He paused, letting the ambition of that statent sink in. In the original tiline, India had secured roughly two-thirds of Kashmir.
The remaining third — including the strategically critical northern areas of Gilgit-Baltistan — had been lost to Pakistan and would remain a source of conflict for nearly eight decades.
"This ans," Vikram continued, "that if the political approach succeeds and the Maharaja accedes peacefully, we must imdiately deploy forces to the northern areas.
Gilgit and Baltistan are garrisoned by the Gilgit Scouts — a paramilitary force under British officers who will transfer to Pakistani command at independence.
If we don't secure those areas before the British officers leave, we lose them."
"And if the political approach fails and Pakistan launches the tribal invasion?"
"Then we execute a rapid military response — but not the defensive, reactive response that conventional military thinking would dictate. We counterattack.
We push the tribals back across the border. We advance into the northern areas.
And we present the world with a fait accompli — the entire state of Kashmir, secured by Indian forces, with the Maharaja's accession docunt providing legal legitimacy."
Patel was quiet for a long ti, staring at the map. The ceiling fan rotated. A gecko clicked on the wall.
The Delhi evening pressed against the windows like a warm hand.
"This is aggressive," Patel said finally.
"Yes, sir."
"It risks a direct confrontation with Pakistan."
"Pakistan's regular army is still being partitioned from the Indian Army. They won't be ready for a conventional war for at least a year.
The tribal militias are their only option, and tribal militias cannot hold territory against a disciplined military force."
"And the international reaction? If India is seen as an aggressor—"
"India won't be the aggressor, sir. Pakistan sends tribal irregulars to invade a sovereign princely state.
The Maharaja appeals to India for help. India responds to a legitimate request for military assistance.
Every action we take is legally and morally defensible — as long as the accession docunt is signed before our troops deploy."
"Which brings us back to the Maharaja."
"Which brings us back to the Maharaja," Vikram agreed.
"He's the key to everything. If he signs, we have legal cover for any military action. If he doesn't..." He trailed off.
"If he doesn't, we're invading a sovereign state without invitation," Patel finished.
"Which is precisely what we're accusing Pakistan of planning to do."
"Exactly. Which is why the political approach must succeed. And which is why, Sardar sahab, you need to go to Kashmir personally."
The room went very still.
Patel looked at Vikram with an expression that was difficult to read — sowhere between admiration and exasperation.
"You want to fly to Kashmir and personally convince a paranoid, indecisive maharaja to sign away his kingdom."
"I want you to fly to Kashmir and personally save millions of people from years of war." Vikram t the Sardar's gaze without flinching.
"You convinced Suhrawardy. You convinced Hashim. You can convince Hari Singh."
"Suhrawardy and Hashim wanted to be convinced. Hari Singh wants to be left alone."
"Then we show him that being left alone is not an option. Pakistan will co for Kashmir — with or without his cooperation.
His choice is not between independence and accession.
His choice is between accession to India, which preserves his dignity and protects his people, and conquest by Pakistan, which destroys both."
Patel drumd his fingers on the desk — once, twice, three tis. Then he stopped.
"When?"
"As soon as possible. Before the monsoon — which ans before June. I'd recomnd the third week of May.
That gives us two weeks to prepare the approach, establish intelligence networks, and begin military positioning."
"Who goes with ?"
"non, for the legal and constitutional aspects. Myself, for strategic support. And Kao, for security and intelligence."
"Not Nehru?"
"Not Nehru." Vikram's voice was firm. "Nehru's involvent complicates things. He has a personal relationship with Abdullah that the Maharaja resents.
And Nehru's instinct will be to negotiate endlessly rather than close the deal. We need this done quickly and decisively."
Patel's lips twitched — not quite a smile, but an acknowledgnt of the truth in Vikram's assessnt. "You have a low opinion of Jawaharlal's decisiveness."
"I have a high opinion of his intellect and a realistic assessnt of his negotiating style, sir. He's the man who will lead India brilliantly on the world stage.
He's not the man to close a deal with a frightened maharaja in a mountain palace."
"Hmm." Patel picked up the Operation Himalaya docunt. "I'll read this tonight. We'll reconvene tomorrow morning to finalize the tiline.
In the anti —" He looked at Kao. "Begin deploying your intelligence networks. I want eyes in Kashmir within a week."
"Understood, Sardar sahab."
"And Rathore — the economic morandum you sent to Nehru. Has he responded?"
Vikram shook his head. "Not yet, sir. It's been five days. He may still be reading it — it was quite detailed."
"Or he may be writing a point-by-point rebuttal. Jawaharlal doesn't accept new ideas easily — he chews on them, argues with them, and eventually either absorbs them or rejects them. Give him ti."
"We may not have much ti, sir. If Nehru commits to socialist planning before we can redirect his thinking—"
"One battle at a ti, Rathore." Patel stood, signaling the end of the eting. "Bengal is won. Kashmir is next. The economy will follow."
He paused at the door. "And Rathore — the dical examination. I haven't forgotten. I'll see your Dr. Chatterjee when we return from Kashmir."
"Thank you, Sardar sahab."
"Don't thank . I'm doing it to shut you up."
The days that followed were consud by preparation for the Kashmir mission.
Kao deployed three operatives to Kashmir within forty-eight hours — two posing as traders and one as a journalist.
Their initial reports painted a picture that confird Vikram's worst fears about the Maharaja's ntal state.
Hari Singh was paralyzed by indecision. He spent his days alternating between elaborate hunting expeditions and anxious etings with his dwindling court, veering between fantasies of an independent Kashmir kingdom and paranoid fears of both Indian and Pakistani designs on his territory.
His treatnt of Sheikh Abdullah — still imprisoned in a Srinagar jail — had beco a symbol of his disconnection from his own people.
The Kashmiri street was restless, the economy stagnant, and the administration increasingly corrupt and incompetent.
"He's a man drowning in a river and refusing to grab any of the ropes thrown to him," Kao summarized during one of their evening briefings.
"He knows he can't maintain independence, but he can't bring himself to choose between India and Pakistan because choosing ans admitting he's lost."
"Then we need to make the choice for him," Vikram said.
"Not by force — by making the Indian option so attractive and the alternatives so terrifying that signing the accession becos an act of self-preservation rather than surrender."
"How?"
"Three approaches, simultaneously. First: the carrot. We offer Hari Singh the most generous accession terms any princely state has received — autonomy, privy purse, ceremonial status, personal security guarantees.
Patel presents this as a gift from a friend, not a demand from a conqueror."
"Second: the stick. We share intelligence about Pakistani preparations for the tribal invasion.
Not our full assessnt — just enough to make Hari Singh understand that Pakistan is coming for his kingdom and that his tiny state forces cannot stop them.
The choice isn't between independence and accession — it's between accession and conquest."
"Third: the interdiary. We use Sheikh Abdullah. He's the one person who can credibly promise Hari Singh that democratic governance under Indian sovereignty will be peaceful — that there won't be a revolution, a bloodbath, or a humiliation.
Abdullah wants Kashmir in India as much as we do. He's our natural ally."
"Abdullah is in prison," Kao pointed out.
"Then we need him released before Patel arrives. Can we arrange that?"
"Through the Maharaja? Difficult."
"Through public pressure. If the Kashmiri street demands Abdullah's release — if it becos politically impossible for Hari Singh to keep him locked up — the Maharaja will have to let him go to maintain what's left of his authority."
Kao considered this. "We'd need to organize demonstrations in Srinagar. That requires contacts in Abdullah's National Conference — people who can mobilize crowds on short notice."
"Do we have those contacts?"
"Not yet. But one of our operatives — the journalist — has made initial contact with Abdullah's deputy, Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad. If I give the word, he can begin organizing within forty-eight hours."
"Do it. Peaceful demonstrations — absolutely no violence. The ssage is simple: release Sheikh Abdullah, let Kashmir choose its future democratically. It puts pressure on Hari Singh without threatening him."
"And if he responds with force? The Maharaja has a history of cracking down on dissent."
"Then the international community condemns him, his moral authority collapses, and he becos even more desperate for Indian support. Either way, it works in our favor."
Kao nodded. "I'll activate the network. Give one week."
On May 10th, while preparations for the Kashmir mission continued, Nehru's response to the economic morandum finally arrived.
It ca not as a letter but as an invitation — hand-delivered by a Congress courier to Vikram's room in Chandni Chowk.
Dear Mr. Rathore,
I have read your morandum with great care. It has given much to think about — so of which I agree with, so of which I emphatically do not, and so of which I find myself unable to dismiss despite wanting very much to do so.
Rather than respond in writing — which would inevitably beco an academic exercise — I would prefer to discuss your ideas in person, at length, and with the rigor they deserve.
I am hosting a small working session at my residence on May 14th, from 10 AM. The purpose is to discuss India's economic future.
I have invited a few economists and policy thinkers whose views I trust. I would like you to be among them — specifically, to present and defend your proposals.
I warn you: I will not be a gentle audience. But I will be a fair one.
Yours sincerely,
Jawaharlal Nehru
Vikram read the letter three tis, his heart beating faster with each reading.
Nehru hadn't dismissed the morandum. He hadn't written a point-by-point rebuttal.
He had invited Vikram to present and defend the proposals — in front of other economists, in a formal setting, with the future Pri Minister of India as the primary audience.
This was exactly the opportunity Vikram needed. Not a casual dinner conversation but a structured intellectual engagent where ideas would be tested, challenged, and — if they survived — adopted.
But Nehru said he would not be a gentle audience, Vikram reminded himself. He'll bring his best argunts.
He'll have supporters in the room — people who share his socialist convictions. I'll be outnumbered and outranked.
Good, he thought with a flash of confidence that surprised even him. Let them bring their argunts. I have eighty years of economic history to draw on.
I know which policies work and which don't — not from theory, but from results. Let them argue for central planning. I'll show them what central planning produces.
He sent a reply accepting the invitation imdiately.
Then he began preparing for what would be the most important economic debate in Indian history — a debate whose outco would determine whether four hundred million people spent the next three decades in poverty or on a path to prosperity.
He wrote through the night, organizing his argunts, preparing data, anticipating counterargunts.
Outside his window, Delhi slept. Inside, the architect was building.
The Kashmir mission. The Nehru debate. RAW's expansion. Blackwood's surveillance. Patel's health. The international chessboard.
So many fronts. So many battles. So many lives hanging in the balance.
But for the first ti since his rebirth, Vikram felt not just determined but genuinely optimistic. Bengal was secured. Kashmir was in motion.
The economic frawork was being presented to the one person who mattered most. RAW was growing.
And behind all of it, the invisible machinery of history was being systematically redirected by a man from the future who knew exactly where the gears needed to turn.
One nation, he thought, capping his pen at 3 AM and looking out at the stars above Old Delhi. One people. One chance.
And we're winning.
To be continued..
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[END OF CHAPTER 33]
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