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Danger of India-Pakistan war remains high despite peace gestures
By Vilani Peiris and Sarath Kumara
13 June 2002
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Over the past few days, India and Pakistan have taken several
small steps to reduce the current state of extreme military tension
a notch or two. The danger of war, however, remains high, with
more than a million heavily-armed troops confronting each other
along the border. The gestures towards peace have been in response
to direct pressure from Washington, including visits to the Indian
subcontinent by two top US officials over the last week.
Last Friday, US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
informed the Indian government that he had extracted a promise
from Pakistans military ruler General Pervez Musharraf that
he would permanently and immediately put a stop to
cross-border terrorism. In return, Musharraf via Armitage
urged India to take reciprocal steps to wind back the military
confrontation.
In a phone conversation with US Secretary of State Colin Powell,
Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh declared that Musharrafs
statement was a step forward in the right direction
and that India would respond appropriately and positively. Indian
officials also stated for the first time that their intelligence
reports indicated a decline in the number of militants crossing
the Line of Control (LoC) between the Pakistani- and Indian-controlled
areas of Kashmir.
New Delhi has repeatedly blamed Islamabad for instigating terrorist
attacks by armed Islamic groups opposed to Indias
control of the disputed state of Jammu and Kashmir. The present
military build-up followed an attack on the Indian parliament
building on December 13. After a further attack on an Indian army
base inside Jammu and Kashmir on May 14, the Indian government
of Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee threatened to strike at
targets inside Pakistan-controlled Kashmira move that carries
the danger of all-out war.
On Sunday, India announced the lifting of a ban on Pakistani
flights over Indian air space, put in place after the December
13 attack. There is no resumption of air, bus or rail links between
the two countries, however. The Indian navy has also pulled its
warships back from areas adjoining Pakistani territorial waters
to Bombay and other west coast naval bases. But it is yet to decide
whether to return five extra warships that were transferred from
bases on the east coast.
The Indian government also announced on Monday the appointment
of a new ambassador to Pakistan. The previous top diplomat was
withdrawn last December and, following the May attack in Jammu
and Kashmir, India expelled Pakistans ambassador in New
Delhi.
All of these measures are, however, largely cosmetic. In announcing
the recall of Indian warships, a naval officer declared that the
countrys army and air force continue to maintain a high
state of operational readiness. Pakistan Brigadier Istikhar
Ali Khan told the New York Times this week:[S]o far,
there is no change across the Line of Control. Its as volatile
as it was two to three weeks ago. It remains highly explosive
and dangerous.
New Delhi and Islamabad are both under pressure from hard-line
religious communalists to maintain their aggressive military stance.
Inside Vajpayees own Hindu chauvinist Bharathiya Janatha
Party (BJP), Home Minister L. K. Advani has, according to the
Times of India, ruled out any bold moves towards
a diplomatic solution such as a high-level summit. A senior Home
Ministry official said Advani believed that Pakistan must
stop infiltration, tear down the camps and stop the violence inside
Kashmir before India reciprocates.
Musharraf is also under considerable pressure from Islamic
extremists and the sections of the military who regard any concession
to India as treason. Over the past decade Pakistan has politically
supported the actions of anti-Indian militia groups as freedom
fighters seeking to liberate Kashmir with its Muslim majority
from Indian control. On Monday, three retired generals joined
dozens of Islamic leaders and clerics in a meeting in Islamabad
to condemn Musharrafs stance on Kashmir.
Hafiz Abdul Rahman Makki, a senior official of the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba
group, attacked the Pakistani leader declaring: This is
a very critical time. It is our religious obligation to help the
Kashmiri people. The government has taken a U-turn and a step
back over the Kashmir policy... We should resist these steps.
Significantly, General Hamid Gul, a former head of the Interservices
Intelligence (ISI), Pakistans powerful military intelligence
agency, was also present. If the West really wants to crush
the jihad, then they should just give the right of self-determination
to the Kashmiri people and finish it, he said.
Plans for a US-British force in Kashmir
While it insists that it wants an end to the military confrontation
between India and Pakistan, the Bush administration has been instrumental
in creating the tensions. The Vajpayee government seized on the
US invasion of Afghanistan to call for Pakistan to be branded
a terrorist-sponsoring country and for Kashmir to
be included in Bushs global war on terrorism.
Washington is clearly concerned that a war would cut across its
own plans in the region, but at the same time is using the situation
to advance its interests.
The most significant step is a proposal to send US and British
troops to Kashmir in the guise of peace-keepers to
conduct joint patrols with Indian and Pakistani troops and to
monitor activity along the Line of Control. The British-based
Independent reported last week that Rumsfeld would propose
a joint US-British military monitoring force of about
500 troops during meetings with Indian and Pakistani leaders.
Rumsfeld was deliberately vague about discussions with Vajpayee
and senior Indian ministers including Defence Minister George
Fernandes, Foreign Minister Singh, Home Minister Advani and chief
security advisor, Brajesh Mishra. But he did concede in response
to questions: Yes that subject (joint patrolling) did come
up. We reached no conclusions. It is a subject that needs to be
discussed and thought about.
US officials are proposing not only soldiers but the possibility
of putting hi-tech electronic and other surveillance in place
to monitor activity along the Line of Control. Rumsfeld indicated
that meetings of experts from the US, UK, India and Pakistan had
been mooted to work out the protocols for the installation and
use of ground sensors in border areas.
A comment in the Washington Post on June 11 indicated
the extent of what is being discussed in the US political and
military establishment. To show that it is serious about
stabilising the Line of Control, the United States should provide
India with state-of-the-art ground based and airborne surveillance
equipment to enable New Delhi to detect infiltration and stop
it... To have a decisive impact, US surveillance help would also
have to include sophisticated airborne radar scanners and night-vision
video cameras...
The article proposed a further step. If US surveillance
assistance to India did not deter Pakistan-sponsored infiltration,
the United States could then escalate its help by leasing the
Predator aircraft to New Delhi and sharing the results of US spy
satellite monitoring along the Line of Control. It should
be noted that the unmanned Predator drones used in Afghanistan
are not just used for passive surveillance. Armed with anti-tank
missiles, they can be used for assassinations and attacks.
Previously India has opposed any international intervention
in Kashmir, insisting it was an internal matter. But the current
US proposals are being quietly welcomed in New Delhi. Neither
Vajpayee nor any of his top ministers have ruled out the plan.
An editorial in the Times of India on June 12 pointed out
that Indian defence analysts were increasingly talking about US
intervention in Kashmir with approval, saying India
can only gain from this.
There were some signs, as Rumsfeld departed for Pakistan yesterday,
that the US may have plans for a more far-reaching intervention
in Kashmir. The US Defence Secretary repeated claims by other
US officials that Al Qaeda guerrillas driven out of Afghanistan
had moved into Kashmir. I have seen indications that Al
Qaeda is operating near the Line of Control, Rumsfeld said,
then admitting: I have no hard evidence of who, how many
and where.
Rumsfelds unsubstantiated allegation could provide the
pretext for US troops, which are already operating in western
Pakistan, to demand access to the eastern areas of the country
and Pakistan-controlled Kashmir. India has already called for
the US troops to ensure that terrorist training camps
inside Pakistan are shut down. The Far Eastern Economic Review
recently quoted the US armys vice-chief of staff, General
John Keane, as saying that the US would go after Al Qaeda in Pakistan.
The US is proposing to put troops and advanced surveillance
equipment in Kashmir in the name of peacekeeping.
But the establishment of a military foothold in a key area of
the Indian subcontinent offers Washington broad possibilities
for electronic spying on neighbouring China and to link up with
US military bases recently established in neighbouring Central
Asia.
An article in the New York Times on June 10 noted that
the US intervention on the Indian subcontinent, particularly its
developing military alliance with India, was part of a far broader
strategy. In particular, it noted that discussions were taking
place in Washington over the possible use of India as a counterweight
to China.
Some senior officials saw a close American military relationship
with India, a developing, democratic nation of a billion people
with a million-member army, as a factor that would give pause
to a rising, autocratic China, if not now, then a decade or two
down the road when India has become richer and more powerful,
American officials say, the New York Times explained.
Far from bringing long-term peace to the region, the placement
of US troops and surveillance equipment in highly sensitive Kashmir
would only sow the seeds for a broader and more devastating conflict
that has the potential to drag in not only India and Pakistan
but China and other major regional powers.
See Also:
US-Indian military ties: an incendiary
factor in an unstable region
[10 June 2002]
Tense military standoff between India
and Pakistan continues
[5 June 2002]
Bush speaks at West Point: from containment
to "rollback"
[4 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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