Pulwama borrows from a history of deception and subversion

*We heard the same denials. Jinnah did not ‘know anything’ about the
raiders of 1947; Ayub Khan feigned ignorance of Operation Gibraltar;
General Zia-ul-Haq insisted that he had nothing to do with Khalistan
secessionists; Nawaz Sharif claimed he was hoodwinked by his own generals
during Kargil; and Pervez Musharraf was ‘innocent’ as masterminds in
Pakistan ran the barbaric assault on Mumbai in 2008. Today, Imran Khan
sings the same tune and demands “actionable evidence”. How can the wilfully
blind and the consciously deaf see or hear evidence? To go down that route
of trust is to participate in fraud.*


MJ Akbar
MJ Akbar is an MP and the author of, among other titles, Tinderbox: The
Past and Future of Pakistan

FOR HISTORY BUFFS, Gibraltar is the last outpost of a British Empire that
once stretched from the West Indies to Hong Kong.

For Indians, Gibraltar should be an indelible part of national memory. It
was twice used as a signature codename in Pakistan’s 72-year Jihad against
India.

There is a misconception in some quarters that Pakistan turned to ‘war by
other means’ or a ‘hybrid war’ only after its decisive defeat in the 1971
war. Pakistan has been using terrorists, both in militia formation and in
small cells, since October 1947. Pakistan described that first offensive as
a ‘jihad’ and used the term as inspirational fodder for recruits. For over
seven decades, Pakistan has tried to seize Kashmir through a combination of
covert terrorism dressed up in a theocratic idiom, duplicity, denial, false
narratives, formal war and the constant drumbeat of deceptive diplomacy.

Patterns established in 1947 echo down to 2019. The political leadership
maintains hypocritical ignorance in its public stance, and gives the nod in
secret. The Pakistan Army always claims that the violence is part of a
‘popular uprising’, while its officers and men arm and train terrorists in
clandestine camps.

The use of ‘Gibraltar’ as a codename was neither whimsical nor accidental.

Gibraltar is a corruption of Jebel al Tariq, Arabic for ‘Mount of Tariq’.
In 711 CE, a small army of Berber Muslims led by Tariq bin Zaid landed on
this tiny Spanish island dominated by a famous 1,398-foot-high rock, and
located on the northern mouth of the Mediterranean. The first thing that
Zaid did was burn the ships that had brought his force. The message was
clear: victory or death. Tariq’s famous victory over the Visigoths created
a launch pad for Arab rule over the Iberian peninsula, which lasted till
the last sigh of the Moor at Alhambra in 1462, or seven-and-a-half
centuries later.

The time has come to aver that the integration of Kashmir into India is a
closed chapter. We must take it off the agenda of talks. There is nothing
to discuss with Islamabad, except the withdrawal of its troops from
‘Occupied Kashmir’

In 1947, the Pakistani army officer who led the planning and operations in
the first invasion of Jammu and Kashmir, Colonel Akbar Khan, was its
director of weapons and equipment at General Headquarters in Rawalpindi.
But since deceit was at the heart of this operation, he was given an alias:
‘General Tariq’. The government and army wanted in 1947 what they continue
to want in 2019: deniability.

Pakistan founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s first strategic decision was to
seize the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir through war. The second
decision was that this would be a war of terror. There would be no formal
declaration of war. ‘General Tariq’ was put in charge. When hostilities
began, Colonel Khan was posted as military adviser to Liaquat Ali Khan, to
smoothen the line of command between the Prime Minister and the invaders.

Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan presided over the long meeting where a plan
called ‘Armed Revolt inside Kashmir’ was finalised. Finance Minister Ghulam
Mohammad joined this meeting for a while. A Military Intelligence
assessment by Colonel M Sher Khan factored in the possibility of an Indian
Army intervention, but concluded that it would not be able to respond until
the spring of 1948 because of the Kashmir winter.

The plan was to arm and train some 5,000 tribals, mobilised from the
Frontier region, and unleash them across the Kashmir border in a campaign
of terror and territory. They would pretend to be Kashmiris seeking
‘liberation’ from the ‘Hindu rule’ of Maharaja Hari Singh.

Every Kashmiri is an Indian citizen. There is no such thing as a ‘special’
Indian or a ‘conditional’ citizen. Then why should such a qualified status
be given to a province which is an equal member of the Union of India?

Confirmation of this deception comes from a British source as well. Sir
George Cunningham, then governor of the North West Frontier Province, wrote
in his diary on October 17th, 1947, that he had been informed by a member
of his staff that ‘there is a real movement in Hazara for a *jihad *against
Kashmir’. There were more details in the entry, including the fact that
rifles had been collected for the operation.

The manner in which these rifles were obtained provides a clue to the
Pakistani mindset in 1947. The invaders had asked for 500 rifles, but
Colonel Khan knew that this would be inadequate. He commandeered, with the
help of the local administration, 4,000 rifles sanctioned for the Punjab
police. These rifles would have helped the police curb communal riots still
raging across the land. But riots were not a priority for Pakistan. A war
over Kashmir was.

On October 20th, 1947, Pakistan announced an economic blockade against
Jammu and Kashmir, further confirming its government’s role as sponsor and
strategist. At first light on October 23rd, just a little more than nine
weeks after freedom, Pakistan launched what would be the first Jihad after
World War II. Pakistan was already responding to its theocratic genes.

In its nascent phase, Pakistan had a dysfunctional administration,
negligible resources and a massive humanitarian refugee crisis. And yet
Jinnah and his acolytes, particularly in the military, could only think of
war

Liaquat Ali Khan’s role is not disputed. But some apologists for Jinnah try
and slice him out of the framework of responsibility. Shuja Nawaz, whose
brother Asif Nawaz rose to become the Pakistani army’s chief in August
1991, writes in his book, *Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army and the Wars
Within*: ‘Given the nature of the Prime Minister’s relationship with Mr
Jinnah, it seems unlikely that all this planning was being done without Mr
Jinnah’s tacit approval...’ Doubtless, if the raiders had captured
Srinagar, Jinnah would have been given a starring role in every Pakistani
school-text as a military genius.

As Lord Mountbatten told Ian Stephens, then editor of the Statesman, on
October 28th, 1947, “Jinnah at Abbottabad... had been expecting to ride in
triumph into Kashmir...He had been frustrated...” (quoted in *Mission with
Mountbatten* by Alan Campbell-Johnson, the Viceroy’s head of personal staff
and press attaché).

At first light on 23rd October, 1947, just a little more than nine weeks
after freedom, Pakistan launched what would be the first Jihad after World
War II. Pakistan was already responding to its theocratic genes

WHY DID JINNAH opt for a jihad in October 1947 when he could have waited
for talks to resolve the problem? Going to war was an astonishing decision
by any standards of logic, international behaviour or even common sense.

In its nascent phase, Pakistan had a dysfunctional administration,
negligible resources and a massive humanitarian refugee crisis. And yet
Jinnah and his acolytes, particularly in the military, could only think of
war.

The status of Jammu and Kashmir was still undetermined. Maharaja Hari Singh
had signed a stand-still agreement with both India and Pakistan that
preserved the status quo until a final decision. Further, India and
Pakistan were both Dominions in 1947, which is why a British citizen, Lord
Mountbatten, could be appointed India’s first Governor General (equivalent
to the President). It also means that Britain had a place at the table, at
least as long as Mountbatten was in Delhi. Discussions over Jammu and
Kashmir were expected to begin in the spring of 1948. And yet Jinnah
preferred to pursue by war what could have been, and would have been,
settled in peace. Why?

Operation Gibraltar began on 24th July, 1965. The numbers involved have
been estimated at 3,000 on the low side and 30,000 on the high. Their
mission, as in 1947, was to replicate Tariq bin Zaid’s bold dash, not to
Spain but to Srinagar

The answer lies in fabrication and distorted ideology.

One of the foundational myths created by its leadership after 1947 was that
Pakistan was born out of some long struggle. Perhaps this untruth was
necessary as some kind of antidote for lingering embarrassment over the
charge that the British had handed over Pakistan to Jinnah as part of a
secret deal.

But facts remain what they are. Jinnah and the Muslim League never once
initiated any kind of people’s movement, let alone a jihad, against British
rule. No Muslim League leader ever went to a British jail. This is
indisputable. Conversely, there is no eminent Gandhian leader during
India’s freedom struggle who did not go to jail.

Pakistan was the end-product of cooperation between Jinnah and the British
during the six-year World War II. For understandable reasons, the
manpower-starved British were deeply grateful to Jinnah for support in
mobilisation, particularly from Punjab and the Frontier, during their
darkest hour, in 1940 and 1941. By the end of the war, about 2.5 million
Indians were serving in the British war effort, a substantial proportion of
whom were Muslims. The British rewarded Jinnah by giving him a veto on
minority rights; and he converted that veto into Pakistan. The British Raj
was Jinnah’s ally, not his foe.

On 29th August, 1965, Ayub Khan ordered his armed forces to proceed,
claiming, stupidly, that “as a general rule, the Hindu morale would not
stand more than a couple of hard blows at the right time and place”. He
learnt about India’s morale the hard way

The only jihad that Jinnah launched before 1947 was against Hindus. In
1946, after the failure of the Cabinet Mission, Jinnah gave a call for
‘Direct Action’ on August 16th, 1946, and the Muslim League cadre and its
National Guard did indeed swing into action. The epicentre was Calcutta,
which witnessed the ‘Great Calcutta Killings’. The cruelty and bloodshed of
that day spawned further massacres on both sides, and all hopes of a united
India died with the corpses.

After Partition, a slogan encapsulated the League reinvention of
history: ‘*Ladh
ke liya Pakistan, ladh ke lenge Kashmir*’ (We have fought to take Pakistan,
we shall fight to take Kashmir). It was heady vainglory, also nurtured by
racist myths including the absurd notion that Hindus could not fight. In
1965, as we shall see, Ayub Khan made this absurd assumption part of his
military doctrine. The most grievous kind of deception is surely
self-deception. Those who started this fight are still in the grip of that
delusion, even as the anguish and havoc they cause is all too real.
Innocent blood flows in the rivulets of a continuing tragedy.

IN 1965, PAKISTAN repeated 1947, but with greater care. Once again the
conflict began with a web of deceit. The deception stage was officially
codenamed Operation Gibraltar.

In Kargil Pakistan denied that its soldiers were involved and kept saying
so till it was forced to retreat. India’s handsome victory under the
leadership of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee is still fresh in public
memory

All aggression begins in the mind. Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan,
dictator of Pakistan, and his obstreperous foreign minister, the young
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, gloated over India’s traumatic defeat in the 1962
conflict with China. They saw an opportunity for Pakistan as India’s
physical and psychological wounds took time to heal. India had begun to
re-arm after the disastrous depletion of its indigenous arms production
during the tenure of Defence Minister Krishna Menon, but it would take time
to reach full strength. In contrast, Pakistan’s army had doubled in size
since 1947, with most recruits coming from within a radius of 160 km from
Rawalpindi. This was a continuation of British policy in recruitment from
what were called ‘martial races’.

Egged on by a belligerent Bhutto, Ayub Khan ordered top secret planning to
begin in 1964. Among the very few in this loop were Aziz Khan of the
Foreign Office, Major General Akhtar Hussain Malik, GOC 12 Division, which
was responsible for large sections of the Kashmir sector, and two
brigadiers, Irshad Ahmad Khan, director of Military Intelligence, and Gul
Hassan Khan, director of Military Operations.

Operation Gibraltar began on July 24th, 1965. The numbers involved have
been estimated at 3,000 on the low side and 30,000 on the high. Their
mission, as in 1947, was to replicate Tariq bin Zaid’s bold dash, not to
Spain but to Srinagar.

I quote Shuja Nawaz again, to indicate that this is not an Indian version
of events: ‘Gibraltar was based on the infiltration of trained guerrillas
under Pakistan Army officers into Indian-held Kashmir to help foment local
dissent and an uprising. The total force was subdivided into subsidiary
units named mainly after Muslim military heroes: Tariq [bin Zaid], [Mahmud]
Ghaznavi, Salahuddin, [Mohammed bin] Qasim, and Khalid [bin Waleed]. One
force named Nusrat [meaning victory]...was designated to conduct sabotage
behind Indian forces at the cease-fire line.’

Infiltration, sabotage, attacks on Indian military and paramilitary forces:
it is all too familiar.

These trained soldiers and officers, once again claiming to be ‘Kashmiri’
civilians, were to mingle with pilgrims to the shrine of Pir Dastgir Sahib
by August 8th, enter Srinagar the next day, take over the airfield and
radio station, set up a ‘Revolutionary Council’ and formally ask Pakistan
for help. Pakistan would then initiate the second stage, Operation Grand
Slam, which constituted a regular attack across the Cease Fire Line. On
paper, it looked good. But in retrospect, Gibraltar seems more a child of
cartoon history, and Grand Slam a sign that the Pakistan High Command had
become inordinately fond of bridge.

The jihadis of ‘Gibraltar 1965’ lost the plot, literally. Most of them did
not speak Kashmiri; nor had they been given simple information, like the
change in Indian weights and measures from seers and *maunds* to a modern
system. They were exposed as Pakistanis when they went to shops.
Inevitably, many were arrested; under interrogation, some of their officers
sang like birds on holiday. The Gibraltar fiasco, however, did not deter
the Field Marshal.

Vajpayee did his utmost for peace; going to Lahore and offering Pakistan a
solemn commitment that included a desire for resolution of all disputes.
What India got in return was the December 2001 attack on Parliament,
repeated terrorist violence, the horrific 2008 murder of innocents in
Mumbai, and now Pulwama

On August 29th, Ayub Khan ordered his armed forces to proceed, claiming,
stupidly, that “as a general rule, the Hindu morale would not stand more
than a couple of hard blows at the right time and place”. He learnt about
India’s morale the hard way.

The Pakistani objective was to head south towards Akhnur and cut off Indian
troops in Kashmir from the rest of the country before applying the squeeze.
Details of how the war unfolded are well known; they need not detain us.
Instead of conquest, Pakistan ended up losing key passes, including the
strategically crucial Haji Pir, and decisive battles like Asal Uttar. The
war ended with the Tashkent Pact in January 1966, where the much-loved
Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri died of a heart attack. Tashkent
destroyed Ayub Khan’s credibility, and he was forced to leave office.

If India had held on to Haji Pir, the third Pakistani effort to enter the
Kashmir valley, through Kargil in 1999, might have been far more difficult.
However, a similar game-plan was repeated in Kargil. Pakistan denied that
its soldiers were involved, and kept saying so till it was forced to
retreat. India’s handsome victory under the leadership of Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee is still fresh in public memory. Having won the war,
Vajpayee did his utmost for peace; going to Lahore and offering Pakistan a
solemn commitment that included a desire for resolution of all disputes.
What India got in return was the December 2001 attack on Parliament,
repeated terrorist violence, the horrific 2008 murder of innocents in
Mumbai, and now Pulwama.

IN 2019, AS so often before, the people of India have a question: What do
we do about this persistent, insistent, searing terrorism?

The answer so far has done nothing to persuade Pakistan to change its
behaviour. India asked Pakistan to take action against self-confessed
terrorist groups like Jaish-e-Muhammad, which flourish in the safety of
Pakistani territory. All we got in return was prevarication. India did not
even withdraw the Most Favoured Nation trade status granted unilaterally to
Pakistan until it was cancelled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Also,
Delhi has always honoured its commitment to the Indus Waters Treaty.

And we heard the same denials. Jinnah and the Pakistan establishment did
not ‘know anything’ about the raiders of 1947; Ayub Khan feigned ignorance
of Operation Gibraltar; General Zia ul Haq insisted that he had nothing to
do with Khalistan secessionists although they got sanctuary, funds and arms
in Lahore; Nawaz Sharif claimed he was hoodwinked by his own generals
during Kargil; and Pervez Musharraf of course was the ultimate ‘innocent’
as masterminds in Pakistan ran the barbaric terrorist assault on Mumbai in
2008. Today, Imran Khan sings the same tune, and then demands “actionable
evidence”. How can the wilfully blind and the consciously deaf see or hear
evidence? To go down that route of trust is to participate in fraud.

There is a military response to Pulwama and a political one. We can leave
the first to the military; as the Prime Minister said, they know what to do
and when. But one aspect of the political response has not been given the
attention it deserves, because of a certain dichotomy in our stance that
began when Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru took the Kashmir issue to the
United Nations. It is time to end this dichotomy.

Pakistan disputes the integration of Jammu and Kashmir into India. We may
not be able to alter Pakistan’s attitude, but we can change ours. The time
has come to aver that the integration of Kashmir into India is a closed
chapter. We must take it off the agenda of talks. There is nothing to
discuss with Islamabad, except the withdrawal of its troops from ‘Occupied
Kashmir’. This position also reflects a formal resolution passed by India’s
Parliament. We have not taken that resolution to its logical conclusion.

That conclusion requires a final step, the full integration of Jammu and
Kashmir into the Union of India. There is a basic flaw in our understanding
of Article 370, which gives the province a special status. Article 370 was
the beginning of the process, not an immutable end-game. It may have been
essential in 1947, and relevant till much later. But today it is an
anachronism that impinges on the unity of our nation.

Every Kashmiri is an Indian citizen. There is no such thing as a ‘special’
Indian or a ‘conditional’ citizen. Then why should such a qualified status
be given to a province which is an equal member of the Union of India?

The process began on October 17th, 1949, when Gopalaswami Aiyangar moved
Article 306A in the Constituent Assembly; this became Article 370. One
member of the Assembly, Hasrat Mohani, asked, “Why this discrimination,
please?” There were cheers when he hoped that in due course Jammu and
Kashmir would become as integrated into the Union of India as other
princely states. The ‘due course’ is surely now overdue.

Revenge is not a word that should exist in the dictionary of a civilised
and sensible government; but justice is. The two have one thing in common:
both are best served cold.
-
With best wishes

S Chander

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