Khadim Hussain Raja

Major General Khadim Hussain Raja (born 23 November 1922 – 9 December 1999) was a retired Pakistan Army general, diplomat, and author who played an important role in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 and was in charge of planning Operation Searchlight. He was the General Officer Commanding of 14 Division during the war.

Early life
Raja was born on 23 November 1922 in Haranpur, Jhelum District to an agriculturist family.

Education
He received his education from Central Model High School in Lahore and graduated with Honours in English from Government College University, Lahore.

Commission
He joined the British Indian Army in 1942 and received the King's Commission from the Indian Military Academy in Dehradun.

World War II deployment
He served in an infantry battalion in the Burma campaign of World War II until the end of the war.

Pakistan Army
After the Partition of British India in 1947, he opted to join the Pakistan Army. He volunteered in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947-1948 where he saw action in Kashmir.

Military education
He graduated from the Staff College, Quetta and afterward from the United States Army Command and General Staff College.

Commands
He commanded the 1st Pakistani Battalion (Quaid-i-Azam's own) at the Pakistan Military Academy.

1971 War
He was in charge of planning the military operation known as Operation Searchlight which was executed on 25 March 1971. Other generals were present in Dhaka along with Yahya Khan, who secretly departed on the evening of that day after setting the deadline for the military action. Lt Gen Tikka Khan, Maj Gen Rao Farman Ali and Maj Gen Khadim Hussain Raja were associated with the planning of the military action. Eventually their action bloodied the capital city Dhaka with the blood of thousands of residents including students, military and police personnel, politician and the general mass.

Army Retirement
On 11 April 1971, he was relieved of his duties as General Officer Commanding of 14th Division. He later retired the same year after serving as DG Artillery.

Later career
In 1972 he was appointed to Army Welfare Trust and became its first Managing Director. He held the position for 5 years before he eventually retired and became Ambassador of Pakistan to Mozambique also accredited to Angola, Swaziland, and Lesotho.

Death
Raja died on 9 December 1999 in Islamabad, Pakistan.

Posthumous book release
Before his death, he authored a book and instructed his family to not publish it until after he died. The book was later released 13 years after his death.

The book detailed their actions in the early hours of 26 March 1971 known as Operation Searchlight. He wrote a book, A Stranger in My Own Country: East Pakistan, 1969-71 (Oxford University Press, 2012), in which he revealed secrets about the nine-month liberation war of Bangladesh.

The Mukti Bahini's (under M. A. G. Osmani) initial success in capturing a portable radio-transmitter near Rangamati was short-lived due to Raja's accidental discovery of the transmitter—he had authorised a search for it, and directed it from his personal helicopter through radio-contact when it was fired-upon.