Lieutenant General Kamal Matinuddin’s "Tragedy of Errors: East Pakistan Crisis 1968–1971" provides a detailed, research-driven analysis of Pakistan's 1971 dismemberment, framing it as a failure of leadership rather than an inevitability. Based on multi-national research and primary sources, the work examines the political, economic, and military mismanagement that led to the creation of Bangladesh. View more details about the book at
describe it as a "monumental and comprehensive" book that offers a candid view of the crisis. Objectivity: The East Pakistan crisis, which ultimately led to
The East Pakistan crisis, which ultimately led to the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, is one of the most tumultuous and tragic events in modern South Asian history. Kamal Matinuddin's book, "Tragedy of Errors," provides a comprehensive and gripping account of the events that unfolded between 1968 and 1971, culminating in the secession of East Pakistan and the birth of Bangladesh. The East Pakistan crisis
The book excels at exposing the disconnect between the GHQ (General Headquarters) in Rawalpindi and the ground reality in Dhaka. Matinuddin describes a command structure where Generals were more concerned with their own careers and "saving face" than with the strategic reality of being 1,000 miles away from their supply lines, surrounded by a hostile population and a looming Indian invasion. "Tragedy of Errors
Matinuddin argues that the breakup of Pakistan was not an inevitable historical event but rather the result of a series of avoidable "errors" by the ruling elite.
You will lost formating of your content.
You will not be able to recover it
Untitled Document
Your content size has be exceed from max limit. Your note is not going to be store any more more than this size. please create new note or don't increase its length
Start Editing you document here
Recent documents
Fetching your notes from Cloud Storage to Browser Storage...