The Turning Points: 1965 War by Sonnia Singh – A Legacy of Courage and Strategy
The India–Pakistan War of 1965 was not just a clash of arms, but a test of a young nation’s soul. Less than two decades after gaining independence, India found itself pushed to a war not of its seeking - its fate hanging by a thread as battles raged across The Rann of Kutch to the Mountains of Pir Panjal and culminated in the fields of Punjab. It was a time when history could have broken in an entirely different direction, but through grit and courage the young nation rewrote destiny through audacity and defiance. In The Turning Points: 1965 War, Sonnia Singh captures this tumultuous moment in history with a rare sensitivity. She takes you inside the moments when history itself hung in balance — when the courage of a few turned the tide
What sets this book apart is its heartbeat. Ms. Singh does not drown the reader in cold figures or dry timelines. Instead, she invites us into human stories that carry the grit and rawness of lived experiences. Through the battle terrains she introduces us to soldiers who held their ground against impossible odds, commanders who made decisions in moments that could have ended in disaster, and an air force that dared to strike deep into enemy territory when hesitation would have been easier.
You walk beside Maj. Ranjit Dayal as he scales the impregnable Haji Pir Pass. You feel the tension as Lt. Col. Desmond Hayde takes Dograi — not once, but twice. You hear the roar of tanks in the fields of Khemkaran, where India’s so-called “outdated” machines transformed the world’s most modern Pattons into burning hulks at Assal Uttar. And you soar with the Indian Air Force as it dares the unthinkable — striking Sargodha, the pride of Pakistan’s air power, in broad daylight.
But Sonnia does not shy away from the shadows. She confronts the missteps, the divisions in command, and the political hesitations that almost squandered these hard-won victories. That honesty gives the book its power. The glory of 1965 shines brighter because it was never guaranteed. Every success was clawed back from the edge of disaster.
Woven through every page is the theme of leadership. Lt. Gen. Harbaksh Singh’s unwavering steadiness. Air Chief Arjan Singh’s audacious vision. The resilience of soldiers who fought knowing they were outgunned, but never outwilled. These are not distant figures frozen in history books. Sonnia brings them close — leaders whose choices under fire carry timeless lessons for anyone who dares to lead today.
The story of this book began, fittingly, with a moment of remembrance. A visit to the Ahmednagar Tank Museum. A father’s quiet correction. A daughter’s realization that the names and battles etched on steel were not relics, but lifelines of a nation’s freedom. That spark ignited two years of research, interviews with veterans, and an unwavering mission: to ensure that these turning points — these fragile, decisive instants — would never fade into obscurity.
Though the war ended with a ceasefire, often labeled “inconclusive,” Sonnia makes the case that 1965 was, in truth, a victory — of spirit, of strategy, of courage. India stopped at Lahore not because it could not advance, but because it chose restraint. That choice itself was strength.
Now, as the 60th anniversary of the war commerates this September, The Turning Points: 1965 War is more than a book. It is a tribute, a remembrance, and a call to reflection. It asks us to honour the men who never came home, to recognize the leaders who carried impossible burdens, and to remember that courage is not history — it is a living inheritance.
This is a book for those who believe leadership is forged in fire. For those who want to understand not just how wars are fought, but how nations are shaped. And for every reader who knows that freedom is never free.
The Turning Points: 1965 War is available now in Amazon (click here to buy) and the Notionpress Store (click here to buy).
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