
When India Considered Giving Poonch To Pakistan: New Delhi's Secret Offer To Islamabad Revealed After Decades
The year was 1955. Conversations between Nehru and then Pakistani leaders Mohammad Ali and Interior Minister Iskander Mirza turned uncomfortably real. Documents and transcripts preserved in India-Pakistan Relations 1947–2007, edited by Avtar Singh Bhasin, now confirm what many never imagined. Serious proposals were once on the table, involving territorial adjustments in Jammu and Kashmir. Some involved potential transfers. Some suggested joint control. All unfolded behind closed doors.
Inside the Nehru-Mirza Talks
It was mid-May, and New Delhi was warm. Leaders from both nations sat across each other from May 15, 16 and 17. Among them were then Union Education Minister Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Home Minister Govind Ballabh Pant.
On May 15, Iskander Mirza floated the idea of common defence. He warned of the Persian Gulf falling under the grip of a hostile power. He believed India and Pakistan needed to face that risk together.
Nehru listened. He disagreed. 'Presumably against the Soviet Union… I could not conceive of the Soviet Union attacking Pakistan or India,' Nehru said.
He did not see a threat in the Gulf justifying such defence pacts. 'The major theatres of war would be Europe and the Far East,' he explained.
Then came the real crux. He acknowledged Pakistan's past proposal from the then Governor General Ghulam Mohammad. That idea had called for control of the Kashmir valley by a joint Indo-Pakistani military and for large swathes of Jammu (north of the Chenab) to be handed to Pakistan.
Nehru stood firm. 'Completely impractical. No one on our side could possibly think of this,' he said.
He feared chaos, migrations and deep unrest. However, he did not walk away. 'It might be possible to consider the transfer of a certain part of the Poonch area,' he offered.
But there was no definite lines, no commitments. It was only a hint.
The reasoning was strategic. 'Poonch was a major recruiting ground for the Pakistan Army,' Nehru pointed out. Giving it up, though painful, might offer a path to resolution.
He estimated that nearly 50,000 people could be affected by such a transfer.
More Maps, More Shock
On May 16, earlier suggestions resurfaced. Pakistan had previously pushed for parts of Jammu (Poonch, Reasi and Udhampur) to be given to them. In return, they were willing to let go of Skardu. There was even talk of attaching Kargil to Kashmir and leaving its fate to a future plebiscite.
Nehru was blunt. 'Quite impossible for us to transfer these large areas. No government in India could do it,' he said.
He rejected the idea of joint control too. 'Unthinkable. Such a thing had not happened anywhere before with success,' he said.
A Narrow Offer on the Table
By May 17, Maulana Azad introduced a more specific suggestion, which was a part of Poonch or maybe even a bit of Mirpur. He said it would cause a marginal shift on the map and turn out to be a gesture toward peace.
There was some confusion. Nehru admitted he had discussed Mirpur with Azad and Pant but had not brought it up with the Pakistanis. 'This had not been previously referred to by the United Nations either,' he said.
Still, he was ready to include it in the conversation, but only if it meant a final settlement.
The two sides tried to make sense of each other's positions. Maps were pulled out, and boundaries were traced. Talks remained open but nothing moved.
A formal joint statement followed on May 18, 1955. It said that the Kashmir problem had been 'discussed fully in all its aspects' and that the talks would continue at a 'later stage'.
The Map Talks Resurface
Years passed, but the wounds did not. In February 1963, the two sides met again. This time, a meeting between India's Swaran Singh and Pakistan's Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was held in Karachi.
The discussion moved to maps. Singh offered slices of land in forest-rich regions near the Kishanganga. Bhutto's counteroffer for India was Kathua district. The rest of the area, including Kashmir, Ladakh and Jammu, would belong to Pakistan. Singh called it absurd. Bhutto refused to move unless the Valley itself was put on the table.
The back-and-forth dragged on, but there was no breakthrough.
Nehru's Final Word in Parliament
Months later, on August 13, 1963, Nehru addressed Parliament. He said India had shown 'great patience and restraint' and had 'offered generous concessions' to win friendship and cooperation.
He did not hide his disappointment. 'There is little possibility of a settlement so long as Pakistan persists in its irrational animus against India,' he said.
A Forgotten Moment
The documents have always been there, buried in volumes and shelved away from public memory. But in those three days in May and again in the winter of 1963, the future of Jammu and Kashmir dangled on a knife's edge.
Offers were made, maps were drawn and names like Poonch and Mirpur floated in the silence of diplomatic rooms.
However, none of it led to a final deal. Once so real, the possibility remains one of the most overlooked turning points in the story of Kashmir.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
37 minutes ago
- First Post
India-Philippines relations in focus as President Marcos Jr. visits New Delhi
Philippines President Ferdinand R Marcos Jr. kicked off his fiveday visit to India starting Monday, during which he will hold bilateral talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and take part in several engagements to bolster ties between the two countries. read more Philippine President Ferdinand R Marcos Jr. began his five-day visit to India on Monday, during which he would conduct bilateral meetings with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and participate in a number of initiatives aimed at strengthening bilateral ties. Pabitra Margherita, Minister of State for External Affairs, welcomed him upon his arrival in New Delhi. 'Mabuhay, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.! President@bongbongmarcoshas arrived in New Delhi on his first State Visit to India. Received by MoS @PmargheritaBJP and accorded a warm welcome. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'India & Philippines are celebrating the 75th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties. This visit will lead to further strengthening of India-Philippines relations,' Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal posted on X. Mabuhay, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.! President @bongbongmarcos has arrived in New Delhi on his first State Visit to India. Received by MoS @PmargheritaBJP and accorded a warm welcome. India & Philippines are celebrating 75th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic… — Randhir Jaiswal (@MEAIndia) August 4, 2025 The MEA previously stated that this will be his first visit to the nation since taking office as President of the Republic of the Philippines. Marcos is joined by First Lady Louise Araneta Marcos, as well as an entourage of senior Cabinet members, top bureaucrats, significant dignitaries, and business executives. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Also Read: Philippines President Marcos in India for 5-day visit: Why this visit is significant On the first day of his visit, President Marcos is set to meet with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar later in the evening. His travel to India will be from August 4 to 8, during which he would meet President Droupadi Murmu and conduct bilateral meetings with Prime Minister Modi. Modi and Marcos are slated to conduct bilateral talks on August 5. The state visit by President Marcos coincides with the 75th anniversary of India-Philippines diplomatic ties. The visit is an opportunity for both leaders to set the path for future bilateral cooperation and to engage on regional and international issues of mutual interest, the MEA said in a statement on July 31. 'He will be accompanied by First Lady Madame Louise Araneta Marcos, and a high-level delegation, including several Cabinet ministers, other dignitaries and senior officials, in addition to business representatives,' the MEA had said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD President Marcos will also visit Bengaluru before returning to the Philippines on August 8. Diplomatic relations between India and the Philippines were established in November 1949.


New Indian Express
37 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Environmental activists gather at Jantar Mantar to demand cancellation of STR rationalisation plan
NEW DELHI: Eminent environmental activists from across the country gathered at Jantar Mantar to demand the cancellation of the Sariska Tiger Reserve (STR) rationalisation plan, which could potentially reopen more than 50 mines that were previously closed by a Supreme Court order in May 2024. People from Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, and Rajasthan appealed to the Chief Justice of India and the Union Minister of Environment to intervene and cancel the rationalisation plan for STR to protect India's national animal. On June 26 meeting, India's top wildlife body approved a proposal to redraw the boundaries of the Critical Tiger Habitat (CTH) of the STR in Rajasthan. It involved the exclusion of about 48.5 sq km area, primarily from the southern and south-western parts of the Sariska CTH. In compensation, the state will designate around 91 sq km as 'quality tiger habitat,' mostly in the STR's north. As a result, the CTH area will increase from 881.11 sq km to about 924 sq km, while the buffer zone shrinks from 245.72 sq km to 203.2 sq km. The protesters called for the immediate revocation of the National Board for Wildlife's approval for the boundary changes in the STR.


Hindustan Times
37 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
UP ATS arrests two men for plotting anti-India conspiracy, promoting radical ideology online
Lucknow, The Uttar Pradesh Anti-Terrorism Squad has arrested two men, including one from Maharashtra, for allegedly conspiring to disrupt communal harmony and promote anti-national activities through online platforms, including WhatsApp and Instagram. UP ATS arrests two men for plotting anti-India conspiracy, promoting radical ideology online According to a press release issued by the ATS here on Monday, the arrests were made after a sustained digital surveillance operation revealed a WhatsApp group titled "Reviving Islam", which had more than 400 members mostly Pakistani nationals and three group administrators. One of the members was found to be using a phone number based in Uttar Pradesh, it said. The suspect was identified as Ajmal Ali, from Dehra village near Amroha in western Uttar Pradesh. ATS officials said that Ajmal was propagating radical and anti-national ideology targeting non-Muslim communities through multiple social media platforms. Ajmal was summoned for questioning at the ATS headquarters, where he allegedly confessed to being in touch with several Pakistani individuals via social media. He also admitted to being mentored by a person, identified as Dr Usama Maj Sheikh, a resident of Badlapur area in Thane district of Maharashtra. Usama, according to the ATS, maintained communication with Ajmal via Instagram and the Signal messaging app. Their conversations included "extremist discussions about toppling India's elected government and replacing it with a Sharia-based system". He is alleged to have incited Ajmal and others toward violent jihad as part of a broader objective to establish "Ghazwa-e-Hind", the ATS said. On August 1, a case was registered against Ajmal at the ATS police station in Lucknow under Sections 148 and 152 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita . He was taken into judicial custody, the agency said. Based on further investigation, ATS operatives arrested Usama from Badlapur, Maharashtra, on August 4, according to the statement. The ATS claims that both individuals were "deeply involved in online radicalisation efforts" and were "attempting to provoke young Muslim men against non-Muslims, thereby encouraging anti-India criminal activities". This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.