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India and Pakistan continue to trade threats of war
By Sarath Kumara
21 June 2002
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Belligerent comments from both India and Pakistan have revealed
just how close the two countries have been to war over the last
month. Moreover, despite superficial moves to ease tensions, no
moves are being made to withdraw the one million heavily-armed
troops lined up along the border and no talks are planned. With
both governments susceptible to pressure from communal extremists,
any incident has the potential to catapult the region into military
conflict between the two nuclear-armed nations.
Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee told Dainik Jagran,
a Hindi-language newspaper, this week that India would have gone
to war with Pakistan, if Pakistans military ruler General
Pervez Musharraf had not promised to halt the infiltration of
armed Islamic militants into Indian-controlled Kashmir. His remarks,
reported in the New York Times, made clear that the Indian
government was willing to plunge the region into a nuclear conflict.
India was prepared for nuclear war, but we were confident
our neighbour would not resort to such madness, he said.
Musharraf, meanwhile, told a group of nuclear scientists and
engineers that Pakistans conventional and nuclear
capability together deter aggression. Referring to Pakistans
nuclear tests in 1998 and missile tests last month, he declared:
We were compelled to show then, in May 1998, that we were
not bluffing and in May 2002 again we were compelled to show that
we do not bluff. His remarks were immediately denounced
in New Delhi as further manifestations of Pakistani irresponsibility,
loose talk and undiluted hostility towards India.
These remarks reveal that neither side has stepped back an
inch. While there is an element of bluster in both camps as they
seek to appease chauvinist layers at home, the threats of nuclear
war have a logic of their own. Musharraf and Vajpayee are well
aware of the maxim: dont make threats you are not prepared
to carry out. With armies drawn up along the border in state of
high alert, even a minor conflict has the potential to rapidly
escalate into all-out war.
In his interview in the Dainik Jagran, Vajpayee admitted
the Pakistani army had implemented Indias demand to block
the infiltration of Kashmiri separatists. But he added: [T]here
is no hurry to withdraw from the border. There is no possibility
of dialogue between two countries. In a telephone conversation
on Wednesday, Vajpayee reportedly told his Malaysian counterpart
Mahathir Mohamad that India would wait to see if Musharraf kept
his promise to stop terrorism through concrete, visible
and permanent action on the ground.
The Indian government clearly feels that, by enlisting the
US and Britain in its own war on terrorism, it has
been able to compel Musharraf to make concessions. By maintaining
the pressure on Islamabad, New Delhi is hoping to make further
gains against rival Pakistan and to strengthen its hold in the
disputed region of Kashmir. Hard-line members of the ruling Hindu
chauvinist Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP) are already adding further
demands. Last Sunday, Indian Home Minister L.K. Advani insisted
that there would be no talks with Islamabad unless Musharraf shut
down terrorist camps in Pakistan-held Kashmir.
New Delhi feels encouraged by Washingtons support to
take a tough stance. As Advani noted: One major change in
last 10 days has been that the US, Britain and other coalition
members have said publicly and forcefully that Pakistan should
stop cross-border terrorism. As well as political support,
close military ties between India and the US have continued to
develop throughout the latest crisis.
Indias Chief of Air Staff S. Krishnaswamy left for Washington
yesterday for high-level talks, which will include planning for
a joint training exercise in Alaska later in the year. On Wednesday,
Defence Minister George Fernandes announced that India would take
up a US offer to place sophisticated electronic monitoring devices
along the Line of Control separating the Indian- and Pakistani-controlled
areas of Kashmir. An article in the Hindu last Friday revealed
that the US and Britain were exploring closer intelligence sharing
with India.
Spokesman for the Pakistani military regime, Rashid Qureshi,
responded to Indian demands by declaring: This talk of jihad
inside Azad Kashmir (Pakistan-held Kashmir) is sheer propaganda
by India. Islamabad has always denied giving anything more
than political support to armed Kashmiri groups, which it has
previously termed freedom fighters. Musharraf now
insists that he will halt all terrorism and, according
to Pakistani spokesmen, the training camps for various Islamic
extremist groups are being shut down. Islamabad has also announced
measures to control madrassas (Islamic religious schools). Under
the new laws, all schools will be registered and the teaching
of militancy and extremism is prohibited. Any clergy
found breaking the law faces stiff penalties.
Under fire from communal extremists
Both Musharraf and Vajpayee face criticism from the communal
extremists that form a base of support for their regimes. Islamic
fundamentalist groups have condemned Musharrafs concessions
to India as a betrayal of Kashmiri Muslims and threatened to defy
the military and continue to infiltrate fighters into Indian-controlled
Jammu and Kashmir. Others have called for Musharraf to go. [See:
Karachi bomb blast highlights Pakistani
regime's political crisis]
Vajpayee has been under fire from the Hindu extremist groups
associated with his own BJP for failing to launch a war against
Pakistan. Onkar Bhave, the International Joint Secretary of the
World Hindu Congress (VHP), declared this week that India should
have retaliated against Pakistan following the attack by Kashmiri
separatists on the Indian parliament last December. He accused
the Vajpayee government of backing down to the pressure of the
big powers by recently withdrawing Indian warships from waters
near Pakistan and opening up Indian airspace to commercial Pakistani
overflights.
Speaking in Jammu, Kashmirs winter capital, BJP national
president Jana Krishnamurthi said India had faced a proxy
war for the past 10 years. India was going to win this war
and it would be the last war between the two countries.
A recent comment on the Asia Times website pointed out
that the Hindu chauvinist organisations would not be content with
control over Kashmir. There are also those in leadership
positions within the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) who want more. They genuinely believe
that Pakistan must be dismembered and destroyed, it noted.
The preparations for war have continued despite the impact
on the two countries economies. In fact, an element of Vajpayees
calculations is that the smaller and weaker Pakistani economy
could not withstand a prolonged military mobilisation. According
to a report in the Times of India, New Delhi is seeking
to increase economic pressure on Pakistan, which is facing a three-year
drought, falling export orders, large debts and financial difficulties.
Pakistans Finance Minister Shaukat Aziz has increased
defence spending to 146 billion rupees ($US2.4 billion) for the
current financial year 2002-03a rise of nearly Rs.15 billion
over the budget allocation for 2001-2002. The military now accounts
for about 18 percent of the total budget.
The Indian economy has also been affected. More than 60,000
foreign nationals have left India since mid-May, significantly
hitting the tourist industry. The owner of one hotel complex lamented:
Twenty five percent of our bookings for June and July made
by foreign visitors have been cancelled and our occupancy rate
has come down from 80 percent to 50 percent in the last 10 days.
Other businessmen pointed to an economic slowdown.
However, none of these economic considerations have deterred
either Vajpayee or Musharraf from their massive military mobilisation
over the past six months and moves towards all-out war.
See Also:
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]
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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