HomeNewsIndiaAirlanding at Srinagar (October 27, 1947): India’s first wartime airlift and the race to save the Valley

Airlanding at Srinagar (October 27, 1947): India’s first wartime airlift and the race to save the Valley

In a few tense hours on 27 October 1947, unarmed Dakotas flew into an almost undefended Srinagar, landing under the shadow of an advancing lashkar. The troops they carried seized the airfield, created a fragile perimeter, and turned a collapsing princely state into a defensible bridgehead that saved the Valley.

November 20, 2025 / 10:20 IST
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At 8 am on 27 October, the first Dakota carrying elements of 1 Sikh swept over the Kashmir Valley. (Courtesy: X | @IAF_MCC)
At 8 am on 27 October, the first Dakota carrying elements of 1 Sikh swept over the Kashmir Valley. (Courtesy: X | @IAF_MCC)

India’s decision to airlift troops into Srinagar on October 27, 1947 remains one of the most dramatic and consequential military operations in its history. Conducted under immense pressure, with the Valley hours away from collapse, the airlanding of 1 Sikh not only prevented Srinagar from falling but also laid the foundation for the counter-offensives that followed, culminating in the decisive victories at Shalateng and beyond. The operation has acquired near-mythic significance, but its success was not inevitable. It was the product of speed, improvisation, courage, and a leadership that understood that if the Plains did not reach the Valley in time, Kashmir itself would be lost.

The Valley on the brink: Why India had to act immediately

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By the third week of October 1947, the situation in Kashmir had deteriorated to crisis proportions. The tribal lashkars, surging through Muzaffarabad and Domel, had overrun the state forces with alarming speed. Baramulla, the gateway to Srinagar, had fallen on October 26. Looting, arson and chaos in the town delayed the invaders — a delay that proved decisive — but the tribal forces remained barely 30 miles from Srinagar.

What made the situation truly desperate was the collapse of the State Forces. After the annihilation of the 4 J&K Infantry at Domel, most units were disorganised, retreating or scattered. Reports of massacres and atrocities created panic that raced ahead of the invaders. Srinagar was in shock; the airfield was undefended; the Maharaja had fled; and a terrified administration was unsure whether reinforcements would arrive before the lashkar stormed the city.