|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Tense military standoff between India and Pakistan continues
By Vilani Peiris and Sarath Kumara
5 June 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The Indian and Pakistani armies remain poised along the border
in a high state of alert following a regional security summit
sponsored by Russian President Vladimir Putin over the past two
days. Artillery exchanges occurred between the two sides even
as Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf attended the 12-nation conference in the Kazakhstan
capital of Almaty.
No talks took place at the summit between the Indian and Pakistani
leaders. Vajpayee had ruled out any discussions in advance, insisting
that negotiations would only take place after cross-border
terrorism in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir halted.
India blames Pakistan for a decade of guerrilla warfare by various
armed Islamic groups opposed to Indian control over Kashmira
majority Muslim state. Vajpayee told the conference that Pakistan
had failed to halt cross-border infiltration and violence
has continued unabated in Kashmir.
Musharraf responded by repeating a promise not to allow Pakistani
territory to be used for any terrorist acts. He then
bitterly criticised Indian rule in Kashmir, declaring: Similarly
we cannot condone for any reason the rapacious policies of certain
states that forcibly occupy territories or deny freedom to peoples
for decades on end. While saying that Pakistan would not
start war, Musharraf declared: We will defend ourselves
with the utmost resolution and determination.
The latest escalation of tensions followed an attack by Kashmiri
separatists on an Indian army base in Jammu and Kashmir on May
14, in which 34 people including women and children were killed.
New Delhi has warned that its military will retaliate against
terrorist bases inside Pakistani-controlled Kashmira
move that could rapidly escalate into an all-out war between the
two nuclear-armed powers. More than one millions troops backed
by heavy armour, warplanes and missiles have confronted each other
along the border since December 13, when a group of Islamic militants
attacked the Indian parliament building in New Delhi.
Vajpayee declared in a television broadcast last week that
India should have responded militarily following the December
13 attack. He said the only reason holding India back at the time
was the pressure of world leaders. But Vajpayee added:
India wont follow the same advice now.
According to an article in the Washington Post last
weekend: An Indian military strike into Pakistani-held Kashmir
is being planned in New Delhi in the spirit of the new ethos of
hot preemption. While the newspaper did not
spell it out explicitly, the new ethos in New Delhi
derives from the Bush administration and its military invasion
of Afghanistan on the pretext of fighting terrorism.
While seeking to restrain New Delhi, in public at least, Washingtons
global war on terrorism has only encouraged India
to take a more aggressive stance against rival Pakistan.
Both sides are openly discussing the possibility of a nuclear
conflagration. In an interview in the Indian magazine Outlook,
Defence Secretary Yogendra Narain warned that in the event of
a Pakistani nuclear strike, India would retaliate with its nuclear
arsenal, ensuring widespread destruction on both sides. Pakistan,
which has far weaker conventional military forces, has not ruled
out the possibility of a first strike. Pakistans ambassador
to US, Maleeha Lodhi, responded to Narain by declaring that Indias
promises not to use nuclear weapons in a first strike were mere
oratory and propaganda with no meaning in an operational
sense.
The two countries have more than enough conventional weaponry
to cause massive destruction and loss of life. The Indian armed
forces have 1,263,000 personnel as compared to Pakistans
620,000. India has 730 combat aircraft, 27 surface warships and
16 submarines while Pakistan has 353, eight and 10 respectively.
The number and type of nuclear weapons held by each are closely
guarded secrets. According to the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute, however, India has between 25 and 40 nuclear
weapons and Pakistan between 15 and 20.
Underlying political weaknesses
The drive to war is being fuelled by the deep-going political
and social crisis in both countries. The two sides are exploiting
the conflict over Kashmir to shore up their weak political position
at home. Vajpayees chauvinist Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP)
has lost a series of state elections and recently faced a censure
motion of its role in anti-Muslim violence in the state of Gujarat.
The Asian Times website commented on May 31: If
the BJP is to come back to power in the next general elections
with an enhanced showing, then one of its best chances of doing
so is to try and cash in on anti-Pakistani jingoism, whose attraction
is potentially much wider than the double-edged appeal of the
nakedly anti-Muslim and anti-Islamic hatred it has shown in Gujarat.
The aggressive Indian stance has been encouraged by the Bush
administrations pressure on Pakistan to halt cross-border
terrorism. Last week Bush bluntly told Musharraf that he
must live up to his word and show results on
the ground. US Secretary of State Colin Powell told the
media: We are pressing President Musharraf very hard to
cease all infiltration activities. Washingtons stance
has been reinforced by a statement from G-8 leaders urging Pakistan
to take urgent action to stop anti-Indian fighters
crossing into Jammu and Kashmir.
Reports on US government planning for the possible evacuation
of 1,100 US troops and around 63,000 of its citizens from both
countries confirms that Washington has calculated the possibility
of war breaking out. The US has asked its non-essential embassy
staff to leave both countries and warned its citizens not to travel
there. Canada and Britain have advised their citizens to leave
India and Pakistan while the UN has issued the same instructions
to families of its staff in Pakistan and India. Japan and other
Western countries have warned their citizens not to visit India
and Pakistan.
US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage is currently
on the subcontinent for talks in both New Delhi and Islamabad.
He will be followed on June 9 by US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
who will meet with both Musharraf and Vajpayee. At the same time
as these diplomatic manoeuvres are taking place, however, the
US, Britain and other countries are warning of the danger of war
and preparing for an evacuation of their nationals from the region.
Since the military build-up last December, the Bush administration
has attempted to rein in Pakistan and India, concerned that a
war could upset its own operations in Afghanistan and elsewhere
in the region. But already there are elements in ruling circles
in Washington who are calling on the Bush administration to exploit
the situation to pursue US interests.
Jed Babbin, a former Deputy Undersecretary of Defence under
Bush senior, wrote in the rightwing Washington Times on
May 30 that one of the Kashmir separatist groups, Lashkar-e-Omar,
has links to the Taliban in Afghanistan. If their [Al Qaeda
and Taliban] presence can be confirmed, we and our allies should
ask Mr. Musharrafs permission to attack, and make clear
that we will not take no for an answer, he declared.
Unilateral US action would further destabilise Musharrafs
military dictatorship in Pakistan, which since September 11 has
been forced to break its links with the Taliban regime and to
crack down on Islamic extremist groups. These measures have created
deep rifts in the military and among Islamic fundamentalists who
previously constituted Musharrafs main bases of support.
The Guardian reported recently that despite the purges,
several hundred in the core of 2,500 ISI [Pakistans military
intelligence service] officers remain opposed to General Musharrafs
alliance with America.
Both sides have a great deal to lose politically if they back
away from the present military confrontation, which is why over
a million soldiers face each other along the Indo-Pakistan border.
See Also:
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
India and Pakistan back off
from war--temporarily
[24 May 2002]
India and Pakistan move to
the brink of war
[21 May 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |