In a statement issued last week, Pakistan’s National Security
Advisor Sartaj Aziz said India shouldn’t take his country for granted.
Pakistan, he added grimly, has nuclear weapons. Other members of the
Pakistani establishment have made similar statements in the recent past.
But as Pakistan’s army chief General Raheel Sharif knows perfectly
well, Islamabad cannot use its nuclear stockpile – not even the small
tactical battlefield nuclear weapons Pakistan is developing.
The reason is simple: A retaliatory nuclear strike by India
would cripple Pakistan. The Americans know this. So do the Russians and
the British. And of course, so does Pakistan.
Farooq Abdullah, the former chief minister of Jammu and
Kashmir, had this to say about Sartaj Aziz’s nuclear threat in an
interview with Sagarika Ghose in The Times of India: “When a
senior diplomat, a former foreign minister, talks about nuclear weapons,
it’s crazy. May I remind Sartaj Aziz about Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Does
he want to bomb J&K? India also has a bomb. When I went to Pokhran
after the tests were conducted, I remember Vajpayee’s words: ‘He said we
aren’t the ones to use this first, we have this as a deterrence, only
to tell people don’t take us for granted. We can defend ourselves.’ I
want to tell Aziz don’t think of the bomb because innocents will die.
Sartaj Aziz saab you too will die if the bomb falls.”
So is Pakistan’s nuclear threat mere bluster? The short answer: yes.
In a recent article in the Indian Express,
journalist Praveen Swami wrote why a Pakistani nuclear reprisal to a
conventional Indian military attack would result in its annihilation:
“Ever since Modi took power last year, Pakistan has demanded
negotiations, seeing them as a cushion against possible Indian strikes
in the face of a major terrorist attack. Large swathes of its troops
tied down in counter-insurgency duties, the Pakistan army would be hard
pressed to resist even a limited Indian push in areas like Kashmir’s
Neelam Valley. Though Pakistan often threatens nuclear reprisal, it
knows it would be hard pressed to deliver on this threat in all but the
most catastrophic scenarios, for the simple reason that annihilation
would follow in short order. The truth is nuclear armed adversaries have
engaged in small conventional wars: China and Russia clashed on the
Ussuri river in the 1950s, and India and Pakistan themselves in 1999.”
And yet, Pakistan continues to develop nuclear warheads at a
rapid pace. Recent reports suggest it will have over 300 nuclear
weapons within ten years – more than France or Britain. In a country
beset by home-produced terrorism, there is always the danger that some
of the small tactical nuclear weapons will fall into terrorists’ hands
and be used against Pakistan itself. Rawalpindi has a secure nuclear
command and control centre. But breaching these safeguards by
disgruntled elements with terrorist links can’t be ruled out.
A recently declassified Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
document reveals that former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi mulled, before
abandoning, an air strike on Pakistan’s nascent nuclear weapons
programme in 1983. According to one report, Israel offered, “as late as
1984”, to bomb Pakistan’s principal nuclear facility in Kahuta if India
allowed “its jets refueling assurance, but India demurred.”
Terrorism – war by other means
Pakistan created the Taliban in the early-1990s. Breakaway
fractions of this terrorist group like the Tehreek-e-Taliban are
relentlessly targeting Pakistan’s armed forces. December will mark the
first anniversary of the brutal Peshawar massacre. The Tehreek-e-Taliban
murdered over 130 Pakistani school children, mostly those from families
in Pakistan’s armed forces. After years of battling these terrorists –
terrorists the Pakistani army has created and nurtured – they remain a
serious threat. Over a third of the Pakistani army is tied down fighting
them and other militant groups across the country.
Since the Narendra Modi government took office fifteen
months ago, Pakistan has tested its will with ceasefire violations
across the Line of Control (LoC) and the International Border (IB). In
October and November 2014, the Border Security Force (BSF) retaliated
strongly to unprovoked Pakistani firing which caused several Indian
casualties. The retaliation resulted in a large number of Pakistani
fatalities as well.
The Pakistani army and the ISI have helped launch a series
of terrorist attacks on Indian soil. The same pattern has been repeated
over the past few days. The increased infiltration by militants trained
in terror camps on Pakistani territory has caused the deaths of Indian
civilians, including women and children. Two captured terrorists, Naveed
and Sajjad, have confessed under interrogation to being trained by the
Lashkar-e-Taiba, the terrorist group the Pakistani army nurtures with
funding, training and logistical support. Pakistan, which has never won
a war against India in 68 years, uses such proxy terror groups to wage a
low-intensity conflict without commiting the Pakistani army to a war it
cannot win. Terrorism and veiled nuclear threats are used by Pakistan
in an attempt to balance the asymmetry between the two countries’ armed
forces.
Now to the myths
There are four myths in the India-Pakistan relationship
that the army, ISI and civilian leadership of Pakistan carefully nurse.
They need to be dispelled.
Myth 1: “Pakistan, like India, is also a victim of terrorism.”
Not true. Pakistan is the victim of its own terrorism;
India in sharp contrast is the victim of Pakistani terrorism. India
doesn’t send terrorists across the border to kill Pakistani civilians.
Pakistan does. To equate the two is a standard manufactured response of
the Pakistani establishment – for instance, citing Indian involvement in
Balochistan without providing a shred of evidence.
The Pakistani army meanwhile continues to commit genocide
in Balochistan. It does not need India to spark an insurgency among the
Baloch – they have been fighting Pakistan’s occupation of their country
which Rawalpindi forcibly annexed nearly a year after Independence.
Remember: Balochistan comprises 44 per cent of Pakistan’s total land
area.
Peter Tatchell, the human rights activist, writes:
“Balochistan was never part of the British Indian Empire. From 1876, it
was a self-governing British protectorate, with Britain pledging to
guarantee its security against external aggression. In August 1947,
Britain granted Balochistan independence separately from India and
Pakistan as it did with Nepal. This independence was short-lived. On
April 1, 1948, Pakistan sent troops to conquer the Baloch people. They
have remained there ever since, blanketing the country with hundreds of
military garrison posts to suppress the people.”
Myth 2: “Jammu and Kashmir is disputed territory.”
It is, but not in the way Pakistan thinks. All United
Nations resolutions require Pakistan, as a first step, to vacate
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). Once Pakistan does, all issues related
to Jammu & Kashmir can be discussed. In short, PoK constitutes the
core dispute in relation to Jammu and Kashmir. All else flows from it.
Thus when engagement in the form of a composite dialogue resumes between
India and Pakistan, as External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj noted –
and once Islamabad adheres to the red lines drawn by New Delhi – Kashmir
will be on the agenda, beginning with PoK.
The soft, porous border proposal discussed between General
Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh nearly a decade
ago is a non-starter. If implemented, it will give terrorists a free
pass to Jammu and Kashmir. Over time Pakistan will occupy the entire
state using a “creeping” strategy. It is fortunate Musharraf was removed
from office before he could pull further wool over Dr Singh’s eyes.
Myth 3: “Reciprocity.”
India granted Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status to Pakistan
in 1996. Pakistan promised reciprocal status several years ago. That
promise remains unfulfilled. If Islamabad continues to be in breach of
that commitment, India could consider withdrawal of MFN status to
Pakistan. India is already moving ahead in the South Asian Association
for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) without Pakistan in crucial economic
and diplomatic areas.
This ostracism could apply to other fields. Cricketing
ties, for example, will remain suspended. Can India really play cricket
with a country that sends terrorists to kill and maim Indian women and
children? Pakistan joined world cricket’s boycott of South Africa’s
apartheid regime throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The pressure –
including a global boycott of South Africa’s all-white rugby team and
other sanctions – led eventually to the abolition of apartheid. Politics
and sport should, ideally, not be mixed – except in the case of extreme
injustice, such as apartheid, or state-sponsored terrorism.
Myth 4: “We are the same people”.
We are not. Pakistan has over 190 million people: 90
million Punjabis, 45 million Sindhis, 30 million Pashtuns, 14 million
Baloch, and 11 million others. Punjabis dominate the army, civil service
and business.
Indians are far more diverse – in language, culture and
religion. As the 2011 census reveals, India has nearly as many Muslims
(172 million) as Pakistan – which is several times the number of Muslims
India had in 1947. Pakistan too had a significant minority (of Hindus)
in 1947. Today Hindus make up less than 1.6 per cent of Pakistan’s
population. In Pakistan, the Baloch are butchered, Shias murdered,
Ahmadis outcast.
No, we are not the same people.
dailyo
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