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WSWS : News
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: India-Pakistan
Conflict
US scheme to end fighting in Kashmir in doubt
By Keith Jones
10 July 1999
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Five days after the US government claimed it had prevailed
on Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to withdraw the Pakistani-organized
force that has penetrated Indian held-Kashmir, it remains unclear
if the Pakistani pledge to restore the existing Line of Control
(LoC) will be fulfilled.
India, meanwhile, has intensified its military campaign in
the remote Kargil-Das-Batalik region of Kashmir, even though,
if its own reports are to be believed, the Pakistani force no
longer poses a threat to the highway that links the main part
of Kashmir with the eastern Ladakh region. Thursday, the Indian
military reported that in the preceding 48 hours it had killed
92 intruders, all of them Pakistani regular troops,
in the bloodiest battles since fighting erupted two months ago.
India has made immediate restoration of its hold over all territory
on its side of the LoC a matter of national honor; yet so inhospitable
are the mountain ridges occupied by the intruders,
they will, in any event, have to abandon them when the climate
changes in the early fall.
Last Sunday (July 4), Sharif made a sudden visit to the White
House and at the conclusion of a three-hour meeting with President
Bill Clinton apparently bowed to US pressure for Pakistan to take
the first step in de-escalating tensions with India. Our
understanding is that there will be a withdrawal of the (Pakistani)
forces, said a US official, who briefed reporters on condition
of anonymity.
Clinton and Sharif issued a joint statement in which the US
President, echoing the Indian government position, urged
an immediate cessation of hostilities only after the LoC
was re-established. The statement, however, also committed Clinton
to take a personal interest in reviving Indo-Pakistani
bilateral negotiations over Kashmir and other disputed issues
once the sanctity of the LoC is restored.
Surprisingly, Sharif did not immediately return to Pakistan
to press for implementation of his agreement with Clinton, which
suggests his support for it is less than enthusiastic. Instead
Sharif traveled to Britain, where after two days he was able to
obtain an audience with Prime Minister Tony Blair. The delay in
Sharif's return provided those whose oppose any tempering of Pakistan's
dispute with India, whether out of ideological conviction or because
they hope to use the Kashmir issue to undermine Sharif's Muslim
League regime, ample time to whip up opposition. Kashmiri secessionist
groups and Islamic fundamentalists have vowed to thwart any sellout
of Kashmir.
Only on Friday did Sharif brief his top ministers (Foreign,
Defence, Interior and Finance) and Pakistan's military chiefs
on his talks with Clinton. This meeting of the Cabinet's Committee
on Defence (DCC) issued an appeal to the Kashmiri militantsPakistan
maintains it has no control over the forces fighting the Indian
army in Kargil-Das-Batalikto provide an opportunity
to the international community to play its role for the resolution
of the Kashmir conflict. It is unclear whether this statement
was merely meant to assuage domestic political opposition or whether
the Pakistani government is intent on tying restitution of the
LoC with internationalization of its 52-year dispute
with India over Kashmir.
For decades India has vigorously opposed any foreign intervention
in the Kashmir dispute. On Thursday, US Congressman Frank Pallone,
who frequently parrots the Indian government line in the US House
of Representatives, wrote to Clinton, urging that the US not be
drawn into the role of a mediator on Kashmir. It's clear,
declared Pallone, that Pakistan has long sought to drag
the United States into this conflict as an international mediator,
as a strategic ploy to enhance its position in the conflict..
On Friday the Indian government refused comment on the Pakistani
DCC statement. Sharif is to make a televised address to
the nation today, July 10.
A major shift in US policy
For decades the US has been a strong ally and military supplier
of Pakistan. However, the collapse of the Soviet Union, with which
India had a special trading and diplomatic relationship, and the
Indian bourgeoisie's abandonment of its historic nationalist economic
policy, set geo-political relations in South Asia in flux. There
is no question that in the current conflict, which was triggered
by the Pakistanis at least in part because of fears they are rapidly
falling militarily and economically behind their larger South
Asia rival, the US has tilted sharply in favor of India.
In a recent newspaper interview, Lieutenant General Hameed
Gul, a former top Pakistani intelligence officer, argued that
the shift in the US's stand on South Asia is tied to concerns
about containing China's influence in AsiaIndia and China
have been at loggerheads since they fought a border war in 1962and
fears that Islamic fundamentalism could become a check to US ambitions
to dominate the oil resources of Central Asia.
To the consternation of the US, Pakistan has been the most
prominent international supporter of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
In this regard, it is important to note that in the days following
Sharif's meeting with Clinton, the US announced new sanctions
against Afghanistan on the grounds that it is harboring terrorist
suspect Osama bin Laden. Did the US offer to assist Sharif in
extricating his regime from the current Kashmir crisis in exchange
for a lessening of Pakistani support for the Taliban?
Needless to say, the US tilt toward India has caused much anger
and bitterness in Pakistan's ruling elite. In a recent editorial,
the Pakistani English-language daily The Nation complained
that when it comes to human rights the US has a double standard.
While the US intervened militarily in Kosovo, it opposes Pakistan
intervening in Kashmir; yet India's treatment of the Kashmiri
Muslims is hardly any different from the treatment that Kosovo
Muslims received at the hands of Milosevic. The editorial
concluded by charging that the US has chosen to anoint India as
a regional policeman. Thus, longstanding friends
get dumped by the US and new favorites are adopted.
In India, meanwhile, the Stalinist parliamentary parties, the
Communist Party of India and the Communist Party of India (Marxist),
are denouncing India's caretaker coalition government for using
the Kashmir crisis to forge a new relationship with US imperialism.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the right-wing Hindu chauvinist
party that dominates the ruling coalition, has long favored closer
ties to the US. But the CPI and CPI (M) have themselves played
a critical role in creating conditions in which the Indian bourgeoisie
can effect a more open alliance with Wall Street and Washington
against the Indian masses. The Stalinist parties have joined the
rest of the opposition in appealing for national unity
against the Pakistani aggressors, ignoring the fact
that the India-Pakistan dispute is rooted in the sabotage, by
the Indian National Congress's bourgeois leadership, of the mass
anti-imperialist struggle that convulsed the subcontinent during
the first half of the century. Moreover, the Stalinists have supported
the Indian bourgeoisie's new economic policy, which
is aimed at making India a low-wage haven for foreign investors
and for aspiring Indian-owned transnationals.
See Also:
Failure of US diplomatic
mission brings ...
India and Pakistan closer to all-out war
[28 June 1999]
India-Pakistan
Conflict
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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