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Attack on Indian parliament heightens danger of Indo-Pakistan
war
By Peter Symonds
20 December 2001
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Tensions between India and Pakistan are rapidly escalating
in the wake of the December 13 attack on the Indian parliament
in New Delhi. Five gunmen armed with automatic rifles, grenades
and explosives killed nine people and wounded others before being
killed themselves in a 45-minute battle with security forces outside
the parliamentary building.
In a speech to parliament on Tuesday, Indian Home Minister
L K Advani blamed the attack on two Kashmiri separatist groupsJaish-e-Mohammed
and Lashkar-e-Taibaand accused Pakistans Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI) of being involved. He described the incident
as the most alarming act of terrorism in the history of
two decades of Pakistan-sponsored terrorism in India, accusing
the terrorists and their mentors of trying to
wipe out the entire political leadership of India.
Advani, a hard-line member of the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP), did not spell out Indias response but
his bellicose comments were certainly aimed at justifying military
retaliation. In the immediate aftermath of the attack last week,
Advani declared: We will liquidate the terrorists and their
sponsors whoever they are, wherever they are.
An intense debate is underway in Indian ruling circles over
a military strike against separatist training camps in Pakistan-held
Kashmir. Such an Indian attackthe first of its kindwould
certainly provoke a sharp reaction from Pakistan, posing the danger
of war between the two nuclear-armed powers. India and Pakistan
have already fought three wars since independence in 1947, two
of them over the disputed territory of Kashmir. In 1998, both
countries conducted nuclear tests and in 1999 went to the brink
of war over the incursion of armed Kashmiri separatists in the
Kargil area of Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir.
The head of Pakistans military junta, General Pervez
Musharraf, condemned the attack on the Indian parliament but warned
against any precipitous action by the Indian government
against Pakistan. This would lead to very serious repercussions.
Pakistan denied any involvement in the attack and, at least initially,
implied that India may have stage-managed the incident
for its own political purposes.
India has formally demanded that Pakistan shut down the offices
of the Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba groups, arrest their
leaders and freeze their assets. Last weekend, Advani said India
would watch for a few days, implying that retaliation
against Pakistan would be swift if its demands were not met. Musharraf
has insisted on India providing proof before Pakistan takes any
action against the Kashmiri groups. Many of the armed Kashmiri
organisations have close connections with the Pakistani military,
but none have claimed responsibility for the attack.
At a meeting of the BJPs parliamentary group on Tuesday,
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee warned that India would mete
out punishment after investigating the dastardly crime,
adding that the punishment will be as big as the crime.
Speaking to parliament yesterday, he bluntly declared: The
topic of the discussion should be whether or not there should
be war and under what circumstances. India would use diplomacy
as a weapon, but other options are open.
Vajpayee is under pressure to take swift action, which undoubtedly
has the support of significant sections of the military establishment.
Over the past week, the BJP and associated Hindu extremist organisations
have been clamouring for military strikes against Pakistan. BJP
spokesman Vijay Kumar Malhotra met the prime minister last Friday
and urged the government to take action similar to the US war
on Afghanistan. The government should think of pro-active
hot pursuit and target the terrorist training camps in Pakistan-occupied
Kashmir, he said.
Bal Thackeray, leader of the fascistic Shiv Sena, which is
part of the ruling National Democratic Alliance, said the Indian
government should strike with an iron hand on the evil designs
of terrorists. A spokesman for the Rashtriya Swayayamsewak
Sangh (RSS), which has previously called on the government to
eliminate terrorists and their training camps in Pakistan-occupied
Kashmir, appealed to all parties to support the fight against
terrorism. Both Vajpayee and Advani are longstanding RSS
members.
Significantly, the main opposition party, Congress (I), has
given a cautious green light for Indian military strikes across
the Line of Control (LoC) that separates the Indian- and Pakistan-held
areas of Kashmir. Congress spokesman Jaipal Reddy declared that
the party would support any well-considered step,
adding that it was up to the government to take a strategic
decision on whether terrorist camps running across the LoC
should be attacked.
Support for an aggressive military response is not unanimous
within Indian ruling circles. An editorial in the Hindu
newspaper, for instance, warned of the risk of all-out war: [A]s
the Vajpayee administration evaluates the strategic options before
it, the people of India must not lose sight of their situational
dilemma that a heightened terror-specific war with hot pursuit
and cross border attacks carries with it the danger of turning
into a fullscope war with Pakistan.
Doubts have also been raised about the evidence linking the
two Kashmiri groups to the December 13 attack on parliament. An
Indian intelligence officer told the New York Times: I
think they were too fast to identify Lashkar-e-Taiba. He
believed that Jaish-e-Muhammad was involved but explained that
the evidence against Lashkar came from intercepted radio communications
between various groups in the Kashmir Valley. On the basis that
Lashkar networks were being told not to claim responsibility,
Indian intelligence concluded that it was involved. None of the
evidence has been made public.
According to a report in the Hindu News Update Service,
former Indian Prime Minister V P Singh has accused Vajpayee of
failing to act despite having prior information of an attack in
the capital. The Central government had specific information
from Intelligence agencies and the Mumbai Police Commissioner
had also given a special message. All this information goes to
[the] Prime Minister. Even with [the] Prevention of Terrorism
Ordinance, they could not do anything, he said.
The US response
Despite the obvious dangers of a full-scale war between India
and Pakistan, the Vajpayee government is beholden to Hindu extremist
groups, such as Shiv Sena and the RSS, who are baying for military
action regardless of the consequences. In Pakistan, Musharraf,
having already been pushed by the US to take action against the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan, is under pressure from Islamic
fundamentalists to make no concessions to India. In both countries,
communalist sentiment is being exploited to divert attention from
growing economic problems and rising social tensions.
In this highly volatile political situation, the most destabilising
factor is the Bush administration. In prosecuting its war against
Afghanistan, the US has thrown the entire region into turmoil.
Over the past three months, Washington has pursued its strategic
and economic interests in Central Asia with reckless indifference
to the consequences in Afghanistan or on the subcontinent. In
the name of defeating terrorism and terrorist-sponsoring
states, the so-called Bush doctrine has now established
the precedent for countries such as India to take unilateral action
and engage in their own military adventures.
Those in the Indian parliament and media pushing for military
action all justify their demands by pointing to the US-led global
war on terrorism and Washingtons support for the Sharon
governments attacks on Palestinians. BJP MP Srichand Kripalani
declared last week: The government should do what America
has done in Afghanistan and what Israel is doing in Palestine.
The government should not shy away from attacking Pakistan, if
involvement is proved.
The initial US responses to the December 13 attack on the Indian
parliament were viewed in New Delhi as giving tacit backing for
Indian military strikes inside Pakistan. The Bush administration
stated last Friday that it expected India to take appropriate
action after determining responsibility for the horrible
acts. As the Times of India noted, the statement
did not contain the call for restraint that accompanied
previous terrorist attacks on India.
Significantly the US ambassador to India, Robert Blackwill,
drew a direct comparison between the attacks in India and the
US: The tragic event that occurred yesterday and that was
perpetrated by terrorists was no different in its objective from
the terror attacks in the US on September 11. From these
comments, New Delhi could only conclude that Washington was giving
the green light for actions along the lines of the US war against
Afghanistan.
In later comments, US Secretary of State Colin Powell pulled
back somewhat, urging India to exercise restraint and warning
that the situation could spiral out of control. In
similar vein, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer yesterday appealed
for India and Pakistan to step back. This is not a reason
for India and Pakistan to take action against each other,
he said. This is a time for India and Pakistan to take action
against the terrorists.
But the very manner in which the Bush administration frames
the issue places the onus on Pakistan to act against groups which
up until now it has defended as freedom fighters.
As in the case of the Middle East or Afghanistan, Washington willfully
ignores the history of Kashmir and the subcontinent as well as
the political and social conditions that have given rise to armed
separatist groups such as Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba.
The bitter dispute over Kashmir has its roots in the reactionary
division of the Indian subcontinent along communal lines in 1947.
The partition virtually guaranteed conflict over the status of
Kashmira princely state with a Hindu ruler and a Muslim
majority. The first war between India and Pakistan was fought
shortly after independence when the Hindu Maharaja adhered to
India amid a Pakistan-backed revolt against his rule. The present
division of Kashmir along the Line of Control stems from that
time. Militant Kashmiri groups demanding either independence or
adherence to Pakistan began to emerge in the late 1980s, in response
to Indias chronic underdevelopment of Kashmir and the rise
of communal organisations in both India and Pakistan.
By insisting that Pakistan take action against Kashmiri terrorist
organisations, without addressing any of the outstanding political
issues, the Bush administration is tacitly strengthening the hand
of the right-wing Vajpayee government, which in turn will only
encourage it to undertake reckless military adventures.
Shifting alliances
Washingtons backing for India is part of a wider shift
away from its Cold War ally, Pakistan, that began under the Clinton
administration and strengthened with the installation of Bush.
In the immediate aftermath of September 11, the Bush administration
did, however, require Pakistans assistance. Washington forced
the Musharraf regime to abandon the Taliban regime and provide
military support for the US war against Afghanistan.
The abrupt US turn back towards Islamabad raised concerns in
New Delhi that Washington was retreating from closer ties with
India. Those fears were heightened when, in the aftermath of a
bomb attack on the Kashmir Assembly building on October 1, Washington
insisted India take no retaliatory action. At the time, Vajpayee
took the unusual step of writing directly to Bush, warning that,
Pakistan must understand that there is a limit to the patience
of the people of India.
Now that the Taliban regime has collapsed, US interest in propping
up the Musharraf regime appears to be waning. The Bush administration
seems more intent on extracting as much as possible from Pakistan,
while strengthening its ties with rival India. Even as the US
is backing away from some of its promises of financial assistance
to Pakistan, Musharraf is intent on ingratiating himself to Washington.
Last week the Pakistani leader approved the turning over of the
Jacobabad military air base to the US on a long-term basis and
with reduced Pakistani supervision.
Over the last month, however, the US has been quietly extending
its military and intelligence cooperation with India through a
series of high level visits and meetings. In late November, Admiral
Dennis Blair, head of the US Pacific Command, stated in New Delhi
that Washington was seeking a robust US-India defence relationship
of a kind unprecedented in our bilateral history. He indicated
that military cooperation could include combined special operations,
joint military training, small unit ground and air exercises,
and navy personnel exchanges.
In early December, Richard Haass, the US official coordinating
policy on Afghanistan, met with all the senior Indian officials
involved in security matters and concluded that there is
no daylight between the positions held by the US and Indian governments
when it comes to Afghanistan. Last week, the India-US defence
cooperation group concluded that the two countries share
strategic interests in Asia and would engage in joint counter-terrorism
initiatives.
An article in the Indian-based Frontline magazine noted:
Home Ministry sources have confirmed that the US and India
have agreed to upgrade their intelligence sharing arrangement
to include the exchange of military intelligence....
According to reports in the US media, India is among the 50 countries
that provide intelligence to the US at the behest of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA).
There is no doubt that the developing alliance between India
and the US is encouraging Vajpayee to take a more belligerent
stance towards Pakistan. Moreover, the fall of the Taliban regimePakistans
proxy in Afghanistanand its replacement by an interim government
dominated by the Northern Alliance, which has received backing
from New Delhi, also strengthens Indias position. The Vajpayee
government was obviously delighted that three top Afghani ministers
have chosen to make their first visits to India.
India may not have stage-managed the attack on
the parliament building, as Pakistan contended. But the right-wing
Vajpayee government clearly calculates that the time is opportune
to press home its advantage against rival Pakistanwith or
without the explicit approval of the Bush administration, and
regardless of the potentially catastrophic consequences of its
actions.
See Also:
US secretary of state's visit
to Pakistan and India fails to quell tensions
[26 October 2001]
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