Border on the morning of 6 September 1965, the immediate objective of 7 Infantry Division was to break through this canal belt by seizing key villages and bridges on the approaches to Lahore. Among these, Barki emerged as the focal point. Located just east of the canal, the village had been converted into a fortified locality, with houses loopholed for fire, lanes mined, and positions sited to dominate likely infantry approaches, a pattern recorded in the Indian Army’s official account of the Western Theatre in 1965.

Story continues below Advertisement

The fighting that unfolded here explains why the phrase “the charge at Ichhogil” entered regimental lore. The terrain forced infantry assaults at close quarters. The canal and its subsidiary drains funnelled troops into narrow axes, leaving little room for manoeuvre. Darkness, smoke, and dust reduced visibility, making junior leadership and individual initiative decisive. In such conditions, attacks often collapsed into short, violent rushes against bunkers and machine-gun nests, the kind of action that soldiers themselves remember simply as “charging”.

Barki and the road to the canal