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India rules out troop withdrawal from Pakistani border
By Vilani Peiris and Sarath Kumara
4 July 2002
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Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee grandly told the
press in Lucknow last Friday: There is no possibility of
war with Pakistan. The comment, however, flies in the face
of an announcement just days before by his Defence Minister George
Fernandes that the top-level Cabinet Committee on Security had
decided to maintain Indian troops on the Pakistan border until
October at least. Fernandes said there would be no scaling down
of the preparedness of the forces.
As a result, around a million heavily-armed Indian and Pakistani
troops continue to confront each other along the border in a high
state of alert. While the prospects of an immediate outbreak of
all-out war may have lessened a fraction in the past fortnight
because of international pressure, either side could seize upon
any incident to rapidly escalate tensions between the two nuclear-armed
powers.
Vajpayees remarks would not have reassured villagers
in border areas, who endure the daily artillery and mortar exchanges
or have fled their homes altogether. According to Pakistani officials,
seven people were injured last Saturday by an Indian barrage that
hit a remote settlement in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir some 80km
north of the city of Muzaffarabad. Another Pakistani was injured
and three homes damaged during Indian shelling on the Lipa Valley.
Although Indian and Pakistani officials say the level of shelling
has reduced somewhat, sporadic exchanges continue along the Line
of Control (LoC) dividing the Indian- and Pakistani-held regions
of disputed Kashmir. According to the Indian Defence Ministry,
more than 1,000 rounds are fired from small arms, mortars and
artillery every day. Official estimates put the number of civilians
and soldiers killed on both sides at nearly 150 since mid-May
when an attack by Kashmiri separatists on an Indian army base
threatened to precipitate military conflict.
Few of the estimated 150,000 people who fled their homes along
the border have returned. Pritam Singh told the press: I
am not sure we will survive if we were forced to go back.
A 60-year-old villager Shanti Devi said: I know we face
malnutrition and other discomforts in the [refugee] camps but
we are not ready to return to our homes unless we are sure that
the Pakistani guns have fallen silent for good.
While ruling out war, for the present at least, Vajpayee told
reporters in Lucknow he had little faith in promises made by Pakistani
military ruler General Pervez Musharraf to halt infiltration by
Islamic extremist militia into Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir.
The US has told us that the General has assured them he
would stop that permanently... But it is difficult to rely on
him. Vajpayee rejected the suggestion of talks with the
Pakistan President.
New Delhi is also maintaining pressure on Islamabad by strengthening
its military forces. Last Saturday India responded to a series
of Pakistani missile tests last month with one of its ownthe
test firing of a Russian-made Smerch rocket, which
has a range of 90km and can strike both air and land targets.
On the same day, Defence Secretary Yogendra Narain announced that
India was dramatically increasing its spending on military purchases
by 33 percent and shopping for a range of new equipment, including
radar, specialised missiles, airborne surveillance devices, and
night vision equipment.
An estimated 60,000 people have died in the decade-long guerrilla
war between Indian security forces and Islamic militia groups
opposed to Indian rule in Kashmir. New Delhi accuses the Pakistani
military of directly arming, training and controlling the cross-border
terrorists. Islamabad points to the lack of democratic rights
for Kashmirs Muslim majority and insists that it provides
only moral and political support to what it terms freedom
fighters.
Under pressure from the Bush administration, Musharraf has
promised to halt all terrorist activity from Pakistan-controlled
territorya concession that has been widely denounced by
Islamic fundamentalist groups in Pakistan. Several groups have
insisted that they will ignore any ban and continue to carry out
attacks on Indian security forces in Kashmir. Any such actions
will be seized upon by the Indian government, led by Vajpayees
Hindu chauvinist Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP), as a sign of
bad faith, providing the pretext for a new series of demands.
The Indian generals already claim that Musharraf has failed
to halt the infiltration of cross border terrorists.
Last weekend the Indian army claimed to have killed three suspected
militants after they crossed into Indian territorythe first
since Musharraf promised to halt infiltration. Brigadier Mahesh
Eranna, chief commander on the Line of Control, accused the Pakistani
military of directly assisting the guerrillas, declaring: The
infiltrators could have never managed to come close to the LoC
and cross it without the assistance of Pakistani troops across
Poonch and Mendhar.
A number of clashes have occurred inside Indian-controlled
Jammu and Kashmir over the past week. Indian police claimed on
Wednesday to have killed nine Kashmiri separatists in a series
of separate gunfights. Few details were made available as to who
initiated the shootouts. Over the weekend, the army raided a house
in the village of Angan Patri and shot dead two alleged guerrillas.
Indian police also cracked down on a protest in Srinagar, the
summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir, organised by the Jammu and
Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), an officially-permitted coalition
of groups opposed to Indian rule. The demonstration was in protest
against statements by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)a
Hindu extremist organisation closely connected to Vajpayees
BJPcalling for the carve-up of Jammu and Kashmir on a communal
basis. Police arrested the protest leader, JKLF Vice Chairman
Javid Mir.
Both Musharraf and Vajpayee preside over unstable administrations
that are wracked by political and economic problems and that are
beholden to communal extremist groups. The two governments have
a vested interest in maintaining a belligerent stance over disputed
Kashmir, which has sparked two of the three wars between the two
countries since 1947.
This highly volatile situation led the US Ambassador to India,
Robert Blackwill, to observe last Friday: The tensions have certainly
eased in the last few weeks... but the situation still remains
dangerous. Even though the crisis has subsided to some degree,
the structural elements that caused it are still in place.
It should be added that the Bush administration while urging
restraint, publicly at least, to suit its own immediate interests
and purposes in the region, has been the key factor in exacerbating
the tensions. Bushs global war on terrorism
and Washingtons developing military and strategic ties with
New Delhi have only encouraged Vajpayees government to take
a more aggressive stance against Indias long-time rival
Pakistan.
See Also:
Tense military standoff continues
between India and Pakistan
[28 June 2002]
India and Pakistan continue
to trade threats of war
[21 June 2002]
Danger of India-Pakistan war
remains high despite peace gestures
[13 June 2002]
US-Indian military ties: an
incendiary factor in an unstable region
[10 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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