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Subject: Tariq Ali: Do we have to wait for a war to bring these politicians
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The INDEPENDENT (UK)
Tariq Ali: Do we have to wait for a war to bring these politicians to their
senses?
'On one level, it would suit both sides to have a small war. But who could
guarantee a small war?'
04 January 2002
Despite pleas of the new pro-Western regime, Afghanistan is still being
bombed. Innocent people die every day. Osama bin Laden is still at large,
but attention has already shifted to Pakistan. The destabilising effects of
the war in Afghanistan were always likely to be felt here first. The reasons
are obvious.

The Pashtun population in Pakistan's North-Western Frontier Province shares
linguistic and ethnic ties with the region that formed the principal base of
the Taliban in Afghanistan. The same brand of Deobandi Islam is strong on
both sides of the border. It is worth stressing that there was less actual
fighting on the ground in the last three months than there has been over the
last quarter century. The bearded ones chose not to fight. A sizeable
section of the Taliban forces simply came back home to Pakistan. Some of
them are undoubtedly demoralised and happy to be alive, but there is
probably a large minority that is angered by Islamabad's betrayal and is
eager to link up with the armed fundamentalist groups already in the
country.

The leaders of the most virulent jihadi sects have been arrested, but who
will disarm their militants? Until late last year some of the Islamist
leaders were boasting that they had chosen 20 cities on which Islamic laws
would be imposed. The unstated threat was clear. If any authority attempted
to interfere, they would unleash a civil war. When the latest Afghan war
began, Washington made no secret of its fear that a massive Western
intervention in Afghanistan that overtly used Pakistan as a launching-pad
might trigger major unrest or even a coup against a collaborationist regime.
The US did everything to maintain decorous appearances for General
Musharraf, Pakistan's ruler, while making sure of the practical compliance
of Islamabad. In return for this, sanctions were lifted and money and the
latest weaponry began to flow into Pakistan once again.

But now that the Taliban have been defeated, can anyone be sure that the
various fig-leaves will really insulate Pakistan from the indignation of the
faithful? Everything depends on the unity of the officer corps. To some
degree, if one difficult to gauge, Sunni fundamentalism has also penetrated
the ranks of the armed forces. Across the country, radical Islamism of one
kind or another is a vocal, if minority, force. General Musharraf's military
regime itself is, moreover, a very recent and none-too-strong creation, with
little positive civilian support.

The abandonment of its own creation in Afghanistan will be a bitter pill for
many in the army, especially at junior levels of command, where religious
influence is strongest. However, even more secular-minded officers are not
pleased at the outcome. The Taliban takeover in Kabul was the Pakistan
army's only victory. Privately the ruling elite - officers, bureaucrats and
politicians - congratulated each other for having gained a new province. It
almost made up for the 1971 defection of Bangladesh. As if to rub salt into
the wounds, the Northern Alliance and its Washington-selected Prime
Minister, Hamid Karzai, have just declared their intention of forging close
relations with India, as was the case from 1947-89. This has further
weakened the position of the general ruling Pakistan.

It is true that, at more senior levels, the American crusade against the
Taliban has been seen as a godsend. For at a stroke it has allowed the
Pakistani generals to recover their traditional regional priority for
Washington, assured them of credits they desperately need and lifted
opposition to their nuclear arsenal. Unlike its Arab counterparts, the
Pakistani army has never seen a coup mounted by captains, majors or colonels
- when it has seized power, as so often, it has always done so without
splits, at the initiative and under the control of its generals (a tradition
of discipline inherited from the Raj).

At all events, short of a break in this long-established pattern, it seems
unlikely that the top-brass of the Pakistani regime will suffer much from
the pieces of silver with which they have been showered. However, the scale
of the Pakistani defeat is such that, once the flow of money and weapons
ceases, General Musharraf might well be toppled from within. Power-hungry
generals have never been a rare commodity in Pakistan.

This is what makes the tension with India potentially dangerous. The irony
is that Pakistan is led by a secular general and India by a fundamentalist
Hindu politician: an ideal combination to make peace. Yet on one level it
would suit both sides to have a small war. General Musharraf could prove
that he was not a total pawn. And Atal Bihari Vajpayee, India's Prime
Minster, could win an election. The Kashmiris would continue to suffer. But
who could guarantee a small war?

The fact is that Pakistan's infiltration of jihadi groups, such as the
Lashkar-e-Tayyiba and the Jaish-e-Mohammed, into Indian-occupied Kashmir has
created an alternative military apparatus that Islamabad funds and supplies
but can't fully control - just like the Taliban. It's obvious that the
attack on the Indian Parliament was carried out by one of these groups to
provoke a more serious conflict. Some of the jihadis don't much care for
Pakistan as an entity. Their aim is to restore Muslim rule in India. Crazy?
Yes, but armed and capable of wreaking havoc in both countries. If General
Musharraf won't deal with the menace, Mr Vajpayee will.

If Washington can wage its "war on terrorism", why can't Delhi? Just because
it can't get retrospective sanction from the UN? But as any Second World
politician will tell you, for UN read US. The threat of an Indo-Pak war has
concentrated minds in Washington: how to give the Indians their pound of
flesh without destabilising Pakistan? Perhaps the time is coming when
General Musharraf can be sacrificed in the name of a return to democracy in
Pakistan. The problem is that no civilian politician in Pakistan is strong
enough to challenge the army, which has ruled the country longer than any
political party.

The real solution lies in Kashmir, the cause of a dispute that could lead to
nuclear conflict. Kashmiris have suffered long enough. The brutality of the
Indian occupation made many of them turn to Pakistan, but the behaviour of
the jihadi infiltrators has shocked most Kashmiris. The very thought of
Talibanisation has led many educated professionals, male and female, to
flee. They would like to be rid of both sides.

An autonomous Kashmir, which shares sovereignty with both India and
Pakistan, and even China, could become a haven of peace in the region.
Sooner or later the situation will require some such solution, but do we
have to wait for a war to bring politicians to their senses?

Verso will publish the writer's 'Clash of Fundamentalisms: Crusades, Jihads
and Modernity' in April


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