Brief by Shorts91 NewsDesk / 11:45am on 15 Aug 2025,Friday India
A new report revisits the controversial 1947 Radcliffe Award, suggesting Jawaharlal Nehru and Lord Mountbatten influenced the decision to assign Gurdaspur to India, securing a vital road link to Kashmir. Initially marked for Pakistan due to its Muslim majority, Gurdaspur’s final allocation enabled India’s military access to the princely state. Historians Stanley Wolpert and Alastair Lamb argue strategic motives shaped the boundary revision, citing canal headworks and railway lines. Pakistan views this as the root of the Kashmir conflict. Nehru’s intervention and Mountbatten’s delay in publishing the award allegedly pressured Maharaja Hari Singh to accede to India. India denies prior knowledge or interference, while sealed documents leave the full truth unresolved.