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EDITORIAL

BUS TO IGNOMINY
The media hype surrounding the flagging of the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad bus route would have gullible readers believe that humanitarian issues have finally started counting in policy circles. The ‘pigheadedness’ of conflict, so it was projected, had given way to people-centric foreign policies by India and Pakistan. But we know very well the way in which the news media preyed upon the sentiments of family members during the IC-814 hijacking by Pakistani terrorists in 1999. That was also portrayed as a ‘humanitarian issue’, which ultimately caused more human loss and misery.

The question we have to ask as interested parties in long-term solutions is whether building ‘Aman-Setu’ (peace bridge) is the way forward for bringing about peace and an end to cross-border terrorism in Jammu & Kashmir. Mufti Muhammad Sayeed has used his typical bluster to call the bus route Delhi’s best gift to Kashmiris. Does he know how many ‘Kashmiris’ reside in Pakistan-Occupied-Kashmir? Aman-Setu is an interesting bridge that brings Pakistani Punjabi-dominated POK into daily contact with Muslim Kashmiri-dominated J & K. A recipe for furthering separatism of the Hurriyat kind, in short.

Indian apparatchiks are congratulating themselves that this is a masterstroke that might be able to ward off Pakistan’s claims for territorial rearrangement and finalise the LoC as an international ‘soft’ border. The attacks of terrorist jihadis on bus passengers, undoubtedly organised with ISI consent, are clear signs that buses cannot eradicate the madrassa’s hate education. They also make clear that Islamabad keeps the gun option open while allowing Aman-Setus. By allowing terrorists to criticise and threaten the bus inauguration, General Musharraf has sent an unmistakable signal to his constituents among the mujahideen that he will never give up annexation of J & K as a goal of state policy. In other words, people-people-contacts are a façade covering Islamabad’s Janus-face.

Unifying families emotionally sounds like a Bollywood sentimental blockbuster theme, a populist cause that will no doubt give Mufti room to outmanoeuvre his political opponents. But will it bring peace with justice? Kashmir Herald emphasises peace with justice because no serious attempt has been made in 15 years to unify Kashmiri Hindu families who have been scattered outside their ancestral homeland, the valley. Human rights dogmas have been so selectively employed that the world has been made to believe that Kashmiri Muslims, the dominant community that enjoys a stranglehold on power in J & K, are the sole oppressed and separated lot. No solution to the Kashmir problem can be lasting if the human rights of POK Kashmiris and religious minorities in J & K are also put on the table.

Bus rides can go home to roost. Kashmir will continue to burn.


A Sinister Nexus
Had there been no jihad in Afghanistan in the 1980s, there would have been no jihad in Kashmir in the 1990s. Had there been no US-Pakistan nexus in Afghanistan, there would have been no jihad in that country. History has unsavoury lessons to teach about the regional implications of military alliances. Ronald Reagan’s foreign policy adviser Jeane Kirkpatrick claimed that there was a difference between “authoritarianism” and “totalitarianism” in order to rationalise Washington’s tight relationship with General Zia’s Pakistan. Zia, whose influence on the most recent wave of radical Islam is stellar,  was labelled a soft autocrat who could be used to dethrone the “evil empire” of the totalitarian USSR.  The dangerous concoction of guns, drugs and mujahideen which was the outcome of the US-Pakistan nexus of the eighties spilled over into Kashmir, Tajikistan, Sinkiang, Bosnia, Chechnya etc. in the nineties. It created the phenomenon of globe trotting jihadis who could fudge identities and carry out terrorist acts with precision.

The poison which Reagan sowed lay dormant for a while in the late nineties but has again reared its ugly head with the Bush Jr. administration. Donald Rumsfeld has just declaimed to the press that Pakistan under General Musharraf is a “moderate Islamic state” that is proving its worth as an ally of the US in terms of the number of Al Qaeda terrorists being handed over to the Americans. Rumsfeld went on to state that it is precisely Pakistan’s model of ‘moderate Islam’ which the US is seeking to foster in the Arab world. As if the creation of one Pakistan has not spawned enough global problems in the last 57 years, the Americans are planning to reproduce more Pakistans around the world. This is the present-day version of Kirkpatrick’s semantics. Musharraf is an ideal ruler for the US to latch on to- he promises and delivers obediently. At least that is what Bush believes, despite evidence to the contrary.

Inside sources revealed to KNN that when Bush got re-elected in November, the Pakistan army and ISI had three nights of revelry and gaiety because they were sure their own futures were secured for another 4 years. Not only is Pakistan benefiting militarily and economically as a ‘Non-NATO Ally’ of the US, the hand of Uncle Sam is evident in Pakistan’s internal politics too. For a long time, the US had been preventing a meeting between exiled politicians Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif. The US had warned Benazir that whatever good press she gets in the western media as a beacon of democracy would be terminated if she tried to topple army rule by joining hands with her erstwhile foe, Sharif. Benazir also went into secret discussions with Musharraf recently and is said to have done a deal for her husband Asif Zardari to be released from jail and for her to be made Prime Minister in exchange for giving greater legitimacy to Musharraf’s Presidency. Informed Pakistanis feel that even this demarche was made with American blessings. The daily beeline which Pakistani politicians make outside the US embassy in Islamabad is itself an indicator of how much the US controls Pakistan today.

A new wave of jihadi terrorism in Kashmir can be expected from a new generation of radical Islamists as the first decade of the 21st century progresses. The blame, without blinkers on, will rest as much on the pliant state of Pakistan as on the puppeteer state of USA. Whether the pro-US lobby in India likes it or not, its reading of history is low brow.

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