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Failure of US diplomatic mission brings ...
India and Pakistan closer to all-out war
By Keith Jones
28 June 1999
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India and Pakistan have moved closed to all-out war, following
the apparent failure of a US effort to broker an end to fighting
between Indian troops and Pakistani-backed forces in the Kargil-Dass-Batalik
region of Indian-held Kashmir.
On Friday, Indian Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee said India would
not run away from war, and that if war does erupt, India would
keep any territory it captures. The following day, in a speech
in the west Indian city of Pune, Vajpayee suggested Indian troops
may cross the Line of Control (LoC) that separates Indian and
Pakistani Kashmira strategy he had ruled out just two days
before.
Over the weekend, India intensified its efforts to dislodge
the Pakistani-organized force that has taken up positions along
mountain ridges overlooking the highway that links Srinagar, the
capital of Jammu and Kashmir, with the eastern Ladakh region,
sending both planes and ground troops into action.
Security forces in both countries are on high alert and their
respective armies, air forces and navies have taken up strategic
positions along the length of their common border and in the Arabian
Sea.
US seeks to prevail on Pakistan to withdraw
A US delegation led by the Commander-in-Chief of the US Central
Command, General Anthony Zinni, visited Pakistan last Thursday
and Friday and met with top military commanders and Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif. According to US State Department spokesman James
Rubin, the US delegation told the Pakistani authorities they should
bring about the withdrawal of forces supported by Pakistan
from the Indian side of control. Rubin's statement was the
strongest public support the US has given to the Indian position
that Pakistan has masterminded the current intrusion on the Indian-side
of the LoC.
Pakistani political and military leaders have dismissed the
appeal of their traditional ally and arms-supplier, insisting
that an end to the current fighting must be tied to a definite
timetable for Indo-Pakistani talks on sovereignty over Kashmir.
Moreover, the Pakistanis are demanding that provision be made
for United Nations or other outside intervention in the Kashmir
dispute in the likely event bilateral talks fail.
Situations like Kargil will continue to erupt,
affirmed Sharif, as long as the 52-year Indo-Pakistani dispute
over Kashmir remains unresolved. A Pakistani military spokesman,
meanwhile, accused the US of taking a narrow view
of the current conflict. The US line of thinking,
he declared, encourages India to talk of war.
Indian military and political leaders were, for their part,
quick to dismiss any suggestions that withdrawal of the Pakistani-supported
forces to positions on the Pakistani-side of the LoC be tied to
talks on Kashmir. Home Minister L.K. Advani flatly denied India
was considering an offer of free passage for the intruders.
On Sunday, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Gibson Lampher
met in New Delhi with India's External Affairs Minister Jawant
Singh and National Security Council Secretary Brajesh Mishra.
Lampher, who had accompanied Zinni on his trip to Islamabad, denied
he had brought an offer of a Pakistani withdrawal. In deference
to India, which is extremely sensitive about any action that could
be seen as internationalizing the Kashmir question,
Lampher said he had come to India not to mediate, but only to
brief Indian leaders on the US mission to Islamabad.
Nevertheless, the US is clearly actively seeking a means to
defuse the crisis. According to a report in Sunday's Washington
Post, Zinni was dispatched to Islamabad after President Clinton
received a letter from Vajpayee warning that the heavy casualties
India is taking in trying to recapture strategic positions on
its side of the LoC may compel it to strike militarily inside
Pakistan. Such action could well spark all-out war, and between
states with proven nuclear missile capability.
The Indian press has noted that Washington has not tied its
calls for Pakistan to adhere to the current LoC with any threats
of sanctions or other reprisals. But the Pakistani daily Dawn
reports Washington has indicated things may get
bad for Pakistan if it does not bow to US wishes, and the
Washington Post has said the US could hold up a $100 million
loan from the International Monetary Fund that Pakistan is slated
to receive next month. (Last year, the US and other Western countries
relaxed the sanctions they had imposed on Pakistan after it responded
to Indian nuclear tests with tests of its own, because they feared
Pakistan would be unable to meet its debt payments and that this
could provoke economic and political turmoil.)
Conflicts over how to respond to the US may account for the
apparent differences that have surfaced between Sharif and Chief
of Army Staff General Pervez Musharraf in the wake of Zinni's
visit. On Saturday Musharraf said efforts were underway to arrange
a meeting between Clinton and Sharif, but the state-run television,
which is controlled by Sharif, made no mention of such an initiative.
Earlier Musharraf had given Pakistan's first implicit acknowledgment
that it controls the anti-Indian forces fighting in Kargil-Dass-Batalik,
when he told reporters that it is the Prime Minister's decision
as to whether they will be withdrawn. He then added pointedly,
we will not withdraw unilaterally. According to a
London Sunday Times report, Pakistan's generals scuttled
a government proposal for a phased withdrawal. It is widely suspected
that the current incursion across the LoC was mounted by the Pakistani
military, which provided the country's government for much of
the past four decades, without the knowledge of civilian authorities.
Whatever the true nature of the differences between Pakistan's
civilian and military leaders, both have engaged in saber-rattling,
including implied threats of nuclear war. On Thursday, Sharif
told Pakistani troops near the LoC in the Pakistani state of Azad
Kashmir that, nuclear and missile technology has given us
great courage.
Vajpayee flip flops on complying with LoC
No less belligerent statements have come from India's political
and military elite. On Friday, Kushabhau Thakre, president of
the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the dominant party in India's
caretaker coalition, all but dared Pakistan to launch a nuclear-first
strike on India. Let Pakistan do it, he said in answer
to a question as to whether India should retaliate if Pakistan
used nuclear weapons against India. It will face the music.
Earlier last week, Organizer, the newspaper of the Rashtriya
Swayam Sewak Sangh (RSS)a Hindu chauvinist organization
from which much of the BJP's cadre are drawnpublished an
editorial suggesting India should launch a nuclear strike against
Pakistan.
In an apparent attempt to dampen the war fervor gripping much
of India's elite, including many of his own ministers, Vajpayee
declared Thursday that India had no plans to cross the LoC. But
by Saturday, he was saying such action could not be ruled out.
The media, said Vajpayee, keeps asking me this
question and it is a difficult question to answer now. We will
take the right decision at the right time.
Although Indian forces have been engaging the pro-Pakistani
force in the Kargil-Dass-Batalik region for eight weeks and have
subjected them to almost daily aerial bombardment for the past
month, they have been unable to sever their opponent's supply
lines. Shelling by Pakistani troops in Pakistani-held Azad Kashmir
has hampered India's counter-offensive (both sides routinely shell
the other's positions across the LoC.) And the rocky, barren terrain
means any assault on the intruders mountain-top bunkers
carries the risk of heavy casualties. According to Indian Defence
Minister George Fernandes, India's military may require until
September to complete the expulsion of the pro-Pakistani force.
The Indian military's difficulties in bringing operation Vijay
(Victory) to a speedy conclusion have prompted intense speculation
that India will either attack the bases in Azad Kashmir that are
supplying the intruders or open a second front elsewhere.
Adding to the volatility of the situation is the approach of the
monsoon season. Heavy rains, which are expected to begin in three
to four weeks, would make it difficult for Indian troops to mount
a counter-strike in most border areas, thus increasing the pressure
for a speedy decision on whether to continue adhering to the LoC.
See Also:
India-Pakistan
Conflict
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Fascistic
movement plays critical role in India's ruling coalition
India: the BJP-RSS Nexus
[20 June 1998]
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