http://www.hindu. com/2009/ 10/05/stories/ 2009100552560800
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*The road ahead for India and Pakistan*

Siddharth Varadarajan

*If terrorism will not compel India to settle outstanding disputes with
Pakistan, keeping the dialogue process suspended indefinitely is not going
to force Islamabad to be more mindful of New Delhi’s concerns either. Both
strategies have failed; it is time the two countries moved beyond them.*

There is a story senior journalist A.S. Panneerselvan tells of the
experience of the first group of Tamil Tigers who were brought to a remote
camp in Uttar Pradesh for arms training by the Indian government in the
early 1980s. Every evening, the camp’s Tibetan cook would look at the group
of Sri Lankan Tamils and start laughing. Eventually, one of the Tamils
learnt enough Hindi to ask the cook what was so funny. “Thirty years ago,”
the old man said, “I was in this camp with other Tibetans getting trained
and there was somebody else to cook for us. Now you are here and I am
cooking for you!” “That may be so,” the LTTE man said, “but I still don’t
see what’s so funny.” Prompt came the reply: “You see, I’m wondering who you
will be cooking for 20 years from now … I think it may be the Chakmas!”

Unfortunately for the Indian establishment, the LTTE story did not end so
tamely, over cooking pots and a camp fire. Well before the terrorist group
eventually met its end in the Vanni earlier this year, the Tigers
assassinated a former Prime Minister of India and were responsible for the
death of countless Indian soldiers.

I am recalling this story in an article about India and Pakistan because it
reminds us of three processes that are an essential part of modern South
Asian statecraft and which help define the contours of the current crisis in
the bilateral relationship.. First, that every state in the region has, at
one time or another, patronised extremist groups or tolerated their violent
activities in order to advance its domestic political or regional strategic
interests. Second, the activities of these groups invariably “overshoot”
their target and begin to undermine the core interests of their original
patrons. Third, there comes a time in the life of all such groups when the
nature and extent of their violence reach a “tipping point” as far as the
same state is concerned.

A mature, well-developed state is one which is able to read the early
warning signs and effect a course correction in official policy well before
that tipping point is reached. In the absence of this maturity, states
respond in one of two ways. States with a tendency to stability are at least
able to recognise when a tipping point has been reached and act accordingly.
But states which are unable to recognise either the early warning signs or
the tipping point itself and which continue to pretend that the non-state
actors they have patronised can be subordinated to an official command
structure despite evidence to the contrary run the risk of destabilising
themselves.

The Congress party leader in Bombay, S.K. Patil, encouraged the rise of the
Shiv Sena in the 1960s in order to undermine the city’s communist-led trade
union movement. The Sena overshot its target and eventually became a
political rival to the Congress. By the time the Sena revealed its true self
in the communal violence it helped orchestrate in Bombay in 1992, it was too
late for anyone to act against it. The Sena had already become a part of the
establishment, its violence normalised, its leaders insulated from police
action and proper judicial sanction.

A second example of the same phenomenon, but with a different ending,
emerged in Punjab in the 1980s. Indira Gandhi welcomed the rise of Jarnail
Singh Bhindranwale and his extremist politics because she saw in him an
effective counter to the Akali Dal in Punjab. The Khalistani ideologue’s
violence was tolerated for some time; the tipping point for the
establishment should arguably have come when a senior police officer, A.S.
Atwal, was gunned down by Bhindranwale’s men in April 1983. But New Delhi
waited and waited, acting against the ‘Sant’ only in June 1984.

The trouble with acting against extremist groups after the tipping point is
reached is that the process can be long drawn out and costly, especially in
terms of human life. Successive governments at the Centre pacified Punjab
but not before nearly 20,000 people lost their lives in Operation Bluestar,
the November 1984 massacres, and the brutal police campaigns in the Punjab.

In Pakistan, the military-cum-intelligence establishment has had a long-term
policy of creating, cultivating and using extremist groups both as a lever
against mainstream political parties within the country and as a tool of
foreign and military policy against India and Afghanistan. Some of these
groups very rapidly ‘overshot’ their initial targets, especially
domestically. The state responded by targeting particularly wayward
terrorist leaders but did not abandon the overall structures of official
permissiveness. External pressure following 9/11 led to the temporary course
correction of abandoning the Taliban in Afghanistan. The Lal Masjid
situation in Islamabad was another potential tipping point but its lessons
were ignored, leading to the growth of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan. Then
came Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, but the nexus between extremism and a
military establishment keen to subvert the return of democracy muddied the
waters. Sufi Mohammad’s folly in openly defying the Pakistani state soon
after the Nizam-e-Adl fiasco in Swat brought about a more decisive point of
inflection, which is today still being played out in the Malakand division.

But even if the Pakistani army has joined the battle against terrorism in
the frontier regions bordering Afghanistan in earnest, there is no question
of the military establishment recognising the danger that anti-India
terrorist groups have started to pose to Pakistan itself. A section of the
Pakistani political leadership saw in the terrorist attack on Mumbai in
November 2008 the grave threat that groups like the Lashkar-e-Taiba pose to
the stability of the region. Nudged along by the United States and by a
non-confrontationist Indian approach, an unprecedented criminal
investigation was launched against a section of LeT operatives. Since the
LeT has never launched a terrorist attack inside Pakistan, however, it is
easy for sceptics there to argue that the group does not pose a threat. That
is why the establishment there is reluctant to act against Lashkar chief
Hafiz Saeed. But wise statecraft is about recognising the early warning
signs, not waiting for the tipping point.. Imtiaz Gul’s book, *The Al-Qaeda
Connection*, provides plenty of evidence on the deep links which exist
between the LeT, the Jaish-e-Mohammed and even the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, on
the one hand, and the TTP in Pakistan’s tribal areas, on the other.

Given these political realities, what can India do to encourage Pakistan to
recognise that the terrorist groups operating on its soil are an
undifferentiated syndicate and pose a common threat to both countries? Of
all the forms of encouragement, refusing to talk is the least effective. It
is not a coincidence that those sections of the Pakistani establishment
which continue to see the jihadi terror groups as future assets are the very
sections least anxious to see the resumption of the bilateral dialogue.
Exchanging rhetoric and putting pressure via public statements are also not
likely to pay dividends. Nor is there any point in messing up the strong
case India has in Mumbai with overkill. Pakistani officials have pointed
out, for example, that the salutation “Major General sahab” — one of the
co-conspirators allegedly identified by Ajmal ‘Kasab’ and seen by the
Indians as proof of Islamabad’s official complicity in 26/11 — is never used
in the subcontinent; the preferred greeting is ‘General sahab’.

At a recent Track-II meeting of Indian and Pakistani analysts, former
ambassadors, military officers and intelligence chiefs organised by the
Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies in Bangkok, there was consensus on
the grave threat terrorism poses to Pakistan and to India. Specifically, the
need for India and Pakistan to open a back channel on counter-terrorism was
recognised, with the participation of intelligence agencies from the two
countries. This would supplement the back channel on Jammu and Kashmir which
worked effectively till 2006 and which, the Track-II meeting felt, needs to
be revived at an early date. The Composite Dialogue process, too, was seen
as having served a useful purpose in the past.

With last month’s meeting in New York between the Foreign Ministers of India
and Pakistan yielding little in terms of forward movement by either side,
there is a danger of the bilateral relationship getting stuck into one of
those ruts that finally require the mediation of extra hands in order to be
rescued. Rather than wait for that, the first available improvement in
optics — the start of the Mumbai trial in Pakistan, for example — should be
seized upon to move ahead on the back channel, with the front channel being
revived in a calibrated manner as confidence increases. Indefinitely
postponing talks will not help protect India from future terrorist attacks.
And talking will not make it more vulnerable. India should stop confusing
hard line diplomatic strategy for effective counter-terrorism.

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