HomeDefenceHajipir Pass: A mountain capture, and the politics of giving it back (1965)

Hajipir Pass: A mountain capture, and the politics of giving it back (1965)

A daring mountain assault that delivered a clear tactical victory, Hajipir became a lasting reminder that in wars between states, what soldiers win on the battlefield can still be surrendered at the negotiating table when diplomacy, international pressure, and political priorities take over.

December 22, 2025 / 16:58 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

In August 1965, Indian soldiers climbed into the Pir Panjal and took the Hajipir Pass. It was not a place most Indians had heard of. It was not a city or a river crossing. It was a narrow mountain route, important mostly to people who studied maps closely.

Inside the Army, the capture mattered. Hajipir sat astride one of the infiltration routes into the Uri–Poonch sector. Taking it closed a door Pakistan had used for years.

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A few months later, India handed it back.

That decision, taken in conference rooms far from the ridgelines where the fighting happened, still unsettles military professionals. Hajipir has since come to stand for a familiar Indian problem: the distance between what soldiers achieve and what diplomacy finally allows them to keep.