| AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA | GUEST ARTICLE |
M V KAMATH
When will our leaders in South Asia learn from history? The British would never have taken over India so totally had there been unity among the Nizam, the Peshwas, Tipu Sultan and all the Rajahs and Maharajahs put together. In this year 2007, which should observe the 150th anniversary of the first War of Independence, we must hark back to the old days to learn some lessons. And the first lesson both India and Pakistan must learn is that they must be united and not depend upon any other nation for whatever benefits each may acquire in the process. Since independence, Pakistan has sought help from the United Kingdom, United States and other western countries and subsequently, to please the United States, from China as well. India had no alternative but to lean on the then Soviet Union and to sponsor the non-aligned movement. India, at least, did not sell its soul. Pakistan did and now we see the results. A report from Washington says that 'Pakistan's military ruler Proves Musharraf has fallen from Washington's good grace and that President Bush who once called Musharraf his 'tight buddy' has now decided to send his buddy an 'unusually tough message' over his failure to deliver results in the war on terrorism. Significantly US Vice President Dick Cheney made an unannounced visit to Islamabad just for a few hours, no doubt to read the riot act to Musharraf. One can sympathise with the Pakistan President. His icon is Kemal Ataturk, as secular a Muslim leader as one can ever imagine but Musharraf is the heir to two mad theories: that India is Pakistan's Enemy Number 1 and that by showing subservience to the West, notably the United States, he can win Jammu & Kashmir.
According to him, Jammu & Kashmir is the 'core issue'. That it is not. The 'core issue' is Pakistan's antediluvian mind-set which it must get over. Truth to tell, he has been trying to get over it. For example he has said specifically that Pakistan has never claimed Jammu and Kashmir to be an integral part of his country. When that is said, Jammu and Kashmir ceases to be a 'core issue'. The real 'core issue' is Pakistan's long subservience to the United States. It must get over that. Another 'core issue' is the support that his government, under the directions of Washington, gave to extremists, especially Taliban and al Qaeda. Now that issue is coming to haunt him. On 12 January, Musharraf frankly admitted that 'extremists have the potential to destroy Pakistan' and that their 'political strength is a night mare for the country'. He admitted frankly in a telecast by the BBC that 'nightmare for Pakistan is exactly this, that politically the extremists again are in strength' and that is a 'tussle' he is involved with at the moment' to get the masses to realise that while we are Muslims we should not follow the extremists because they will destroy Pakistan'.
And the blame should go not to India but the United States which has long been Islamabad's patron. Washington has only contempt for Pakistan. Pakistan is not a free country because, when it comes to brasstacks, America has no hesitation in bombing any part of Pakistan which it believes, harbours al Qaeda. President Bush made it abundantly clear last September that if the US came to know of the presence of any al Qaeda or Taliban leader in Pakistan it will not hesitate to kill him in Pakistan territory. Washington has no respect for the territorial integrity of Pakistan. It treats Pakistan as a slave nation. What is the answer to Musharraf's dilemma? He has not one, but several problems. He has to reckon with a still anti-Hindu elite consisting of landlords and army men. He has to deal with mullahs who still live in the medieval era. The Sunni-Shia conflicts are a source of perpetual killings. Then there is the persisting antagonism between the 'locals' and the mujahids, the 'outsiders' which remains to be settled but never would be. Baluchistan wants to have nothing to do with Pakistan. With the murder of the Baloch nationalist leader Nawab Akbar Bugti last September, Baluchistan is for all purposes beyond Islamabad's control. Pakistan has been forced to sign a 'truce' with militants in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border and it is virtually a truce between Pakistan and the Taliban. Pakistan's rule does not operate in Waziristan. And the ISI has turned out to be a law unto itself, needless of what Musharraf plans to do. In effect Pakistan has defeated itself.
A report from Quetta in The
Tribune (8 September) said that Musharraf may soon be purging some of his
army commanders, and one shouldn't be surprised if the US is behind the
revolt among army leaders. Washington will not hesitate to do away with
Musharraf against whom there have been half a dozen murder attempts in
the past two years. If Musharraf turns out to be a hurdle in implementation
of Washington's policies, it will have no hesitation in getting rid of
him. We know what happened to Zia. Accidents can always be created. And
in this field the United States has great expertise. If Pakistan wants
peace and prosperity it has only one friend in the world: India. He must
throw out the United States and China and befriend India wholly and totally.
That, in fact, is the 'core issue'. It will then revolutionise South Asia
and make it a true power. And, if Musharraf would like to hear it said,
it will be a joint power. India will walk an extra mile towards befriending
Pakistan. If that is achieved, both India and Pakistan can thumb their
noses against any power in the world. Islam won't lose its glory. Musharraf
must remember that the armies which stood by Bahadur Shah Zaffar were largely
Hindu. And Indian will stand by Pakistan if it chooses to do away with
the over lordship of the United States and its subservience to China. It
is not only possible, it is wholly necessary. An Indo-Pakistan confederation
is the only answer to Pakistan's present woes. It is pleasant to heart
that a three-member team of archaeological experts from Pakistan had come
to India in search of Hindu idols to be restored in temples in Pakistan,
that Islamabad has budgeted Rs 100 million to complete the Katasraj Temple
Project and that last November Musharraf had even visited a Shiva Temple
in Karachi and declared that 'historical places of all religions including
that of Hinduism are integral part of Pakistan's cultural and geographic
history'. All that is in the right spirit. India and Pakistan must undo
partition, not territory-wise but emotion-wise. Throw out the white man,
General. Learn from India's past history. Together India and Pakistan can
make South Asia great. Remember what the British did to Bahadur Shah Zaffar
in 1857, General. What the British did to India, the American can do it
to you.