Moneycontrol
HomeNewsIndiaDefence of Poonch (1947-48): A year-long siege, air-supply lifeline, and the final breakout under Operation Easy

Defence of Poonch (1947-48): A year-long siege, air-supply lifeline, and the final breakout under Operation Easy

How a remote frontier town held out for twelve desperate months, survived on a fragile airbridge and relentless local mobilisation, and finally broke free in one of the war’s most daring operations — a risky, hard-fought breakout that turned a starving, encircled Poonch from a besieged outpost into a symbol of endurance, unity and strategic recovery.

November 23, 2025 / 12:40 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
(Image credits: bharat-rakshak website)

The defence of Poonch stands among the longest and most resilient military actions of the 1947-48 conflict. Whereas Srinagar was saved by swift intervention and Shalateng delivered a decisive counteroffensive, Poonch became a slow, grinding test of endurance — a year-long siege fought under constant bombardment, supply starvation and repeated enemy assaults. Isolated in the rugged Pir Panjal foothills, with enemy forces dominating every approach, Poonch survived only because of the determination of its defenders, the commitment of local militias and the audacity of pilots who sustained an improbable airbridge for months.

When the siege finally ended with Operation Easy in November 1948, the breakout was not just a tactical success; it was the culmination of one of the most remarkable survival stories in Indian military history. The town that should have fallen in weeks had held for nearly a year.

Story continues below Advertisement

Strategic setting: Why Poonch mattered so much

Poonch occupied a unique position in the northwest of Jammu & Kashmir — a district connected by narrow hill roads, close to the border, and vulnerable to infiltration. Its population was mixed, its topography rugged, and its loyalty fragile. Control of Poonch offered Pakistan-backed irregulars a chance to sever communication lines to Rajouri and Jammu, while for India its defence ensured that the western flank of the state did not collapse in a domino effect.