8:50 AM



 







Dear All, 
  
Please refer to a shocking article by Shashi Tharoor (Congress contestant from 
Thiruvananthapuram) published in a main Israeli daily ‘Haaretz’ on 21/01/09. 
 
Need to do everything possible to make sure such people are not elected to 
parliament from our own state irrelevant of which political party you are 
supporting in this election. (Hope some one will instigate our News channels to 
flare a debate on this). 


 
http://www.haaretz. com/hasen/ spages/1057981. html
  
India's Israel envy 
 
By Shashi Tharoor 
   
NEW DELHI - As Israeli planes and tanks were exacting a heavy toll on Gaza, 
India's leaders and strategic thinkers were watching with an unusual degree of 
interest - and some empathy. 
 
India's government, no surprise, joined the rest of the world in calling for an 
end to the military action, but its criticism of Israel was muted. For, as 
Israel demonstrated anew its determination to end attacks on its civilians by 
militants based in Hamas-controlled territory, many in India, still smarting 
from the horrors of the Mumbai attacks in November, have been asking: Why can't 
we do the same? 
 
For many Indians, the temptation to identify with Israel was strengthened by 
the terrorists' seizure of the Chabad House, and the painful awareness that 
India and Israel share many of the same enemies. India, with its 150 million 
Muslims, has long been a staunch supporter of the Palestinian cause, and 
remains strongly committed to an independent Palestinian state. But the Mumbai 
attacks confirmed what has become apparent in recent years: The forces of 
global Islamist terror have added Indians to their target list of reviled "Jews 
and crusaders." 
 
Just as Israel has frequently been attacked by rockets fired from across its 
border, India has suffered repeated assaults by killers trained, equipped, 
financed and directed by elements based next door, in Pakistan. When president 
George W. Bush's press secretary equated members of Hamas with the Mumbai 
killers, her comments were widely circulated in India. 
Yet there the parallels end. Israel is a small country living in a permanent 
state of siege, highly security-conscious and surrounded by forces hostile to 
it; India is a giant country whose borders are notoriously permeable, an open 
society known for its lax and easygoing ways. 
 
Whereas many regard Israel's toughness as its principal characteristic, India's 
own citizens view their country as a soft state, its underbelly easily 
penetrated by determined terrorists. Whereas Israel notoriously exacts grim 
retribution for every attack on its soil, India has endured with numbing 
stoicism an endless series of bomb blasts, including at least six major 
assaults in different locations in 2008 alone. Terrorism has taken more lives 
in India than in any country in the world after Iraq, and yet, unlike Israel, 
India has seemed unable to do anything about it. 
 
Moreover, whereas Israel's principal adversary is currently Hamas, India faces 
a slew of terrorist organizations - Lashkar-e-Toiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, 
Jamaat-ud-Dawa and more. But, whereas Hamas operates from Gaza without 
international recognition, India's tormentors function from Pakistan, a 
sovereign member of the United Nations. And that makes all the difference. 
 
Hamas is in no position to repay Israel's air and ground attacks in kind, 
whereas an Indian attack on Pakistani territory, even one targeting terrorist 
bases and training camps, would invite swift retaliation from the Pakistani 
army. And, at the end of the day, one chilling fact would prevent India from 
thinking that it could use Israel's playbook: The country that condones, if not 
foments, the terror attacks on India is a nuclear power. 
 
So India has gone to the world community with evidence that the Mumbai attacks 
were planned in Pakistan and conducted by Pakistanis who maintained contact 
with handlers there during the operation. While India had briefly hoped that 
the proof might enable Pakistan's weak civilian government to rein in the 
malign elements in its society, the Pakistani authorities' reaction has been 
one of denial. 
 
Yet no one doubts that Pakistan's all-powerful military intelligence has, over 
the last two decades, created and supported terror organizations as instruments 
of Pakistani policy in Afghanistan and India. When India's embassy in Kabul was 
hit by a suicide bomber last July, American intelligence sources revealed that 
not only was Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence behind the attack, but that 
it made little effort to cover its tracks. The ISI knew perfectly well that 
India would not go to war with Pakistan to avenge the killing of its diplomatic 
personnel. 
 
The fact is that India knows that war will accomplish nothing. Indeed, it is 
just what the terrorists want - a cause that would rally all Pakistanis to the 
flag and provide Pakistan's army an excuse to abandon the unpopular fight 
against the Taliban and Al-Qaida in the west for the more familiar terrain of 
the Indian border in the east. India's government sees no reason to play into 
the hands of those who seek that outcome. 
 
Yet, when Indians watch Israel take the fight to the enemy, killing those who 
launched rockets against it and dismantling many of the sites from which the 
rockets flew, some cannot resist wishing that they could do something similar 
in Pakistan. India understands, though, that the collateral damage would be too 
high, the price in civilian lives unacceptable, and the risks of the conflict 
spiraling out of control too acute to contemplate such an option. So Indians 
place their trust in international diplomacy and watch, with ill-disguised 
wistfulness, as Israel does what they could never permit themselves to do. 
 
Shashi Tharoor is an Indian novelist and commentator, and a former 
under-secretary- general of the United Nations. Copyright: Project Syndicate. 
 
. 




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