Heroes in the military are usually the
ones fighting the enemy in close range combat. Very rarely do commanders meet
the enemy face to face. During the Bangladeshi War of 1971 a commander went to
the enemy and forced an entire army to surrender. This incredible feat is more
impressive when you know that he had very few soldiers in his command and was
bluffing. Lieutenant General Jack Jacob of the Indian Army was the man who
singlehandedly defeated an entire army.
Jacob
Farj Rafael Jacob was born in 1923 in Calcutta which was then part of British
India. His family was Baghdadi Sephardic Jews who had moved there in the 1700s.
The family was described as deeply religious in an area with few Jws.. During
WWII Jack heard of the plight of his brethren in Europe and decided to join the
British Army to fight the Nazis.
After
graduating from officer school in 1942 he was given his first assignment.
Ironically, it was with the Arab Legion in the British Army posted in Northern
Iraq in case the Germans got that far. Soon it became apparent that the main
battle was in Egypt and North Africa so Jacob was reassigned to an artillery
unit to fight the Afrika Korps. However, they arrived after the battle and were
sent to Burma to fight the invading imperialist Japanese Empire. He saw action
here in some of the toughest terrain fighting of the war.
While in Burma
(today the country is called Myanmar) he met the eccentric British General Orde
Wingate. Wingate was not Jewish but morally was a Zionist and had trained
Jewish settlers in Palestine in clandestine warfare. This was Jacob’s first
time meeting a Zionist and it rubbed off on him. Later this had an effect on India’s
positive reception towards Israel.
After
the war Jacob attended military schools in the U.S. and England and joined the
Indian Army when they gained independence from Britain in 1947. He had risen
through the ranks and in 1963 was promoted to brigadier general. Two year later
he commanded a division during one of the many wars between India and Pakistan.
In 1969 he was a major general and was appointed chief of staff of the Eastern
Command. His job was put down insurgencies these areas and to keep tabs on
neighboring Pakistan.
In
1971 the eastern section of Pakistan had an uprising and wanted to start their
country called Bangladesh. The Pakistani government was ruthless in their
retaliation and killed upwards of half a million civilians. Millions more fled
to India who then declared war on Pakistan. General Jacob was tasked with
drafting a war plan and came up with the idea drawing the Pakistanis into
swampy lands in Eastern Pakistan. After tiring out the enemy they then would
capture the capital Dhaka. Jacob’s superior, Lieutenant General Sam Manekshaw,
agreed to the plan except for the capture of Dhaka.
Jacob
realized that the capture of Dhaka was more strategic then the small towns
fortified by the Pakistani Army. The Indian Army therefore bypassed many of
these defenses and severed communications. Control of East Pakistan was coming
under Indian Army control in two weeks of war but Dhaka still remained to be
captured. A drawn out war could spell disaster for the small Indian Army so
Jacob came up with a daring plan. He went to the heart of the enemy and gave
them an ultimatum.
Pakistani
Lieutenant General A.A.K. Niazi invited Jacob to discuss a cease fire on
December 16. Instead of a cease fire Jacob wrote a declaration of surrender for
the Pakistani general to sign. Unarmed and accompanied by only one staff
officer he flew to Dhaka. Jacob told Niazi that he had a half an hour to decide
or the Indians would be coming to Dhaka to destroy the enemy. Indian planes
would bomb the 26,000 or so Pakistani soldiers in Dhaka and an untold number of
civilians would be in harm’s way.
While Niazi was
contemplating the surrender Jacob went outside and said Shema Yisrael. The
truth was that Jacob had but 3,000 men some 30 miles away and they were up
against 93,000 Pakistani troops. He was hoping that Niazi focused on the
previous two weeks of Indian victories and didn’t want to see any more
bloodshed. The United Nations was also pushing for a cease fire and this would
be the only chance that the Indians could capture Dhaka. Against all odds the
bluff worked. All of the Pakistani soldiers in the area surrendered and Jacob
became the hero of the war. It was the largest surrender of soldiers since WWII
and when Niazi returned to Pakistan he was stripped of his rank. The war was
over and Bangladesh became an independent nation.
After 38 years
in the army Jacob retired in 1978 and went into business and became the
governor of Goa. He cracked down on criminals and saved areas from destruction.
When he left office someone put graffiti on the walls that said “Without Jacob
who will feed the poor?” A truly beloved officer of the state he stayed in
politics for over 30 years. In the 1990s Jacob was a big advocate for an advanced
India-Israel relationship. He visited Israel many times and was a personal
guest of former Prime Minister Rabin. Several of Jacob’s personal effects were
donated to Israel and his uniform hangs in the Israeli military museum in
Latrun.
Although there
are some reports that Jack Jacob passed away last year many sources still
maintain that he is alive at the age of 90 living in Delhi, India. He said
about his time in the Indian Army, “Although I
was one of only a few Jews in the army, I never came across any anti-Semitism,
only enthusiasm and acceptance.” However, he won’t talk about his time in the
British army. General Jack Jacob will be remembered as the man who convinced an
entire army to surrender under incredible odds thereby saving countless lives.
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