HomeDefenceThe pilots of the Poonch and Srinagar airbridges: The Dakota crews who saved Kashmir in 1947-48

The pilots of the Poonch and Srinagar airbridges: The Dakota crews who saved Kashmir in 1947-48

The unsung Dakota crews who flew into hostile valleys day after day kept Srinagar and Poonch alive, turning fragile airstrips into lifelines that helped decide the first Kashmir war.

December 14, 2025 / 22:24 IST
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Among the first pilots was Wing Commander KL Bhatia, who flew one of the initial sorties on 27 October. The first aircraft to touch down that morning was flown by Wing Commander LRD Blunt, carrying the vanguard of 1 Sikh.
Among the first pilots was Wing Commander KL Bhatia, who flew one of the initial sorties on 27 October. The first aircraft to touch down that morning was flown by Wing Commander LRD Blunt, carrying the vanguard of 1 Sikh.

In the winter of 1947, as tribal lashkars backed by Pakistan advanced across Jammu and Kashmir, the newly independent Indian state faced a logistical and tactical crisis. Road links were blocked, mountain passes were snowed in, and vital garrisons were on the verge of starvation. What followed remains one of the least-celebrated, yet most decisive, episodes of the first India-Pakistan war: the creation of two wartime airbridges into Srinagar and Poonch, kept alive by the Royal Indian Air Force’s Dakota crews who flew day after day into hostile skies, often with minimal navigation aids, little military infrastructure and a clear understanding that failure would mean the loss of the Valley.

The airlift into Srinagar is widely remembered for the symbolic landing of the first troop-carrying Dakota on 27 October 1947, bringing 1st Sikh under Lt Col Dewan Ranjit Rai. But the full scale, tempo and risks of the operation have rarely been given the attention they deserve. By the end of 1948, the Dakota pilots had carried out thousands of sorties, delivered men, ammunition and food, evacuated civilians, transported artillery, and performed casualty evacuations under fire. They held the line where land routes could not.

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The crisis after accession

When Maharaja Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession, Indian forces were nowhere near the state. Pakistan-supported tribal forces had already entered Kashmir, overrunning Muzaffarabad and pushing rapidly towards Srinagar. With the Uri-Baramulla road cut and reinforcements unable to arrive overland in time, Delhi ordered an airlift to secure the capital.