Narendra Modi, a sharp critic of Pakistan when he was in the
opposition, completely changed his approach when elected an Indian Prime
Minister in 2014.
The BJP won the elections with a huge majority and he could have
easily hardened India’s Pakistan policy. His party and the right wing
Hindutva politicians would have been only too glad to back him to the
hilt. Instead, Modi did the opposite, to the surprise of many. He
reached out to Pakistan, invited Pak Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to his
inauguration ceremony and continued to pursue this line despite
criticism at home. To be fair Sharif also responded.
Not surprisingly, however, history repeated itself in Pakistan. The
deep state (the army and the ISI) stepped in with handsome support from
the Pakistani foreign ministry. The Jehadi groups, the army’s
acknowledged foreign policy assets like Jamat-ud-Dawa (JUD) Chief Hafeez
Saeed and Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) founder Masood Azhar were brought in.
Terrorism against India from Pakistan continued to increase. Modi
remained undeterred. His visit to Islamabad on December 25, 2015 to
wish Nawaz Sharif on his birthday was reciprocated by a JEM attack on
India’s air force base in Pathankot. Modi still stood his ground,
allowing an investigation team from Pakistan which included an ISI
Officer, to visit the airbase to collect evidence. The team came, saw
and investigated, but did not allow an Indian team’s reciprocal visit to
Pakistan. Indian officials decided to view the Pakistani visit as a
positive move that would result in a joint counter-terrorism effort.
Nothing of the sort happened.
The international community witnessed the Indian government’s
restraint against grave provocations. But things had to give at some
point. The unprecedented violent protests that followed the (July 8)
killing of Hizbul Mujahidin (HM) terrorist Burhan Wani by Indian
Security Forces in Kashmir was found to be fuelled from Pakistan, and
their friends in the Kashmir valley like the Hurriyat Conference and
woman separatist leader Ayesha Andrabi. The HM is based in Pakistan
occupied Kashmir (POK), and its leader Sayed Salahuddin roams freely in
Islamabad and Lahore, giving speeches and planning terror attacks with
elements like Hafeez Saeed. Salahuddin also heads the United Jihad
Council (UJC), based in Pakistan.
Indian politicians in Kashmir played questionable roles. Jammu and
Kashmir (J & K) Chief Minister Ms Mehbooba Mufti, whose PDP runs a
coalition government with the BJP in J & K first kept silent and
them gave confusing and contradicting statements on Burhan Wani’s
death. She has a track record of, “running with the hare and hunting
with the hounds”. When in power she is with the central government, and
when out of power colludes with the separatists.
J & K politics is an internal matter of India. Pakistan’s
interference in J & K through Fidayeens (terrorists willing to give
up their lives) is something different. It is asymmetric warfare.
Pakistan exposed itself to the world when it allowed Sayed Salahuddin
to take out an anti-India march when Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh
was in Islamabad for the SAARC Home Minister’s meeting (August 3-4).
Both Salahuddin and his outfit HM are designated terrorists. It should
be a matter of concern for Pakistan that at least three SAARC countries,
namely Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka did not send their home
ministers for the Islamabad meet. All three countries have had their
share to Pakistani terrorism agenda on their soil.
The Pakistani establishment shut all doors of bilateral; dialogue
with India, declined to act on the Ufa agreement between the two
countries to discuss terrorism harping only on Kashmir. Pakistan’s
actions on and in Kashmir forced Mr. Modi to take a new aggressive
position on Pakistan’s sponsorship of terrorism. At the recently
concluded G-20 meeting in Hangzhou, China, and immediately after the
ASEAN summit in Vientiene, Laos, Modi pulled no punches. These were
stunning charges with no one coming to Pakistan’s aid. Not even its
“all weather friend”, China.
For a glimpse of Pakistani establishment’s psychological-ideological
fixation with terrorism to forward its foreign policy agenda, consider
the following:
- Declassified US Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) cables of January and February 2010 showed that ISI provided the Haqqani Network (HQN) $200,000 to attack the CIA facility at Camp Chapman (the camp located in the Pak-Afghan border was wiped out and all occupants killed). The US has been providing Pakistan billions of dollars since September 2001 to counter terrorism.
- In July 2016, former chief of Afghan intelligence agency (NDS) Rahmatullah Nabil, released documents about Pakistan’s GHQ and ISI operations paying the HQN to attack the Kabul airport during President Hamid Karzai’s rule, and other targets including Shias. Nabil resigned when Karzai’s successor President Abdul Ghani tried to be friend Pakistan against his advice. Ghani later changed track after the realized that the Pakistanis were actually sabotaging his peace efforts with the Afghan Taliban. The documents give details (including copies of ISI/GHQ documents) of Pakistan’s covert warfare against Afghanistan, using US taxpayers’ money.
- JUD leader Hafuz Saeed, who also controls the terrorist organizations Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), is a designated international terrorist. The US had put a ten million dollar bounty of his head. Yet, he roams about freely in Pakistan, holding public meetings and spewing venom against India. Former Pak President Gen. Pervez Musharraf had told Pakistani law-maker that LET was a reserve force (against India). This organization was responsible for the “26/11” Mumbai attack in which 156 people were killed including six American citizens.
- The US declared LET a terrorist organization. In July, a US congressional panel launched a fierce attack on Pakistan’s duplicity over terrorism, and manipulating the US. Congressman Matt Salmon suggested several steps including economic sanctions and declaring Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism. Congressman Dana Rhorabacher called Pakistan a vicious terror-supporting country and assured the people of Balochistan of US support for their independence and self-determination.
- In a senate hearing (September 9) between law makers and experts Pakistan was roundly castigated and threatened with cutting off of aid.
The above are only representative samples.
President Barack Obama, Secretary of State John Kerry and State
Department Spokespersons have issued strongly worded warnings to
Pakistan. But nothing seems to have affected the military brass in
Rawalpindi.
In a manner, these Pakistani gentlemen are no fools. They have
learnt that when the pressure becomes intense the Americans will make
some moves and statements like “Pakistan is moving in the right
direction”, will start coming from the State Department and the White
House. And aid will be restored. Everything will be back to square
one.
The Pakistanis are aware that the Americans need Pakistan for their
Afghan policy. Equally important the Americans are not going to vacate
Pakistan for the Chinese to have a free run. The importance of
geopolitics comes in here.
China, of course, is sitting pretty. Politically and strategically,
China will continue to support and empower Pakistan. Tactically it will
continue to support Pakistan’s official jehadi core because in this
bargain these jehadis will not give sanctuary to China’s Uighur
separatist Muslims of Xinjiang. And China has been successful. As a
bonus the Pak establishment and their jehadi auxiliary forces continue
to try and debilitate India. As the Chinese say, it is a “win-win”
situation for China.
Informed and discerning people in Pakistan are increasingly
articulating the futility of their establishment’s blind and vitriolic
India policy which is actually hurting Pakistan. This view is reflected
in several of Pakistan’s respected newspapers. Former Pakistani
ambassador to China, India and the US, Ashraf Jehangir seemed distressed
with Pakistan’s India policy. In a recent in article “The Dawn” (13th Sept) he wrote “Pakistan’s
reliance on jehadi ‘assets’ has resulted in a comprehensive jihadi
‘blowback’. Its foreign policy is determined by unelected and
incompetent decision-makers who largely operate from behind security
screens.” This, he said has “significantly disabled Pakistan’s diplomacy”.
Jehangir Kazi should know, having forwarded Pakistan’s Kashmir policy
for years. He also recalled former Chinese President Jiang Zemin’s
advice that “Kashmir was an issue left over from history and its
solution should be sought in that context”. The “incompetent” decision
makers in Rawalpindi must realise that the Chinese will not wage a war
against India on Kashmir. Without saying in so many words, Kazi said
that Pakistan was dangerously close to being isolated.
Pakistan’s establishment still remains caught in the
ideological-political time warp of the “two nation theory”. That theory
died in 1971 when East Pakistan broke away and was reborn
as“Bangladesh”. Now Balochistan is fighting for independence from
Pakistan and the voice of the people of Balochistan is gaining traction
in the international community. US congressman Dana Rhorabacher has
already voiced his support.
Pakistan’s interference in Bangladesh, both in support to terrorists
with money and shedding tears for those war criminals who supported the
Pakistani army in 1971, reiterates the fact that the policy makers in
Pakistan are in a psychological bind and self delusion, lying to
themselves.
Pakistan has hardly any friends left in the neighbourhood. Relations
with Afghanistan are in a sharp decline. They betrayed President
Ashraf Ghani. No Afghan fully trusts Pakistan’s establishment including
the Taliban who reject the Durand Line as the Pak-Afghan border.
Relations with Iran are no longer warm, to say the least. Even the
Saudis are annoyed when they discovered that footprints of terrorist
involved in bombing in Saudi Arabia led to Pakistan.
The Pakistani army appears to be again presiding not only on further
dismemberment of Pakistan, but making Pakistan a poster-boy of a nation
supporting terrorism. They are taking the country to international
ignominy.
By Bhaskar Roy
(The writer is a New Delhi based strategic analyst. He can be reached at e-mail grouchohart@yahoo.com)
Courtesy: South Asia Analysis
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