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India and Pakistan back off from wartemporarily
By Vilani Peiris and Sarath Kumara
24 May 2002
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Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vaypayee yesterday took a
small step back from the brink of war with Pakistan, declaring
to the media that he saw clear skies replacing war cloudsat
least for the moment. He warned, however, that, sometimes
lightning can strike even when the sky is clear. I hope there
will be no lightning.
Vajpayees tone was in marked contrast to his comments
the previous day when addressing an Indian army unit stationed
near the Indo-Pakistan border. Then, he told the troops: India
is forced to fight a war thrust on it and we will emerge victorious.
Let there be no doubt about it... Be ready for sacrifice. Your
goal should be victory. Its time to fight a decisive battle.
The shift in emphasis followed a statement by Pakistani military
strongman General Pervez Musharraf after a cabinet meeting on
Wednesday. While repeating that Pakistan was ready for war, Musharraf
added: The meeting emphasised the government will not allow
Pakistans territory or any territory whose defence is the
responsibility of Pakistan to be used for any terrorist activity
anywhere in the world.
The comments contain a significant concession to Indias
demand that Pakistan crack down on cross-border terrorismthat
is, armed Islamic fundamentalist groups opposed to Indias
control of Jammu and Kashmir. In January, following an armed attack
on the Indian parliament building on December 13, Musharraf took
a number of measures to appease New Delhi, including the banning
of several organisations and the round-up of hundreds of their
members. But he stopped short of taking similar steps in the parts
of Kashmir ruled by Pakistan.
According to the Indian government, a number of the Islamic
groups simply re-established themselves in Pakistan-controlled
Kashmir. By referring to any territory whose defence is
the responsibility of Pakistan, Musharraf implied that Pakistans
security forces would now move to shut down the new offices and
camps in Kashmir and prevent armed fighters from crossing the
border into Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir.
Top Indian cabinet ministers and military officials met yesterday
in Kashmir to consider Musharrafs statement. According to
the Hindustan Times, the Unified Headquarters chaired by
Vajpayee in Srinagar decided to give Pakistan two months to halt
cross-border terrorism ahead of state elections due
in Jammu and Kashmir. While formally rejecting Musharrafs
comments, the Cabinet Committee on Security, which also met yesterday,
endorsed the earlier decision to give Pakistan more time to comply.
The decision amounts to little more than a temporary respite,
which could at any time be reversed. The onus is placed on Pakistan
to crack down on the activities of various Islamic militia, with
which the Pakistani military and intelligence bodies have close
relations, but do not control. Any fresh attack inside India or
on Indian forces, such as the one at Kaluchak last week in which
34 people were killed, could become the basis for New Delhi to
renew its threats of war.
Behind the scenes, the major powers, particularly the US, have
exerted considerable pressure on both countries to back off from
a military confrontationon Islamabad to make concessions
and on New Delhi to give Pakistan more time. US Assistant Secretary
of State for South Asia Christina Rocca visited the subcontinent
last week and Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage is due
to arrive early next month. European Union External Affairs Commissioner
Chris Pattern was due to arrive in New Delhi yesterday, to be
followed by British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw next week.
In seeking to prevent the outbreak of war between India and
Pakistan, Washington is concerned that any conflict would not
only undermine its military operations in Afghanistan but also
destabilise the region and threaten broader US economic and strategic
interests. At the same time, the Bush administrations war
against terrorism, and its own closer relations with New
Delhi, have only encouraged the Vajpayee government to take a
more belligerent stand against Pakistan.
The Pakistani regime has attempted to enlist international
support for negotiations or the establishment of monitors along
the Line of Control that divides Kashmir into Indian and Pakistani
zones. Pakistans Foreign Minister Shaukat Aziz stated: We
are willing to talk bilaterally, through third party mediation,
or by any other acceptable mechanism to avert the war. But
India, which has traditionally insisted that Kashmir is an internal
issue, has rejected any international involvement and indicated
that it is not prepared to talk with Musharraf.
Military flashpoint
Tensions between the two nuclear-armed powers remain extremely
high. Neither side has pulled back from frantic military preparations
over the last week. More than one million soldiers armed with
tanks, heavy artillery, warplanes and missiles have faced each
other across the border in a state of high alert since last December.
Heavy exchanges of mortar and artillery fire have forced at least
25,000 villagers to flee the border areas and resulted in a number
of deaths.
Last weekend, India integrated its paramilitary border guards
and coast guard with the Indian military for the first time since
its war with Pakistan in 1971. On Wednesday, five warships from
Indias eastern fleet were moved to the western coast to
strength its naval presence near Pakistans waters. Warplanes,
tanks and missile batteries are already in place in what has been
Indias largest-ever military mobilisation. Millions of landmines
have been planted along the border.
As well as military threats, some Indian officials have warned
that India could tear up the Indus Water Treaty, signed with Pakistan
in 1960. The agreement regulates the use of water in three rivers,
including the Indus, which flows through Pakistan but has its
headwaters in India. The general secretary of the Pakistan Labor
Party, Farooq Tariq, commented: If this treaty were scrapped,
it would not only starve the Punjab and Sind provinces of Pakistan,
but Pakistan as a whole and Afghanistan.
Pakistan has responded in kind. The military has moved Haft
missiles, with an estimated range of 75 to 100 km, as well as
the longer range Haft-2 to the border with India. Islamabad has
indicated that it will pull its troops out of UN-sponsored operations
in Sierra Leone. The army has begun to transfer troops from the
western border with Afghanistan to the Indian border in the east.
Islamabad has been put on a war footing, all army reserves and
retired officers have been recalled to active duty and government
hospital beds emptied in preparation for casualties.
Within India, there have been repeated calls for strikes across
the Line of Control against anti-Indian militia groups. The Indian
military establishment has been speculating on the possibility
of a limited war, involving raids by groups of elite
soldiers on militia training camps. But, as several defence analysts
have pointed out, any military confrontation has its own dynamic
and its own momentum. Even a limited attack by the Indian army
in a confined area could spread rapidly along the border, and,
if conventional weapons proved inadequate, lead to the unleashing
of nuclear-tipped missiles with tragic consequences for millions
of people.
The long-running conflict over Kashmir stems from the reactionary
character of the partition of the Indian continent into a Muslim
Pakistan and a Hindu-dominated India in 1947. Within that communal
framework, strategically-placed Kashmir, with a Muslim-majority
and ruled by a Hindu maharaja, immediately became a focus of sharp
rivalry and warin 1948 and 1965. The two countries again
moved to the brink of war in 1999, when Pakistani-backed forces
seized key mountaintops in the Kargil region of Jammu and Kashmir.
The volatility of the present standoff is fueled by the deep
political crisis in both countries. Vajpayee has seized on the
opportunity to divert public attention from communal rioting in
the state of Gujarat where hundreds of Muslims were killed. Criticisms
of the actions of his Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) threatened to lead to a break-up of the ruling coalition.
Within Pakistan, Musharraf, who took power in a military coup
in 1999, is increasingly coming under fire. Most political parties
refused to attend a meeting called by the Pakistani leader to
gather support for war. Instead the All Party Conferencea
coalition of 29 opposition parties, including the Pakistan Muslim
League (PML) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP)demanded
Musharraf resign and hand over power to a neutral caretaker government.
The opposition resolution stated: [Musharraf] stands discredited
and lacks the stature and moral authority to deal with the current
threat to national security and territorial integrity of Pakistan.
PPP leader and former prime minister Benazir Bhutto blamed
Musharraf for creating a war-like situation, saying:
The latest tensions on the border and the threat of a potentially
nuclear war emphasise the need for a political change in Pakistan
... Increasingly isolated, Musharraf responded on Wednesday:
In fact, I now want to shed power. I wish there was an elected
prime minister to take the crucial decisions that need to be taken
at this juncture.
Pakistan faces a serious economic crisis. The chairman of the
Central Board of Revenue, Raiz Malik, stated recently that the
country had lost 42 billion rupees ($US0.8 billion) in revenue
following September 11. Over the last week, the Karachi stock
exchange has slumped by 1,527 points or 14.5 percent. The Bombay
stock exchange in India has lost 9 percent since May 14.
In these highly charged conditions, any incident could quickly
become the pretext for an escalation of hostilities.
See Also:
India and Pakistan move to the brink
of war
[21 May 2002]
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