My grandpa was a Sandhurst trained Officer in the British-Indian Army, who saw action in WW-II, I remember him talking about the many Indians and now Pakistanis who served as loyal soldiers for the Raj. Thenumber of Indians and Pakistanis who joined the Nazis or the INA were very small in number, and they had little or no effect on the war effort against the Axis. I dont know about present day Pakistan, but, in modern day India, the INA and other proAxis soldiers are largely forgotten, and it is a small number of cranks and kooks who still try to glorify them.
My grandpa was a Sandhurst trained Officer in the British-Indian Army, who saw action in WW-II, I remember him talking about the many Indians and now Pakistanis who served as loyal soldiers for the Raj. Thenumber of Indians and Pakistanis who joined the Nazis or the INA were very small in number, and they had little or no effect on the war effort against the Axis. I dont know about present day Pakistan, but, in modern day India, the INA and other proAxis soldiers are largely forgotten, and it is a small number of cranks and kooks who still try to glorify them.