HomeDefenceThe defender of Poonch: How Captain Pritam Singh turned a doomed hill town into a year-long fortress

The defender of Poonch: How Captain Pritam Singh turned a doomed hill town into a year-long fortress

In the winter of 1947, a young captain arrived in a remote garrison expected to fall within weeks. What followed was one of the longest and most improbable defences in the first Kashmir war — a siege held together by grit, airlifts, local militias and a commander who refused to surrender.

December 09, 2025 / 13:30 IST
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Throughout late 1947 and early 1948, the defenders endured wave after wave of attacks.
Throughout late 1947 and early 1948, the defenders endured wave after wave of attacks.

When Captain Pritam Singh rode into Poonch in November 1947, the district was already fraying at the edges. Villages around the town were burning, tens of thousands of civilians were fleeing in panic, and the last road link to Jammu was collapsing under tribal lashkar attacks. By the time snowfall sealed the Pir Panjal passes, Poonch was encircled. What should have been a brief holding action became a 12-month siege, one of the most punishing in the 1947-48 war.

The odds were clear from the start. As the Poonch account records, the garrison was little more than a mix of 1/2 Punjab troops, local levies and hurriedly raised volunteer militias, with scarce weapons, limited ammunition and a population whose numbers swelled overnight into a humanitarian crisis. Into this chaos stepped Pritam Singh, a determined field leader who understood that Poonch could not be abandoned — because if it fell, the western flank of Jammu & Kashmir could unravel with it.

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A frontier spiralling into war

By late 1947, tribal forces supported by Pakistani irregulars had overrun large parts of western Jammu & Kashmir. Poonch lay directly in their path. The geography left little room for manoeuvre: a small valley ringed by hills, threaded by a fragile road to Jammu and surrounded by communities now caught between loyalty and fear.