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4 December
4 December 1971
Indian Navy Day
Operation Trident was an offensive operation launched by the Indian Navy on Pakistan's port city of Karachi during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. Operation Trident saw the first use of anti-ship missiles in combat in the region. The operation was conducted on the night of 4–5 December and inflicted heavy damage on Pakistani vessels and facilities. While India suffered no losses, Pakistan lost a minesweeper, a destroyer, a cargo vessel carrying ammunition, and fuel storage tanks in Karachi. Another destroyer was also badly damaged and eventually scrapped. India celebrates its Navy Day annually on 4 December to mark this operation. Trident was followed up by Operation Python three days later.
Operation
Prelude
The Indian Naval Headquarters (NHQ) in Delhi, along with the Western Naval Command, planned to attack the Port of Karachi. A strike group under Western Naval Command was formed for this mission. This strike group was to be based around the three Vidyut-class missile boats already deployed off the coast of Okha. However, these boats had limited operational and radar range, and to overcome this difficulty, it was decided to assign support vessels to the group.
On 4 December, what
was now designated as the Karachi Strike Group was formed and consisted of the
three Vidyut-class missile boats: INS Nipat, INS Nirghat, and INS Veer, each
armed with four Soviet-made SS-N-2B Styx surface-to-surface missiles with a range
of 40 nautical miles (74 km; 46 mi), two Arnala-class anti-submarine corvettes:
INS Kiltan and INS Katchall, and a fleet tanker, INS Poshak. The group was
under the command of Commander Babru Bhan Yadav, the commanding officer of the
25th Missile Boat Squadron.
Attack
As planned, on 4
December, the strike group reached 250 nautical miles (460 km; 290 mi) (nmi)
south off the coast of Karachi, and maintained its position during the day,
outside the surveillance range of the Pakistan Air Force. As Pakistani aircraft
did not possess night-bombing capabilities, it was planned that the attack
would take place between dusk and dawn. At 10.30 pm Pakistan Standard Time
(PKT), the Indian task group moved 180 nmi (330 km; 210 mi) from its position
towards the south of Karachi. Soon Pakistani targets, identified as warships,
were detected 70 nmi (130 km; 81 mi) to the northwest and northeast of the
Indian warships.
INS Nirghat drove forward in a northwesterly direction and fired its first Styx missile at PNS Khaibar, a Pakistani Battle-class destroyer. Khaibar, assuming it was a missile from Indian aircraft, engaged its anti-aircraft systems. The missile hit the right side of the ship, exploding below the galley in the electrician's mess deck at 10.45 pm (PKT). This led to an explosion in the first boiler room. Subsequently, the ship lost propulsion and was flooded with smoke. An emergency signal that read: "Enemy aircraft attacked in position 020 FF 20. No. 1 boiler hit. Ship stopped", was sent to Pakistan Naval Headquarters (PNHQ). Due to the chaos created by the explosion, the signal contained the wrong coordinates of the ship's position. This delayed rescue teams from reaching its location. Observing that the ship was still afloat, Nirghat fired its second missile hitting Khaibar in the second boiler room on the ship's starboard side, eventually sinking the ship and killing 222 sailors.
After verifying two targets in the area northwest of Karachi, at 11.00 pm (PKT), INS Nipat fired two Styx missiles – one each at cargo vessel MV Venus Challenger and its escort PNS Shah Jahan, a C-class destroyer. Venus Challenger, carrying ammunition for the Pakistani forces, exploded immediately after the missile hit, and eventually sank 23 nmi (43 km; 26 mi) south of Karachi. The other missile targeted Shah Jahan and damaged the ship very badly. At 11.20 pm (PKT), PNS Muhafiz, an Adjutant-class minesweeper, was targeted by INS Veer. A missile was fired and Muhafiz was struck on the left side, behind the bridge. It sank immediately before it could send a signal to the PNHQ, killing 33 sailors.
Meanwhile, INS Nipat continued towards Karachi and targeted the Kemari oil storage tanks, placing itself 14 nmi (26 km; 16 mi) south of the Karachi harbor. Two missiles were launched; one misfired, but the other hit the oil tanks, which burned and were destroyed completely, causing a Pakistani fuel shortage. The task force returned to the nearest Indian ports.
Soon the PNHQ deployed rescue teams on patrol vessels to recover the survivors of Khaibar. As Muhafiz sank before it could transmit a distress call, the Pakistanis only learned of its fate from its few survivors who were recovered when a patrol vessel steered towards the ship's burning flotsam.
Aftermath
The Pakistan Air
Force retaliated for these attacks by bombing Okha Port, scoring direct hits on
fuelling facilities for missile boats, an ammunition dump, and the missile
boats' jetty. The Indian Navy anticipated this attack and had already moved the
missile boats to other locations to prevent any losses. However, the
destruction of a special fuel tank prevented any further incursions until
Operation Python, executed three days later.
As a result of the operation, all of the Pakistan Armed Forces were put on high alert. The deployments raised a number of false alarms in the ensuing days about the presence of Indian Navy vessels off Karachi. One such false alarm was raised by a Pakistan Navy Fokker Friendship reconnaissance aircraft on 6 December 1971, which incorrectly reported a frigate of the Pakistan Navy as an Indian Navy missile boat. The PNHQ requested a Pakistan Air Force airstrike on the supposed Indian ship. At 06.45 am (PKT), fighter jets were scrambled and strafed to the vessel before it was identified as the frigate PNS Zulfiqar. This friendly fire incident resulted in casualties and damage to the vessel.
With no casualties on the Indian side, this operation was considered to be one of the most successful in modern naval history post-World War II. To mark this victory, the Indian Navy annually celebrates Navy Day on 4 December.
Awards
A number of Indian Navy personnel were honored with gallantry awards for the operation.
Then Fleet Operations Officer, Captain (later Vice Admiral) Gulab Mohanlal Hiranandani, was awarded the Nau Sena Medal for the detailed operational planning;
The Maha Vir Chakra was awarded to the strike group commander, Cdr Babru Bhan Yadav, for planning and leading the task force;
And
Vir Chakras were awarded to Lieutenant Commanders Bahadur Nariman Kavina, Inderjit Sharma, M O Thomachan, and Om Prakash Mehta, the commanding officers of INS Nipat, INS Nirghat, and INS Veer respectively.
Master Chief M. N. Sangal of INS Nirghat was also awarded the Vir Chakra.
Search engine lead:- aaj ke din kya huva tah ? On this day? What happened today?
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