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WSWS : News
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: Indian
subcontinent
Kashmir crisis at the boil
Amid preparations for a new military offensive, India puts
off talks with Pakistan
By Keith Jones
7 June 1999
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this version to print
Over the weekend India rejected a Pakistani proposal that its
Foreign Minister Sartaj Aziz visit New Delhi today, June 7, to
discuss the current Kashmir crisis. It also began barring all
civilians, including journalists, from using the northern Kargil
highwaythe key artery in the mountainous region where Indian
troops and a Pakistani-backed Kashmiri secessionist force have
been engaged in heavy fighting since early May.
Both moves are seen as heralding a new Indian ground offensive
aimed at dislodging the anti-Indian force that entered the Indian
state of Jammu and Kashmir from Pakistani-held Azad
(Free) Kashmir and now occupies strategic heights in the Drass
and Kargil sectors, several thousand meters beyond the Line of
Control (LOC) demarcating Pakistani and Indian Kashmir. Indian
troops were consolidating the recent gains from where further
operations will be launched soon, Army spokesman Brigadier
Mohan Bhandari told a press conference Saturday.
On May 31 India agreed in principle to a visit by Aziz, but
the two sides have been unable to settle on a date. The only explanation
given by India for rejecting June 7th was that it was inconvenient.
Speaking in Lahore shortly after India had announced the postponement
of Aziz's visit, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif warned
events could easily spin out of control. Chances of a war
between Pakistan and India cannot be ruled out, declared
Sharif. Kashmir was the principal issue in two of the three wars
India and Pakistan have fought in their 52 years as independent
states.
Earlier last week, Pakistani Foreign Secretary Shamshad Ahmad
made an implicit threat of a nuclear strike against India, when
he declared that Pakistan would not refrain from using any
weapon in its arsenal to uphold its territorial integrity.
India claims that it has killed some 200 infiltrators
since May 9 and reports 54 of its own troops killed, 14 missing
and 209 wounded.
A combustible political situation
Throughout the 1990s, Indian security forces have been engaged
in a fierce struggle against Pakistani-supported, and in many
cases Pakistani-armed, Kashmiri secessionists, some of who favor
an independent Kashmir and others who seek a united
Kashmir within Pakistan. Estimates on the numbers killed in the
conflict vary widely, but 10,000-15,000 is considered a conservative
figure. Nevertheless, the current Indo-Pakistani tensions over
Kashmir are the most acute since the early 1990s.
Whatever the exact composition of the Kashmiri secessionist
force now fighting on the Himalayan ridges of the Kargil-Dass
region, its size and the inhospitable locale of its operations
are such that it had to have had Pakistani logistical support.
India claims it has incontrovertible proof that Pakistani troops
are involved in the incursion in the form of the bodies of three
Pakistani soldiers. It also alleges that an Indian pilot whose
MIG fighter was shot down by Pakistani troops after allegedly
entering Pakistani airspace was murdered on capture by Pakistani
security forces, and that a second pilot whom the Pakistanis captured
was harshly treated during more than a week of captivity.
India has taken great exception to a statement made by Aziz
last week that the LOC is ill-defined, seeing it as a thinly-disguised
justification for the intrusion and an indication Pakistani troops
may overtly intervene to prevent the destruction of the anti-Indian
force in the Kargil-Dass region. A Pakistani General on the LOC
frontline, where Indian and Pakistani forces are regularly exchanging
artillery fire, told journalists India and Pakistan are already
at war. "There was a war in 1948, 1965, 1971 and now it is
in 1999," affirmed Brigadier Nusrat Khan Sial. Let
them attack and we will retaliate."
Adding to the combustibility of the situation is the weakness
and crisis of both the Indian and Pakistani governments. India's
coalition government, which is led by the Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya
Janata Party, is a caretaker regime that remains in power only
until India goes to the polls next fall. Pakistan is in the throes
of a wrenching economic crisis.
The Indian political opposition has seized on statements by
Defence Minister George Fernandes to try to prove that they are
more hawkish on the Kashmir conflict than the government. To the
dismay of Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee and Home Minster L.K. Advani,
Fernandes said Sharif may not have known about the incursion in
Kashmir. (There have been suggestions the Pakistani military orchestrated
the Kashmir intrusion as part of a powerplay against Sharif, who
has sought to reduce the generals' political power.) Then Fernandes
indicated India might be willing to allow the Pakistani
intruders safe passage back to the other side of the LOC.
The main opposition party and India's traditional governing party,
the Congress, has accused Fernandes of "being more concerned
about the well-being of the aggressors than the defence of the
nation.
When the Kashmir incursion first emerged as a major issue,
the Communist Party of India (Marxist) demanded to know how the
government had allowed such a situation to develop, suggesting
the government might have ignored early warnings in the belief
that it could reap political gains out of a confrontation with
Pakistan. But the CPI (M) and the other major Stalinist parliamentary
party, the Communist Party of India (CPI), have quickly fallen
into line. The CPI (M) has strongly criticized Fernandes for his
"irresponsible" statements, saying they serve only to
divide Indians at a time when the entire country and all political
parties are behind the government in resisting Pakistan.
The role of the United States
An important factor in India's decision to delay opening negotiations
with Pakistan may well be the position the US has taken on the
latest Kashmir crisis. For decades Pakistan has been a close ally
of the US. But with the end of the Cold War and India's repudiation
of its longstanding national economic strategy, the geopolitical
dynamics of South Asia are in flux.
The US Ambassador to India, Richard Celeste, has made several
statements which, in light of traditional US views on South Asia,
are highly favorable to India. The US, Celeste told
the Sunday Observer, will never interfere (in Kashmir).
Never. Kashmir is an issue which can only be settled by peaceful
talks between the two countries, without any intervention. The
US realizes this.
For decades the US supported Pakistan's demand that a plebiscite
be held to determine Kashmir's future, but in 1990 the then-US
Ambassador to Pakistan said that the US government no longer
urges a plebiscite on Kashmir as contained in UN resolutions of
1948 and 1949.
India is also claiming that letters US President Clinton sent
to both the Indian and Pakistani Prime Ministers Saturday support
India's position. The text of the letters have not been made public,
but Indian spokesmen claim that in calling for a peaceful resolution
to the Kashmir dispute, Clinton urged Pakistan to respect the
LOC.
As is the case with other regional conflicts, the Western media
present the Kashmir dispute as rooted in primordial communal and
national-ethnic identities. In fact, the Kashmir conflict is a
legacy of India's colonial domination and has endured largely
part because it has become enmeshed in imperialist power politics.
In seeking to combat the rise of Indian nationalism, the British
over many decades promoted a separate Muslim political consciousness
and ultimately partitioned the subcontinent along communal lines,
thus creating antagonistic statesa Muslim Pakistan and a
predominantly Hindu India. The British also sought to maintain
their rule by sustaining some 600 princely states that were subordinate
to British interests, but constitutionally had a semi-feudal,
vassal-type relation to the British Raj. Jammu and Kashmir, whose
pre-independence borders were the product of British colonial
brigandry and diplomacy, was the largest territorially of these
princely states. As today, the princely state of Kashmir united
several geographically and ethnically distinct regions.
Up until weeks before the August 1947 transfer of power, the
British maintained that the princely states would revert to their
natural state of independence, when British (as opposed
to Princely) India became independent. Encouraged by the British
stance, the Maharaja of Kashmir maneuvered in the hopes of transforming
his principality into an independent state. But when Pakistan
fomented a rebellion against him, the Hindu ruler agreed to Kashmir's
accession to India.
In the decade prior to India's independence and partition,
the Indian National Congress enjoyed close relations with the
Kashmir's largest political organization, the Kashmiri National
Conference. It had begun as an exclusively Muslim organizationKashmir's
royal family and the landowning elite on which it rested were
predominantly Hindubut, under the influence of the Congress,
the National Conference evolved a non-communal program of democratic
and social reform. Yet Kashmir's accession to India was ultimately
realized not through a mass mobilization from below, but rather
through a deal with the Maharaja which was predicated on the Congress
having become the successoror at least the principal inheritorof
the state machinery of the British Raj.
Subsequently, the Kashmir conflict became embroiled in the
Cold War, with the US emerging as the primary military and economic
backer of Pakistan. A significant factor in the rise of an armed
secessionist movement in Kashmir over the last decade was the
political and military support the US gave to the Muslim fundamentalist
opposition to the Soviet intervention in nearby Afghanistan.
Bordering China and the former Soviet Union, Kashmir is of
great strategic value. But the Kashmir question is also bound
up with the political-ideological foundations of bourgeois rule
in both Pakistan and India.
Unlike Bangladesh (the former East Pakistan), Kashmir, the
only majority Muslim state in the current Indian Union, was considered
an integral part of the Pakistan project from its inception in
the early 1930s. In recent years, the Kashmiri conflict has become
a vital means for Pakistani rulers to counterbalance mounting
national-ethnic tensions within Pakistan as privileged layers
among the Pathans, Baluchis, Sindis, and the Urdu-speakers who
moved to Pakistan from north India following partition challenge
Pakistan's predominantly Punjabi elite for greater power.
Having proven incapable of providing a progressive solution
to India's myriad problems, the Indian ruling class has increasingly
turned to Hindu communalism. This retrograde ideology serves to
deflect social tensions and provides an alternative national
ideology to discredited Congress socialism with which
to resist a growing number of national-ethnic and communal insurgencies
that, because of endemic poverty and gross social inequality,
have been able to gain popular support.
See Also:
Fighting escalates in Kashmir
A dangerous confrontation between India and Pakistan
[28 May 1999]
Congress power bid fails
India to hold mid-term elections
[3 May 1999]
Pakistan
explodes nuclear device
Gathering war clouds in South Asia
[30 May 1998]
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