Blood feud: India and
Pakistan threaten lethal confrontation over Kashmir
By
ERIC MARGOLIS
NEW YORK
-- The mountain of debris that was the World Trade Center still smoulders, spreading
over lower Manhattan a toxic miasma of rotting bodies, burned plastic, asbestos,
and crushed buildings. It took two showers to rid my body of the stink.
America's vengeance has been falling on Afghanistan in the form of B-52 carpet
bombing, and 5,000-lb. blockbuster bombs. U.S. troops are moving to overthrow
the Taliban regime in Kabul, which foolishly offered itself up as a target to
American wrath.
While all western eyes are fixed on Afghanistan, the immensely dangerous confrontation
over Kashmir between India and Pakistan has just gone critical, as this column
warned it would on September 23, when I wrote of the dangers of "an enraged
U.S. bull in South Asia's nuclear china shop." CIA calls the Line of Control
(LOC) that divides the disputed Himalayan mountain state between India and Pakistan
"the world's most dangerous border."
Last week, Indian officials began to speak openly about nuclear war with Pakistan
over Kashmir.
Kashmir is the only Indian state with a Muslim majority. When India and Pakistan
were created by Britain in 1947, Kashmir was left divided after bitter fighting
between the two hostile neighbours. Kashmiris were to have decided in a UN plebiscite
whether they wanted to join India or Pakistan. But India never allowed a vote
in the two-thirds of Kashmir it controlled.
In 1989, after decades of corrupt and often brutal Indian rule, Kashmir's Muslims
rebelled and began a guerilla war. Many of the score of Muslim independence
groups are based either in the Pakistani-ruled portion of Kashmir (Azad Kashmir),
or in Pakistan. The Muslim insurgents are battling 600,000 Indian troops and
paramilitary police in a vicious, dirty war that has left at least 50,000 dead.
India has long branded Kashmiri separatists as "terrorists" and accused Pakistan
of sponsoring "cross-border terrorism." Pakistan says it only gives the "freedom-fighters"
moral support. In fact, Pakistan's intelligence service, ISI, has long armed
and sponsored some - but not all - of the Kashmiri mujahadeen, as well as some
Sikh separatists and insurgents in India's eastern hill states. India's intelligence
service, RAW, plants bombs in Pakistan, stirs up anti-government extremist groups,
and supports Taliban's foes in Afghanistan.
On October 2, a radical Kashmiri guerilla group launched a suicide bombing attack
on the parliament building in Srinagar, capital of Indian-controlled Kashmir,
that left 40 dead.
Washington last week branded Kashmiri and Chechen independence fighters as 'terrorists.'
If the U.S. has the right to attack nations that harbour terrorists, Indians
logically insist, so do they.
Last week, India's External Affairs Minister, Omar Abdullah, warned that Pakistan
could use nuclear weapons in any conflict with India. India has about 40-60
nuclear weapons; Pakistan about 20. Both sides' nuclear-armed missiles and strike
aircraft are on a hair-trigger, 3-minute alert. A single false alarm - say a
U.S. Tomahawk missile flying off course - could trigger a nuclear exchange that
would kill 2 million immediately and gravely injure 100 million. Indian and
Pakistani nuclear reactors are prime targets in any war.
If Washington does not move swiftly to begin resolving the lethal Kashmir dispute,
a lot of cities may end up looking like lower Manhattan.
India is also growing uneasy as Pakistan falls increasingly under American control.
This past week, Pakistan's besieged leader, Gen. Musharraf, staged a barracks
coup, replacing popular nationalist generals with officers who would not oppose
U.S. action in Afghanistan. The powerful director of ISI, Pakistani intelligence,
Lt. Gen. Mahmood Ahmad, whom I met with last year, was forced out by U.S. pressure,
just like his nationalist predecessors, Hamid Gul and Javed Nasser.
Washington is urging restraint on India, a virtue it is hardly following itself
in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the U.S. blitz against Afghanistan is profoundly
- perhaps mortally - destabilizing wobbly Pakistan. Pakistan's sprawling army
HQ was just burned down. If Musharraf is overthrown by angry, pro-Afghan Pakistanis,
or if the nuclear-armed nation dissolves in chaos, India may be tempted to intervene,
gobbling up Azad Kashmir, or even making good on the vow of the Hindu fundamentalists
who dominate the current government in Delhi to "crush Pakistan" and recreate
the united India of the British Raj.
U.S. troops are about to go into action in Afghanistan between feuding India
and Pakistan, while a nervous China watches American forces operate on its sensitive
western borders. Adding more danger, Russia, the long-time military backer of
the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance, is pushing troops into Afghanistan. After
expending U.S.$6 billion and 2 million Afghan lives to oust the Russians from
Afghanistan in the 1980s, the U.S., blinded by anger, is now inviting them back
in.
[reproduced with permission from
www.foreigncorrespondent.com]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:05:36 AM
Readers'
Comment
ash: 10/11/2005 6:20:49 PM
It's so bias, I can't even believe i had the misfortune of reading it.
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