http://www.thehindu.com/news/the-india-cables/the-cables/article1565611.ece


There is no chance Naxalites could threaten the Indian state, and the
GOI is unlikely to eradicate Naxalism through police action. The most
likely prospect is a continuing and bloody stalemate.

47006, 12/08/2005 08:36, 05 NEWDELHI 9245, Embassy New Delhi,
CONFIDENTIAL, 05 CHENNAI 2761 | 05 NEWDELHI 1274, "This record is a
partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original
cable is not available.","C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 NEW
DELHI 009245

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/08/2015 TAGS: PGOV, PINR, PREL, PHUM, PTER, KCRM,
ASEC, SCUL, IN, NP, Counter-Terrorism

SUBJECT: INDIA FACES GROWING NAXALITE MENACE

REF: A. NEW DELHI 1274 B. CHENNAI 2761

Classified By: Political Counselor Geoff Pyatt, for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)

1. (C) Summary: Despite India's rapidly expanding economy, Naxalite
groups in poor rural areas and their educated urban sympathizers
continue to spread and have extended their areas of influence into 12
states, proving they can launch spectacular attacks on government
facilities. The GOI has responded with the formation of an
""interstate joint task force,"" to enable state governments to devise
a coordinated response. New Delhi has also committed 24 battalions of
the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) to counterinsurgency
operations. Embassy contacts and many commentators are skeptical that
the new initiatives will accomplish very much, as they do little to
address the persistent economic and social problems underlying
Naxalism. Indian economic development has missed large portions of the
countryside. India's scheduled tribes (STs), and scheduled castes
(SCs) who live in these remote areas, often face lives of desperation
and view Naxalites as the only groups willing to defend them. There is
no chance Naxalites could threaten the Indian state, and the GOI is
unlikely to eradicate Naxalism through police action. The most likely
prospect is a continuing and bloody stalemate. To end the conflict,
the GOI would have to convince Naxalites to renounce violence and
embrace parliamentary politics. This would entail ending violent
attacks on those Naxalites who have already entered politics and
enacting comprehensive land reform and other measures aimed at
dismantling the rural feudal power structure than oppresses India's
poorest citizens. There is little sign that the GOI is willing to take
such steps. India's Maoists are closely eyeing events in Nepal, and if
their Nepali comrades eventually give up armed struggle, it could
encourage the Naxalites to do the same. Meanwhile in parts of the
countryside the bloodletting continues. End Summary.

Naxal Activity Spreading

------------------------

2. (U) The Indian Home Ministry in its 2004-2005 Annual Report
documented the spread and continued success of the Naxalite
insurgency. According to the report, there are currently 9,300
full-time Naxalite fighters active in 118 districts and spread across
12 Indian states (Chattisgarh, Karnataka, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh,
Jharkhand, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Madhya Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Himachal Pradesh). The insurgents are armed with 6,300
factory-made weapons (mostly WWII era bolt action rifles, supplemented
by a few automatic weapons). The remainder are armed with
""country-made"" weapons, produced in rural gunshops of dubious
reliability. Counter-insurgency experts estimate that every one
Naxalite fighter is supported by four ""active sympathizers,"" who
provide housing, food, money, weapons and other infrastructural
support. Just two years ago, Naxalites were active in only 9 states
and 76 districts. To date in 2005 some 510 persons have been killed in
Naxalite violence, including over 90 security force personnel. The
goal of the Naxalites is to create a ""revolutionary corridor"" from
AP to Nepal, that will form the basis of a ""liberated zone"" governed
by the Maoists (reftel). They currently administer areas in Jharkhand
and AP where there is no GOI control and which provide safe-haven for
Naxalite combat units.

3. (U) Experts concur with the GOI assessment that while Naxalite
activity has spread over a wider geographic area, the number of
violent attacks has remained constant. Increased tactical
sophistication and the use of more lethal improvised explosive devices
(IEDs) has pushed up the security force death toll, however. There
have been a steady stream of Naxalite attacks throughout 2005. Some of
the most notable include:

--November 2004 - 15 policemen killed in an Andhra Pradesh landmine attack.

--February 2005 - 38 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) killed in AP

--June 2005 - approximately 500 Naxalites attack the UP village of
Madhuban destroying buildings, capturing weapons and killing several
local policemen

--August 2005 - Naxalite murder of a member of the AP legislative
assembly, his son and six others.

--August 2005 - 22 CRPF members killed in a Chattisgarh explosives attack.

--September 2005 - 15 police killed in Jharkhand

--November 2005 - Naxalites attack a Jharkhand police Training Center
killing policemen and capturing 185 weapons

--November 2005 - an estimated 300 to 400 Naxalites attack the
Jehanabad Prison in Bihar - killing several constables - freeing 341
inmates, including 20 members of the anti-Naxalite Ranvir Sena, whom
they subsequently murdered.

Reasons for the Spread

----------------------

4. (U) Aggressive counterinsurgency operations by State police forces,
supplemented by 24 battalions of the CRPF deployed by New Delhi, have
failed to halt the spread of Naxalite activity. Experts agree that the
Maoists are ahead of the game, adapting quickly to changed
circumstances and growing in sophistication and capability since the
September 2004 formation of the Communist Party of India (Maoist). The
formation of the banned CPI(Maoist), with the merger of the Peoples'
War Group (PWG) and the Maoist Communist Center (MCC), has increased
Naxalite capabilities, enabled intelligence sharing between formerly
disparate Naxalite groups, increased the Naxalite support network, and
allowed formerly localized groups to operate across state boundaries.
The new party has implemented an extensive training program that has
produced professional military-type cadres with improved tactics,
better coordination, more sophisticated communication networks and
better IEDs.

5. (C) Although Naxalites claim to represent the interests of India's
oppressed Scheduled Castes (STs) and Schedule Tribes (STs), the
leadership is almost entirely from the upper castes, including some
highly educated individuals. The same applies to the extensive
Naxalite support network, including above-ground organizations of
educated middle class persons from academia, the media and the legal
profession. As globalization and economic liberalization
(neo-liberalism) expand in India, some within the largely middle-class
anti-globalization forces disparage the Left Front (LF), a group of
Communist and Socialist Parties who espouse parliamentary democracy
and support the ruling United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government
from outside. They feel that the Naxalites are the only ""true""
leftists, who stand up for the oppressed SCs and STs. The Naxalite
movement would not have been able to expand without this middle-class,
above-ground support.

New Delhi's Response

--------------------

6. (U) The Home Ministry, frustrated by the inability of Naxalite
effected states to mount a coordinated response, on September 19
called the administrative heads, senior officials and Chief Ministers
of the 12 states together in New Delhi. The participants established
an ""interstate joint task force"" to ""facilitate coordinated and
synergized anti-naxalite operations across state boundaries,"" and
""strengthen intelligence networks."" Home Minister Shivraj Patil
hailed the meeting, claiming that it would foster a ""multi-track
approach,"" rather than merely treating Naxalism as a law-enforcement
problem. Patil emphasized that the new approach would work to develop
the local economies in the effected areas, ensure political and social
justice for the SCs and STs, and ""as a last resort"" act against
those Naxalites who continue to insist on committing acts of violence.

An Opposition Viewpoint

-----------------------

7. (C) Telegu Desam MP M. Jagannath represents an AP constituency with
a large ST population in which Naxalites are quite active. Although he
is in the opposition, he supported many of the views expounded by Home
Minister Patil, but urged the Indian state to go much further. In a
December 2 conversation with Poloff, Jagannath emphasized that the
Naxalite problem is inherently political, and cannot be solved with a
purely law and order approach. He pointed out that India's STs and SCs
often live in the grip of feudalism, that in India's more backward
areas the ""feudals"" are usually supported by the high castes, and
local police do the bidding of the feudal/high caste nexus, leaving
STs and SCs helpless. India's rural underclass, he noted, face an
unrelenting cycle of poverty, unemployment and atrocities, including
the rape of wives and daughters. Seeing no other option, the STs and
SCs often turn to the Naxalites, who provide them the means to exact
revenge and reverse their economic status.

8. (C) Jagannath urged the GOI to tackle the Naxalite problem by
providing employment and subsidized loans to poor SCs and STs and
investing in genuine rural development programs, including extensive
land reforms aimed at breaking the back of the feudals. Jagannath
blamed the AP government for the breakdown of negotiations with the
Naxalites there, pointing out that to show ""progress"" in the
anti-Naxalite campaign, state police forces have picked up innocent
tribals, murdered them and claimed they were Naxalites killed in
""encounters.""

The View from the Left

----------------------

9. (C) Journalist and political activist AS Verma, himself a former
Naxalite, told Poloff on December 2 that the GOI's September 19
meeting was little more than political theater and would do nothing to
stop the spread of Naxalism. He pointed out that LK Advani had pursued
a similar policy as Home Minister in the previous NDA government, when
Naxal activity was confined to only four states. Verma accused the GOI
of inherent hypocrisy, in that it claims that Naxalism is a ""social
problem,"" but then relies on a law and order solution. In Verma's
estimation, the UPA will rely more on the police than the NDA. This is
because the LF, which keeps the UPA in power, is a sworn enemy of the
Naxalites, as the CPI(M) used harsh police methods to crush Naxalism
in West Bengal.

10. (C) Verma urged the GOI to differentiate between revolutionaries
and terrorists. Terrorists, he emphasized, have no mass base, while
Naxalites have a popular following throughout India. The Naxalites,
unlike terrorists, target their violence and do not engage in mass
killing of innocents. This was demonstrated in Jehanabad, when they
warned civilians to remain indoors and assured them they would not
face attack. Verma emphasized that the GOI must stop jailing illegally
leftist activists who speak out on behalf of STs/SCs, especially those
that are landless laborers and poor peasants, and should release those
currently in illegal detention. Arguing that India is basically a
""criminalized state,"" he noted that the left parties and Naxalites
are the only parties in India that are not corrupt and entrenched with
criminal mafias.

11. (C) Verma urged Poloff not to take Naxalite assertions of eternal
class war at face value. In his estimation, Naxalite violence is a
bargaining tool and a means to an end, rather than an end in itself.
Saying that ""this is not the 1960's and there is no possibility of a
violent overthrow of the Indian state,"" Verma insisted that the
Naxalites want to see a negotiated settlement, an end to violence, and
their acceptance as above-ground political parties. The GOI should
hurry this process along by declaring a cease-fire, and ending violent
attacks against the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist), the
above-ground political party formed by former Naxalites.

Comment - Naxalism as Prelude to Bargaining

-------------------------------------------

12. (C) Naxalites cannot overthrow the government of India, and are
unlikely ever to control more than a few remote areas of the country.
Likewise, the GOI is unlikely to eradicate Naxalism, as the crushing
poverty, lingering feudalism and inherent discrimination of Indian
society has nurtured desperation that finds its only outlet through
violence. Without a radical change of tack by both sides, the most
likely outcome is an extended stalemate that can only grow bloodier as
the Naxalites acquire more sophistication and better weapons. While
the security forces can gain the upper hand in some Naxalite areas,
they can expect to suffer reverses in others. Three factors hold the
key to an eventual solution: events in Nepal, the development of
India's left parties, and the nature of Indian economic development.

13. (C) India's Naxalites are watching events in Nepal closely. Nepal
is a small and largely homogeneous state, with an entrenched feudal
class, weak central government, and a desperately poor rural
underclass, which provides much better conditions for a Maoist
revolution than India. If Nepal's Maoists eventually give up armed
struggle and come to a negotiated settlement, it will provide the
impetus to India's Maoists to do the same, as the chances for a Maoist
victory in India are much less than in Nepal. Some leftists, such as
Verma, argue that Indian Maoists are well aware that they cannot win a
class war, and intend to negotiate a settlement when conditions are
right. A negotiated outcome in Nepal would provide a further impetus.

14. (C) The Communist Party of India (Marxist) is India's leftist
flagship and remains a committed enemy of the Naxalites. CPI(M)
General Secretary Prakash Karat dismisses the Naxalites as
""adventurists"" whose ""politics rely on anarchic violence directed
at individuals and ordinary people."" Karat argues that Naxalite
violence only invites state repression, hurting the very people it
intends to help. He has pledged the CPI(M) to ""counter politically
and ideologically the false posturing of such 'revolutionary'
activities."" The fledgling CPI(ML) is committed to bringing the
Naxalites out of the underground and into parliamentary democracy, but
faces opposition from both the LF and the GOI. In order for India's
Naxalites to renounce violence, the GOI would have treat the CPI(ML)
as a legitimate political party and provide reformed Naxalites an
opportunity to join and agitate on behalf of STs and SCs.

15. (C) Desperation often drives Naxalism. The onus is on the GOI to
demonstrate to India's have-nots that it is crafting an economic
development program that is genuinely aimed at alleviating this
desperate situation. As long as India's political parties and elites
are willing to accept the status quo and not take on feudal interests,
the stalemate and the violence will continue.

MULFORD
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
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