On 3 June 1947, control of the Gilgit Agency was transferred to the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. The state's Maharaja, Hari Singh, appointed Brigadier Ghansara Singh to govern the area on his behalf.[5] The Partition of India took place in August of that year, which divided the former British colony into a Hindu-majority India and a Muslim-majority Pakistan. On 22 October 1947, amidst Pakistani fears of the Maharaja potentially acceding his Muslim-majority princely state to India, state-backed Pashtun tribal militias from Pakistan invaded Jammu and Kashmir and attacked the Maharaja's state forces.[6] As Pakistani militias closed in on the capital of Srinagar by 26 October, Hari Singh had fled from the princely state and signed an instrument of accession for Jammu and Kashmir with India. The decision by the Maharaja—a Hindu Dogra ruler governing a princely state with a Muslim-majority populace—to accede to a Hindu-majority India following the creation of Pakistan was seen as controversial.[7] Dogra rule was unpopular and disliked in every part of the princely state outside of the Jammu region; Prem Nath Bazaz, a Kashmiri scholar, describes Dogra rule in his book as:
"The Dogras have always considered Jammu as their home and Kashmir as the conquered country…[T]hey established a sort of Dogra imperialism in the State in which all non-Dogra communities and classes were given the humble place of inferiors…Dogra imperialism brought nothing but misery, thraldom, physical and mental deterioration in its wake…"[8]
On hearing of the decision, Brown urged Ghansara Singh to ascertain the wishes of the Gilgit Agency's Muslim community over the accession, and warned him that he may have to take certain measures to avoid large-scale bloodshed.[7] Brown's view on the escalating Kashmir conflict was that the whole of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, including Gilgit, should go to Pakistan in view of the fact that the state's population was predominantly Muslim, and that the foundation of Pakistan's existence was the accommodation of Muslim-majority regions in British India.[9] Singh ignored the warning, prompting Brown to begin planning what became known as 'Operation Datta Khel'.[7][10]
Brown was well aware of the anti-Maharaja sentiments among the populace of the Gilgit Agency.[8] On 31 October, the Gilgit Scouts, under the command of Brown, surrounded the Gilgit Residency and took Ghansara Singh & Wazir-i-wazarat Sehdev Singh Chib along with their families and staff into protective custody.[11][12] Brown then requested for troops to be sent to the Gilgit Agency from Pakistan and established a de facto military administration on 1 November. On assuming direct control of the region, Brown thwarted plans by a large section of his contingent to set up an independent republic called Gilgit−Astor.[7] On 2 November, he hoisted the Pakistani flag over the capital residency and announced the accession of the Gilgit Agency to Pakistan.[13][14] He was then instructed by Sir George Cunningham, the then-Governor of the North West Frontier Province to restore order in the region.[7] On 16 November, the Pakistani government sent Muhammad Alam to take control of the region as a political agent and on 18 November, Gilgit and its neighbouring states signed a combined instrument of accession to Pakistan.[7] Brown remained in command of the Gilgit Scouts until 12 January 1948, when he was replaced by Aslam Khan.[7]
Brown's actions were strongly condemned by the Indian government who regarded it as an unlawful and unpopular coup, whereas the Pakistani government hailed it claiming that Brown had the full support of the people.[7] Brown himself acknowledged the severity of his actions when he later remarked, "my actions appeared to possess all the elements of high treason. Yet I knew in my own mind that what I had done was right."[7]
Brown is also credited to have saved the Hindu minority in Gilgit from being harmed during the war, taking personal risk in doing so.[15]
In 1998, Brown's diary from his time in Gilgit was published as a book titled The Gilgit Rebellion.[16]
^Marin, Steve (2011). Alexander Mikaberidze, ed. Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 394. ISBN978-1598843361.
^ abcdefghiVictoria Schofield, Kashmir in Conflict: India, Pakistan and the Unending War, I.B.Tauris, 2003