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January
3, 2002
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Musharraf’s
compulsions cannot dictate India
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Empathy
is dangerous
In
1320, Ghazi Tughlaq rose in revolt against Sultan Khusrav Khan.
The pretext was that Islam was in danger since the ascent of Khusrav
Khan — a convert from Hinduism — represented the triumph of the
conquered heathen. It was the first time the cry of ‘‘Islam in danger!’’
was raised by a rabble-rouser on Indian soil. Quite successfully
too — the governors of Multan and Samana were killed by their own
people for the sin of remaining loyal to the Sultan. The lesson
has not been lost on Muslim politicians in the Indian subcontinent
ever since.
Aurangzeb
would use it as a weapon to seize the Peacock Throne. The Qaid-e-Azam
would revenge himself upon Gandhi by reciting the magic words. General
Zia would justify his usurpation from the (relatively) secular Bhutto
with the same excuse. Will General Pervez Musharraf be the next
to fall?
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Five men could push both nations over
the edge. Is Musharraf prepared even now to hand over twenty
men to justice, or will fear of the mullahs expose Pakistan
to the horrors of war?
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That
is what the United States fears, offering it as the sole credible
reason why India should exercise ‘‘restraint’’. It was summed up
nicely in an article by Nicholas Kristof for the New York Times:
‘‘Just as New Delhi is politically unable to allow Kashmiris a plebiscite
on their future, so General Musharraf cannot arrest Kashmiri militants
and hand them over to India. He would be overthrown ten minutes
later.’’
This
is a classic example of the shabby analysis which raises hackles
in Delhi. Read the United Nations resolution which Pakistan constantly
harps upon, and you find any plebiscite is contingent on Pakistan
withdrawing all its troops. As for Muhajir Musharraf, is he really
so unpopular with Punjabis, Sindhis, Baluchis and Pathans that arresting
twenty militants will topple him? Well, then, why should India pander
to the fears and fancies of a man so hated by his own people?
Here
lies the first truth we must face squarely: no country shall aid
India in its battle against terrorism. Washington seeks to hunt
down Osama bin Laden, and keeping Pakistan happy is necessary if
only because its troops are required to man the mountain passes
to Afghanistan. None of the other chancelleries will dare defy the
United States. Indira Gandhi’s diplomatic efforts — sending envoys
to various capitals — proved fruitless in 1971; I am not sure such
attempts will be more useful today.
I
will be sorry if anything is done to hamper the American effort
to hunt down the the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. But India’s security
is a far greater concern, and Musharraf’s personal security is of
no import whatsoever.
Yes,
anyone who shunts Musharraf aside will probably be even more closely
linked to militants. But this is a shopworn excuse, one first offered
by Liaquat Ali Khan to Jawaharlal Nehru when he pleaded his inability
to rein in the men who invaded Jammu and Kashmir. India’s patience
has been ill-paid over the years. Iskander Mirza was no improvement
over the Qaid-e-Millat. Yahya Khan was worse than the Ayub with
whom the world wanted Lal Bahadur Shastri to negotiate. And surely
nobody argues that Pervez Musharraf be granted concessions that
India would have denied to Nawaz Sharif?
The
world urged restraint in 1999 when there was fighting in Kargil.
What was the result? That the terrorists have now been emboldened
to attack not just the Assembly in Srinagar, but Parliament in Delhi!
Here
is a second truth we must face: it is not in the interest of the
Pakistani elite to have peace with India. The Pakistan Army is a
state within a state, and the Inter-Services Intelligence is a state
within a state within a state. Both occupy prized positions because
they made a bogey-man of ‘‘Hindu’’ India.
It
is a dirty bargain that Pakistan’s generals have struck with the
Mullahs. The generals want to play with their dogs, to have their
photographs taken, and to enjoy their daily tipple (all forbidden
under a strict interpretation of the Shariat). But they will allow
the Mullahs free rein if only they will divert the attention of
the people from their own miserable condition to anger at their
neighbouring nation.
Yet
the world changed on September 11, 2001, though it took some time
for the truth to sink in. Late in November, Musharraf was talking
about a ‘‘moderate’’ Taliban, and after the attack on Parliament
House he couldn’t bring himself to utter the word ‘‘terrorists’’
(preferring ‘‘armed intruders’’). Rashid Qureshi, Musharraf’s official
spokesman, raised the balloon that the attack was nothing more than
a drama directed by India. And Foreign Minister Abdus Sattar, Islamabad’s
ranking civilian, said Delhi accused the Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad
merely to blacken the ‘‘freedom fighters’’ in Kashmir.
I
think these latter statements inflamed Indian opinion more than
the actual assault on Parliament House. They confirmed an opinion
building up since the Kargil War and the Agra Summit that Pakistan’s
rulers are insincere and untrustworthy, pretending to negotiate
only under pressure.
Some
American friends have wondered why India isn’t giving enough credit
to Musharraf for arresting a few score militants. Very simply, he
is doing it in the most sullen manner possible, and only because
the United States has cracked the whip. And that in turn has happened
only because Washington is concerned right now about war breaking
out.
What happens when American attention turns from Afghanistan to,
say, Iraq? Must India mobilise all its forces after each terrorist
outrage to convince the world of the depth of its anger? Appearing
on a BBC show shortly after the Parliament House attack, Pramod
Mahajan summed up the public mood nicely: ‘‘If we do not act now,
then when will we act?’’
George
Bernard Shaw was more eloquent in 1914. Britain was ‘‘sore-headed
and fed-up’’, he wrote. ‘‘We were rasped beyond endurance by militarism
and its contempt for us and for human happiness and common sense;
and we just rose at it and went for it.’’ The result was World War
I.
There
are a billion Muslims in the world. Almost three hundred million
of them live either in India or in Pakistan. Five men brought the
subcontinent to the brink of war; five others could push both nations
over the edge. Is Pervez Musharraf prepared even now to hand over
twenty men to justice — or will fear of the Mullahs expose Pakistan
to the horrors of war?
Let
me return to 1320. Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya, a greater exponent
of Islam than any Tughlaq, refused to back the revolt. He would
later prophesy of the first Tughlaq, ‘‘Dilli door ast!’’
General Musharraf, if you continue to back militants, then friendship
with Dilli shall remain forever door — assuming you want such amity!
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