Surely They’re Joking, Mr. Fai! Kashmir’s American Counsel?

*By Farzana Versey*

24 July, 2011
*Countercurrents.org*

The fact that there is an element of surprise over Ghulam Nabi Fai’s arrest
after the FBI exposed his connections to Pakistan’s Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI) reveals that this was probably a sudden brainwave.

The allegation is that Mr. Fai’s Kashmir American Council (KAC) was
illegally funded by the ISI to exert influence on the US Congress to swing
the Kashmir debate in Pakistan’s favour.

Did the ISI do it? Possible. Did Mr. Fai use this money? Possible. Was the
FBI unaware about it all these years? Not possible.

There are a few important aspects to this development:

1. The FBI keeps track of all funds, so why was it quiet all along? KAC is
not an underground movement. It puts up petitions; it has a Google groups
forum; there is a Facebook page of its affiliates; its conferences are held
in university halls and invitation is free. Often dinner is served.

The huge amount of money discovered should prompt the FBI to question the
recipients and investigate as to how it has impacted on US policy. Instead,
the focus is almost entirely on the Fai-ISI link. Is it possible to forget
that the ISI virtually runs Pakistan and that Pakistan is also the
beneficiary of American funds? Ergo, the ISI is by default propped up by the
US financially and, given the strategic political dynamics, on the ground
too. The ISI is nobody’s fool to depend on a Kashmiri organisation in the US
to lobby for Pakistan’s interests in the Valley when it already has its
people in the region with help from the Lashkar-e-Taiyba and other forces,
including a faction of the local Hurriyat Conference.

This is not a simple case of getting the bad guy. It is about creating one
more bad guy, and this is notwithstanding Fai’s role in the larger Kashmir
issue and sponsorship.

2. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has just visited India and set the
tone for Indo-US relations. However, the dog-and-bone attitude continues
with an emphasis on American interest and interests in Pakistan. There is
most definitely an attempt to influence the talks between the foreign
ministers of India and Pakistan scheduled for July 27.

3. The proposed US move out of Afghanistan would necessitate having some
presence in the region. In fact, after the Clinton meeting, India’s Foreign
Minister S.M. Krishna said, “We have impressed on the United States and
other countries who have a major presence in Afghanistan that it is
necessary for them to continue in Afghanistan.”

Pakistan is handy for some sado-masochism. Recently, there were video clips
in the media of the Taliban killing Pakistani soldiers, in a reversed
version of Gitmo.

4. Osama Bin Laden’s killing is being regurgitated on a tangential topic by
implying yet again that Pakistani intelligence agencies knew about his
abode. There have been arrests that seem suspiciously like red herrings.

5. David Headley is deposing before the courts in the US and providing
details of the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Headley’s departure from the US to India
is a major goof-up by security forces in that country as well as the Indian
embassy. His implicating the ISI would surprise no one except the US in its
studied ‘naïve’ state. It is pertinent that Ms. Clinton mentioned these
attacks (with only a cursory sympathetic reference to the recent Mumbai
attacks only days before she arrived). This is much like Headley who wanted
to fight for Kashmir, but ended up taking pictures of Mumbai’s landmarks to
help his ‘handlers’.

6. One is aware of the ISI’s crucial strategic role in Pakistan. But, how
does the FBI function in the US? Does it push the agenda of the party in
power? If so, then its bolt from the blue could be another means to assist
the current government in the coming elections.

The major beneficiary of Mr. Fai’s political contributions seems to be
Republican Congressman Dan Burton of Indiana. This has been going on for 15
years. For 15 years the FBI has managed to trace the $23,500 contribution to
US lawmakers that is legally available with the Federal Election Commission.
What made the FBI now want to dig into the over $ 4 million that was
illegally brought in?

If indeed it is true, then the onus ought to be on the security agencies and
those who were expected to lobby for the Kashmir cause. There are murmurs
that Fai is only a front. This is a convenient ruse. You have some evidence,
claim other evidence, arrest the man based on these and then leave a small
opening for the bigger fish, well aware that the bigger fish are not born
that way but plumped up artificially in diplomatic laboratories.

* * *

It is time to ask how exactly lobbying works and whether the United States
can take an ethical stand when it is open to such influencing.

The political action committee (PAC) is a blatant forum to ensure that
groups can help political candidates and parties, which in turn promise to
assist them. Contributors range from real estate agencies, insurance
companies, defense contractors and oil companies. There are also special
interest groups based on race, gender, nationality, and religion too. In
less developed societies this might be deemed as bribery. Legalising it
makes the process transparent only to a small extent. If KAC has really
managed to get in the millions of dollars illegally, then it suggests that
there are loopholes in the system.

However, does this ensure that the lobbying group will truly benefit? Mr.
Fai was a US citizen; he organised conferences as many do. There was one
held on February 2011 and the list of speakers included Chairman of the
Hurriyat Conference Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Norwegian Member of Parliament
Peter S. Gitmark, author and South Asia Analyst Victoria Schofield,
Pakistani envoy Husain Haqqani. The others listed as “invited” were the
Indian ambassador to the US, Meera Shankar, Chinese ambassador Zhang Yesui
and US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
Robert O. Blake, Jr.

Rather curiously, reports have made it sound ominous by stating, “Another
group which has come under the lens is Indian liberals and so-called
bleeding hearts who accepted Fai’s and KAC’s hospitality to attend
conferences in US on the Kashmir issue…” The liberals go on junkets for
several causes, including plane rides with ministers of the ruling party or
the opposition depending on their agenda or that of the organisation they
represent. This includes the media. Does their presence help the cause? What
is their contribution in real terms?

A peripheral but telling aspect is how some Indians view the unfolding of
this episode. A Hindutva group functionary sent an email with an article
from the Times of India appended with his comments. He writes, “First, the
author calls those who have exposed the Indians (either citizens or those
who are of Indian origin) as 'Indian hypernationalists and right-wingers'
and 'hardline nationalist'. However, those Indians who attended the seminars
organized by the Pakistan's ISI sponsored front as 'liberals', instead of
traitors. Clearly he wants to prejudice the minds of the readers. But, you
cannot hide the truth. The Indians who were invited to the various
programmes were obviously those who would be taking an anti-India position,
and not ones who would project a holistic picture. It is absolutely
necessary to expose those Indians who attended these programmes. Actually,
they themselves should come forward and identify themselves.”

There is nothing secret about this. As mentioned earlier, the KAC’s
activities were open. While the person is quick to label those attending
such conferences as traitors based on the implication of the ISI role in the
council, he assumes they would take an anti-India stand. One must remember
that there are several influential Hindutva groups too in the US. There are
Jewish lobbies.

Since I was never invited, let me add that it is more important to first
find out whether anyone has managed to score points for Pakistan on the
Kashmir debate and how much it can change the ground realities. The US is
interested in counter-terrorism that affects it directly. Has it ever spoken
about lives lost in the state – civilian and military?

On what grounds can the US plan to question Kashmiri separatists when they
were given visas to travel for seminars that were in the public domain?
Should it not look into its own backyard and see how and why anyone can
lobby for positions that it claims to be chary of?

Pakistan has, naturally, denied any role. What is the Indian position? If it
cannot take a stand regarding a person of Indian origin only because he is
Kashmiri, then it only reiterates the attitude of disenchantment that people
in the Valley suffer from.

In November last year Ghulam Nabi Fai had written:

“Once again, Kashmir is giving proof that it is not going to compromise, far
less abandon, its demand for Azaadi (freedom) which is its birthright and
for which it has paid a price in blood and suffering which has not been
exacted from any other people of the South Asian subcontinent. Compared to
the sacrifice Kashmir has had to endure, India and Pakistan themselves
gained their freedom through a highly civilized process. That is a most
poignant truth. But even more bitterly ironical is the contrast between the
complex and decades-long agony the Kashmir issue has caused to Kashmiris, to
Pakistan and to India itself and the simple, rational measures that would be
needed for its solution. No sleight of hand is required, no subtle concepts
are to be deployed, and no ingenious deal needs to be struck between an
Indian and a Pakistani leader with the endorsement of the more pliable
Kashmiri figures. The time for subterfuges is gone. All that is needed is
going back – yes, going back – to the point of agreement which historically
existed beyond doubt between India and Pakistan and jointly resolving to
retrieve it with such modifications as are necessitated by the passage of
time.

“That point of agreement is the one India as well as Pakistan, each
independently, brought to the United Nations Security Council when the
Kashmir dispute was first internationalized. In fact, the Council itself
took that point as the basis of the resolutions it later formulated.

“The point was one of inescapable principle- -- that the future status of
the State of Jammu and Kashmir shall be decided by the will of the people of
the State as impartially ascertained in conditions free from coercion. The
two elements of a peaceful settlement thus were, first, the demilitarization
of the State (i.e. the withdrawal of the forces of both India and Pakistan)
and a plebiscite supervised by the United Nations.

“With propositions of such clarity and character accepted, what room was
left for the dispute to arise?”

Is this not the position taken by many political groups within Kashmir, by
separatists, by the people?

It would be a pity if due to the ISI angle, the real issues will be pushed
aside. America has the arsenal to deal with the ISI, but does it have the
will? If Mr. Fai is a front, then why only name the ISI people and not the
Congressmen who knew what they were expected to lobby for? Culpability in
this case lies across the board. It is utterly ridiculous to make this sound
like a terrorist plot when the monies have been traced and people of some
stature have been consistently raising the Kashmir issue, not just abroad
but at home.

And Kashmiris are not pawns of the United States of America that some
official can pocket the money and decide its fate.

Farzana Versey is a Mumbai-based author-columnist. She can be reached at
http://farzana-versey.blogspot.com/

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