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: India-Pakistan
Conflict
India shoots down Pakistani plane
New crisis in Indo-Pakistani relations
By Deepal Jayasekera
13 August 1999
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Tensions between India and Pakistan have intensified dramatically
since the Indian Air Force shot down an unarmed Pakistani naval
surveillance aircraft Tuesday. The entire crew of 166 Pakistani
navy officers and 10 sailorsdied when their rapidly disintegrating
plane crashed in southern Pakistan.
Pakistan's military retaliated the next day, opening fire on
Indian planes also over the Rann of Kutch. India claims Pakistani
ground-to-air missiles targeted Indian helicopters that were carrying
journalists to look at debris from the felled Pakistani plane,
which is apparently strewn on both sides of the international
border. Pakistan angrily denies the Indian charge. It claims the
missile attack was aimed at Indian fighter jets that accompanied
the helicopters and which it alleges violated Pakistani airspace.
Both countries have put their militaries on a heightened state
of combat readiness, raising anew fears of a fourth Indo-Pakistani
war just a month after Pakistan, fearing a military showdown with
its larger neighbour and under pressure from the US and other
traditional allies, ordered an end to the military intrusion it
had mounted in the Kargil-Das-Batalik region of Kashmir.
The nation and the armed forces are fully prepared for
any aggression by India, declared Pakistani Foreign Minister
Surtaj Aziz in a speech Wednesday evening in the country's Senate.
Since Tuesday, Pakistan has installed missiles and deployed at
least one additional battalion in its part of the Rann of Kutch.
A marshy area that straddles the border between India's Gujurat
state and Pakistan's Sind province, the Rann of Kutch has been
an important battlefield in previous Indo-Pakistani wars and is
the site of a lengthy estuary, Sir Creek, that is potentially
oil-rich and over which India and Pakistan have competing territorial
claims.
While expressing concern about the escalation of tensions in
South Asia, the Clinton administration, which played a leading
role in bringing about the retreat of Pakistani forces from Kargil,
has said it has no plans to mount a high-level intervention to
defuse the current crisis.
Claims and counter-claims
India claims it was justified in downing the Pakistani plane
because it violated Indian airspace and, when intercepted, rejected
requests to surrender. It was obviously on a spying mission,
declared Indian Defence Minister George Fernandes in a television
interview. What else could it have been doing?
Responding to reports that Pakistani planes had repeatedly
entered Indian air space in recent months, Indian External Affairs
Minister Jaswant Singh said, "It is our expectation that
Pakistan would not be so unwise as to assume that India will not
act in protecting its territorial integrityland, sea or
airsimply because the Indian Armed Forces, under instructions
from the Government, acted with exemplary restraint during the
Kargil confrontation."
Pakistani spokesmen, for their part, are claiming that their
French-made reconnaissance and anti-submarine plane never entered
Indian airspace and that the deaths of the 16 constitute murder
and a grave violation of international law.
This new escalation of tensions must be placed within the context
of the crisis of both regimes. Pakistan's Muslim League government
of Nawaz Sharif has come under sharp attack from the political
opposition for the failure of the Kargil intrusion. The Islamic
fundamentalists are denouncing Sharif for capitulating to US pressure
and abandoning the Kashmir liberation struggle, while
the largest opposition party, Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's
Party, is accusing Sharif of both bowing to Washington and a failure
of judgement in launching the Kargil adventure in
the first place.
Buoyed by US support, India hardens its stand
India, meanwhile, is in the throes of a mid-term election.
The Hindu-chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party, the dominant force
in the outgoing coalition, and its allies in the National Democratic
Alliance are giving India's Kargil victory pride of
place in their re-election campaign. The Congress, the BJP's main
rival, has responded by accusing the government of incompetence,
saying that if it had been more vigilant there would never have
been a Kargil intrusion in the first place.
Believing that the US tilt in favour of India in the recent
Kargil crisis is the beginning of a new US-Indian strategic partnership,
the BJP, which has long been known for its bellicose rhetoric
and militarism, has become increasingly brazen in its dealings
with Pakistan. Last February, Indian Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee
and Sharif signed an agreement (the Lahore Declaration) that established
a framework for addressing the many bilateral disputes between
India and Pakistan. While not officially renouncing the Lahore
Declaration, Vajpayee and his government are, in the wake of Kargil,
insisting on a series of new Pakistani concessions before Indo-Pakistani
talks can resume.
Speaking in Lucknow on August 10the day the Pakistani
plane was shot downVajpayee said talks with Pakistan will
be resumed only if Islamabad stops supporting "terrorism,"
a reference to Pakistan's political and military support to the
decade-long insurgency in Indian-held Kashmir. Then, ominously,
Vajpayee added that India is committed to peace and that he would
not hesitate to use force in establishing it".
Three days before, in an interview with the editors of several
newspapers in the Indian border state of the Punjab, Vajpayee
urged the United Sates to declare Pakistan a "terrorist state.
He added that India was striving to educate and mobilise international
public opinion to the point where Washington would take such action.
Vajpayee ruled out any resumption of talks with Pakistan as long
as it does not respect the Line of Control (LoC) between Indian-
and Pakistani-held Kashmir that was established in 1972.
Although the Kargil crisis clearly represented a dramatic escalation
of overt Pakistani intervention in Indian-held Kashmir, it is
no secret that Pakistani-supported Kashmir guerrillas and even
Pakistani troops have repeatedly crossed the LoC for the past
decade. In seeking to make respect for the LoC a precondition
for talks, India is both imposing conditions it knows that any
Pakistani government would find it difficult to accept and laying
the groundwork for a diplomatic drive to transform the LoC into
a permanent boundary.
Needless to say, Sharif and his aides have rejected India's
new hard-line negotiating stance. Last week Sharif reiterated
his call for a resumption of talks without pre-conditions,
warning that Kashmir is on fire. His Foreign Minister
Aziz reiterated the Pakistani position that the LoC is only a
temporary line in a disputed territory.
India's opposition parties have rallied, as they did at time
of the Kargil incursion, behind the BJP-led government and have
supported its claims that the Indian air force had no choice but
to down the Pakistani plane. On Wednesday opposition leaders including
Congress (I) President Sonia Gandhi,, Indrajit Gupta of the Communist
Party of India and Ramachandra Pillai of the Communist Party of
India (Marxist) were given a briefing by Vajpayee, Defence Minster
Fernandes, Home Minister L.K. Advani, and the heads of the three
Indian military services. Later a senior Congress leader, K. Natwar
Singh, declared, When it comes to unity and integrity of
the nation, all hundred crores [1 billion] Indians are one. Let
Pakistan have no illusions.
It was left to the liberal daily the Hindu to voice
any misgivings over the increasing belligerence of the Indian
government and military. It warned that actions such as last Tuesday's
could cause events to spin out of control, omitting to add with
potentially horrific consequences. Wrote the Hindu, The
shooting down of the Pakistani reconnaissance plane, in the prevailing
post-Kargil atmosphere of mistrust and extremely fragile bilateral
relations, is an unwarranted escalation of the confrontation....
Such intrusions, quite often innocuous, are not deemed a provocation
except in times of extreme emergencies, and the BJP-led caretaker
Government must explain to the people of this country whether
the shooting down and the escalation was warranted and why the
Pakistani plane could not have been forced to land on Indian territory.
See Also:
In wake of Kashmir retreat
Pakistani opposition presses for Sharif's resignation
[7 August 1999]
India-Pakistan
Conflict
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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