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SAFETY FIRST: THE SECURITY OF BRITONS IN INDIA, 1946–1947

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2013

Abstract

A month into his viceroyalty, Lord Mountbatten took time out from sounding Indian political opinion about independence to discuss the future security of British residents with his provincial governors. By this stage, the concerns stemmed from fears of a general breakdown in law and order and Hindu–Muslim conflict rather than nationalist assault. Detailed plans were developed for a sea-borne evacuation. In the event, the only Britons who were evacuated were those airlifted from Srinagar in November 1947 as they were in the path of an invasion of the disputed Kashmir territory by Pakhtun tribesmen from Pakistan. Despite numerous articles on the British departure from India and the aftermath of Partition, little has been written about either the airlift or the broader strategic planning for European evacuation. The paper will focus on this neglected corner of the history of the transfer of power. It argues that while anti-British sentiment declined from a peak around the time of the Indian National Army trials, of 1945–6, the memories of the wartime chaotic flight from Burma and Malaya and the irreparable damage this had done to British prestige in Asia coloured the safety first approach adopted in 1947.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 2013 

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References

1 Critics of Mountbatten have juxtaposed these scenes with the grisly murders in the Punjab at the same time. See Wolpert, S., Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British in India (New York, 2006)Google Scholar.

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3 James Murray, ‘Box Wallah’, Indo-British Review: A Journal of History, 25th Anniversary Number 1993, ‘To Independence and Beyond’, 123.

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6 Ibid., 182.

7 Ibid., 182.

8 Ibid., 168.

9 Cited in ibid., 120.

10 See Statesman (Calcutta), 12 and 13 Feb. 1946.

11 See Hindustan Times (Delhi), 28 Feb. 1946.

12 See the Peoples'Age, editorial 3 Mar. 1946, entitled, ‘In the Name of Our Dead’. This extract is contained in Towards Freedom: Documents on the Movement for Independence in India 1946, ed. Sumit Sarkar, i (New Delhi, 2009), 65.

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18 Hindustan Times (Delhi), 8 Mar. 1946.

19 G. Ahmed, deputy director Central Intelligence Delhi, 13 Mar. 1946, file 5/2.46, Home Political Department GOI, in Towards Freedom, ed. Sarkar, 141.

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28 For details, see J. S. H. Shattock, HC Delhi to H. A. F. Rumbold, Commonwealth Relations Office, 3 Dec. 1947, L/P&S/13/1850 IOR.

29 This meant British nationals, not ‘foreign’ nationals, nor Anglo-Indians.

30 Secretary of state, memo European civilians in India, 18 Feb. 1947, India and Burma Cabinet Committee, MB1/D228, University of Southampton.

31 Governors’ Conference, 15 Apr. 1947, MB1/D229, University of Southampton.

32 Ibid.

33 Ibid.

34 See Khan, The Great Partition, 89.

35 Governors’ Conference, 15 Apr. 1947, MB1/D229, University of Southampton.

36 Ibid.

37 Auchinleck to Abell, 2 Apr. 1947, MB1/D228, University of Southampton.

38 Secretary of state to viceroy telegram, 20 Mar. 1947, MB1/D228, University of Southampton.

39 Ibid.

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41 Ibid.

42 Secretary of state to viceroy telegram, 4 Apr. 1947, MB1/D228, University of Southampton.

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50 Ibid.

51 Report by Major W.P. Cranston, 18 Oct. 1947, L/P&S/13/1850 IOR.

52 UK high commissioner Pakistan to secretary of state Commonwealth Relations, 18 Oct. 1947, L/P&S/13/1850 IOR.

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59 There is great controversy as to whether the accession document was signed before the first troops were airlifted.

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63 Whitehead, A Mission in Kashmir, 119.

64 Ibid., 150.

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68 Whitehead, A Mission in Kashmir, 151.

69 Indian High Commission to Commonwealth Relations Office telegram, 30 Oct. 1947, L/P&S/13/1850 IOR.

70 W. P. Cranston report, 27 Nov. 1947, L/P&S/13/1850 IOR.