India complains like a village old woman
Asif Haroon Raja
India being an imperialist power wants to
become super power of South Asia and a world power. Mired in dozens of
insurgencies it considers Pakistan as the lone stumbling block in the way of
her imperialist ambitions. Indigenous freedom movement in Indian Occupied
Kashmir (IOK) has become a bleeding wound for India and a cause of
embarrassment that despite deploying such a large force in a small Valley and
using excessive force, rape and torture as tools to crush the movement for over
22 years, it has failed to extinguish the flame of liberty. Maintenance of
750,000 security forces since 1989 in IOK is a huge drain on India’s economy which
is slowing down. So is the burden of 700,000 troops employed for fighting
dozens of insurgencies and separatist movements in various parts of India.
Once India jumped out of the lap of former
Soviet Union and slid into the warm lap of USA in 1991, it started working
feverishly to create permanent wedge between USA and Pakistan – the two
erstwhile allies – by coloring the perceptions of US leaders against Pakistan.
India’s main propaganda plank was ‘cross border terrorism by Pakistan in IOK’.
9/11 gave a godsend opportunity to India to restore its lost influence in
Afghanistan and to operationalize its plan of destabilizing, denuclearizing,
encircling, isolating and balkanizing Pakistan through proxy war using Afghan
soil. For the achievement of their common objectives, the Indo-US-Afghan nexus
commenced covert war against Pakistan in 2002 with a view to cripple Pakistan
economically, politically, socially and militarily.
Their sustained efforts have made FATA and
Balochistan highly restive and Pakistan’s economy fragile. More the
difficulties encountered by Pakistan on account of foreign sponsored
insurgencies in the two turbulent regions and disorder in Karachi, more the
closeness between the three strategic partners grew. So much so that
Indo-Afghan and Afghan-US strategic partnership agreements were signed. At the
same time, hostility of the trio against Pakistan also intensified. India was
over the moon seeing Pakistan in dire strait and breathlessly waited to use its
military instrument to axe it for good. Karzai regime didn’t lag behind in
keeping Pakistan in the dock.
Not only the Indian political leaders have
maintained an aggressive posture against Pakistan, Indian senior military
officers also have been flexing muscles to overawe Pakistan, and have been
looking for a 1971 like opportunity to strike Pakistan. Apart from offensive
deployment of troops along Pakistan’s border in 2001-02 and 2008-09, former
Indian Army chiefs Gen Kapoor and Gen V.K. Singh and even the current chief Gen
Bikram Singh have been bragging about India’s much hyped Pakistan-specific Cold
Start Doctrine, which in Indian military view has nullified Pakistan’s nuclear
deterrence. Ex Army chief Gen V.K. Singh had set up a secret intelligence unit
called Technical Services Division (TSD) without the knowledge of Ministry of
Defence. Purpose was to carryout clandestine operations against officials of
Ministry of Defence, IOK and Pakistan. He misused secret funds to destabilize
Omar Abdullah’s government in Kashmir and spent Rs 1.19 crore for this purpose.
Gen V.K. Singh justified his act in
Kashmir on the plea that use of secret funds has been in practice since 1947.
He also admitted that the TSD had conducted eight successful missions inside
Pakistan. He used his moles for phone tapping, eavesdropping officials of
Ministry of Defence. V.K Singh had a tainted tenure and was accused of
corruption. He submitted a petition to Ministry of Defence to adjust his date
of birth so that he could serve for another ten months in office. When his
petition was rejected by Supreme Court, he became a laughing stock. While in
uniform he started hobnobbing with BJP leaders and soon after retirement he
joined BJP. He attends Narendra Modi’s rallies and BJP is giving full support
to him. Modi whose hands are soaked in the blood of Indian Muslims have been
tipped as future Prime Minister of India by BJP. His sole forte is to raise the
emotions of Hindus against Indian Muslims and Pakistan and make them hysteric.
Indian Army under Gen Bikram Singh who
took over the reins of Indian Army on May 31, 2012 heated up the Line of
Control (LoC) in Kashmir in January 2013 on a false pretext that Pak Army
soldiers were involved in beheading of two Indian soldiers on January 8. It led
to unprovoked firing by Indian military. After Manmohan Singh’s stern warning
to Pakistan, Gen Bikram on January 14, asked his commanders in Kashmir to be
aggressive and offensive against Pakistan. He said, “We reserve the right to
retaliate at a time and place of our choosing”. In August 2013, yet another
drama of killing of five Indian soldiers by Kashmiri Mujahideen backed by Pak
Army was cooked up. The incident led to prolonged ceasefire violations in the
form of firing and shelling. The guns had not silenced when another
stage-managed terrorist attack on a police station and military base in Samba
on September 25 was enacted in which a dozen people were killed. This false
flag operation was timed with Manmohan Singh’s address to the UN General
Assembly Session in New York on 27th and his scheduled meeting with
Nawaz Sharif on September 29. LoC was activated at the behest of BJP which
wanted to scuttle Manmohan-Nawaz meeting and the peace process.
Unprovoked firing by Indian soldiers
across the LoC and working boundary in Sialkot Sector in which scores of
civilians as well as soldiers and cattle were killed became a daily routine
from August to first week of November 2013 till Sartaj Aziz met Manmohan Singh
and Indian Foreign Minister Salman in Colombo and both sides agreed to respect
2003 ceasefire agreement. Military coercion and jingoism spearheaded by Indian
military-BJP combine are aimed at playing Pakistan card to win next elections
in 2014. Indian military and BJP nexus aims at establishing Hindutva in
India.
India’s dangerous plan conceived in 2001
to destroy Pakistan has run into difficulties because of NATO’s and ANA’s
inability to defeat Afghan Taliban. From 2008 onwards, the wind started to blow
against occupying forces because of Taliban’s resurgence. When nothing worked
in favor of USA, a stage came when the US was forced by circumstances in 2010
to employ its political prong to induce the Taliban to hold peace dialogue. At
the same time, Obama announced that the US-NATO troops would quit Afghanistan
by December 2014. This unpalatable step was taken in spite of opposition from
Pentagon and CIA as well as from India, Israel and Afghanistan. It dawned upon
Obama’s Administration that all the strategic allies on whom the US had leaned
heavily had no influence over the Taliban and were ineffectual. On the other
hand, Pakistan which was all along seen as part of the problem was the sole
country which could help in arranging talks and arriving at a political
settlement.
Increasing intimacy between USA and
Pakistan is happening at a time when Indo-Pakistan relations are sailing
through murky waters. This change in the outlook of USA trying to remove the
distrust accumulated over a period of time and to rebuild friendly ties with
Pakistan is vexing India. Not knowing how to disrupt growth of Pak-US ties,
India is continuing to play the terrorism card. During his meeting with Obama
in New York in September last, Manmohan Singh had a single point agenda of bad
mouthing Pakistan. Throughout the meeting he kept complaining like a village
old woman that Pakistan was indulging in cross border terrorism in Kashmir and
disturbing the peace. Even during his address to the UN he dubbed Pakistan as
epicenter of terrorism. Indian officials are propagating that there is sharp
increase in LoC-crossing attempts into IOK which has led to increase in
ceasefire violations and resurgence of terrorist attacks against Indian forces
in Kashmir. While craving to become a world power, Indian leaders have a bad
habit of putting their sins in the basket of Pakistan and then moaning like a
village woman that they are the victims of terrorism.
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