Concepts

Cease-Fire Line History

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectDefence

Definition

The historical evolution of the military demarcation between India and Pakistan in Jammu and Kashmir, from the Cease-Fire Line (CFL) of the 1947 to 1948 war to the present-day Line of Control (LoC).

Key points

  • After the first India-Pakistan war over Kashmir (1947 to 1948), a United Nations-brokered ceasefire took effect on 1 January 1949, and the resulting Cease-Fire Line was formalised by the Karachi Agreement of July 1949.
  • The CFL ran through Jammu and Kashmir, leaving roughly two-thirds of the former princely State on the Indian side and the rest under Pakistani control (Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan).
  • After the 1971 war, the Shimla Agreement of 1972 between India and Pakistan converted the Cease-Fire Line (with some adjustments from the 1971 fighting) into the Line of Control, and both sides agreed to respect it and to settle differences bilaterally.
  • The LoC is a military control line, not a recognised international boundary; the international boundary between India and Pakistan in the plains (Punjab, Rajasthan, Gujarat) is a separate, settled border.
  • Beyond the northern end of the LoC, positions on the Siachen Glacier are marked by the Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL), which emerged after operations in the 1980s.

Why it matters for CAPF

The CFL-to-LoC evolution is a core strategic-geography and history fact; the 1949 Karachi Agreement, the 1972 Shimla Agreement, and the LoC versus international boundary distinction are commonly tested.

Common confusion

The Cease-Fire Line (1949) became the Line of Control (1972 Shimla Agreement); they are the same line through different stages, not two parallel lines. The LoC is a control line, distinct from the settled international boundary in the plains.

One-line recall

1949 Cease-Fire Line (Karachi Agreement) became the Line of Control under the 1972 Shimla Agreement; both are control lines, not the international boundary.

concept line of control vs international border, concept loc vs lac, concept surgical strikes, concept indus waters treaty mechanism

Parent note

indo pak border and relations

← BackAll of Concepts