The Jammu & Kashmir Rifles is an infantry regiment of
the Indian
Army. The Jammu & Kashmir State Forces were the only former Princely State
Forces of India to be absorbed into the Indian Army as a distinct and separate
Regiment. In 1963, the designation was changed to Jammu & Kashmir Rifles.
After the conversion, the Ladakh Scouts came
under the aegis of the Regiment, where it remained until raised as a separate
Regiment in 2002.
The Jammu & Kashmir Rifles has a unique
regimental history. It was not raised by the British but by an intrepid Indian
ruler called Gulab Singh in
1821. Gulab Singh was one of the ablest Generals of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh and
later became the ruler of the Jammu and Kashmir state.
The
Sikhs ruled Kashmir until their defeat by the British. Thereafter, Maharaja
Gulab Singh of Jammu paid Rs. 75 lakhs to
the East India Company in 1846 in exchange for Kashmir and some other areas
under a treaty later named as Treaty of Amritsar. Jammu and Kashmir
as a single entity was unified and founded by Maharaja Gulab Singh on 16 March
1846. Zorawar Singh, a General in the Dogra Corps of the Khalsa Army of
Maharaja Ranjit Singh, later led daredevil campaigns in northern areas like Ladakh, Baltistan, Gilgit , Hunza and Yagistan,
consolidating smaller principalities and making the northern areas a part of
the expanding dominions of Maharaja Gulab Singh. Zorawar Singh mounted a
breath-taking invasion of Tibet in
1841.
The
Maharaja of Kashmir maintained a larger number of State Forces than any other
ruler of an Indian State under the British Raj. These forces were organized
into the Jammu and Kashmir Brigades. They comprised one Bodyguard Cavalry
regiment, two Mountain Batteries, seven active and one training battalions of
Infantry and a Transport unit consisting of both pack and mechanized transport.
Several of these units served with distinction on the North-West Frontier of
India and overseas during the Great War. The state forces fought as Imperial
Service Troops in
both the First and Second World
Wars (under their own native officers). They distinguished themselves in East
Africa, Palestine and Burma.
The regiment's grimmest hour
came during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947. It was
their heroic stand that gained time for the entry of the Indian Army and thus
saved the Kashmir
Valley. It may not be out of place to mention that the Indian people largely owe the State of Jammu and Kashmir to the
heroic defensive stand made by the outnumbered and ill-equipped, but highly
motivated, J&K State Force. They paid a steep price in blood and sacrificed
over 76 officers, 31 JCOs and 1085 Other Ranks. For their gallant stand they
earned three Maha Vir Chakra, 20 Vir Chakras and 52 Mentioned in Despatches.
Later the Jammu and Kashmir State Force was absorbed en bloc into the Indian
Army as a separate regiment.
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