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by: Yogendra Bali (Daily Excelsior)
Both India and Pakistan will
have the occasion to look back at the ten-day shooting war
of 1999, which became part of military history of the sub-continent
as the Kargil Conflict. Starting on May 5, 1999 it concluded
on July 26, 1999.
Pakistan, who launched the high-altitude
military misadventure was ultimately defeated and suffered
at least 4,000 casualties in the conflict.
Once again, the lesson to learn
for Pakistan was that all its attempts to secure military
solution to its internal and external political, social and
ethnic problems, failed once again as they had always failed
in the past and would fail in future too. Better try sane
diplomacy and peaceful dialogue.
India's primary lesson not to
be forgotten was that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty
even while putting its faith in peaceful negotiations and
dialogues instead of diatribes for resolution of real and
imaginary problems. India should not let its defences down,
and thank god will not do so as Defence Minster Pranav Mukharjee
said.
The powers that be in India
and Pakistan, would increasingly have to face from their constituents
the ultimate question : How many lives, and for how long,
should we sacrifice to cater to the whims such rulers for
whom their coterie and religious corporates were in their
jaundiced concept, a nation, and who thought terrorism and
nuclear blackmail would fool the world community into accepting
false claims and territorial aggression as instruments of
legitimacy of fools wars and violent conflicts unleashed by
organized hooligans under false slogans and flags?
Was not Kargil also an expression
of that politics of creating dishonest claims by regimes which
lacked legal and constitutional legitimacy in their own countries
? Was not the Kargil conflict linked with the psychology of
neo-colonialism where gun-fire and nuclear threats were claimed
to be the voice of this people or that people ? Was it not
an expression of the bully-and-bluster practiced by illegitimate
regimes within their home and across the frontiers of the
country they ruled by gun-and-grab politics ?
Since 1947, the Pakistan Army
and its politically ambitious generals, had tried to use on
other nations and ethnic entities, the same rule of coercion
and aggression as they perpetuated on the Pakistani masses
in the first place. "Struggle of the Kashmiri people,"
"Right of self-determination," "Strategic depth
in Afghanistan, "The international military campaign
against terrorism," "Bringing law and order into
Northern territories," "Building Pakistan's nuclear
deterrent" were their false slogans. Engaging in secret
nuclear vending of technology and equipment to states which
had like-minded autocratic rulers who felt atrocities and
repression was the way of ruling their own people.
The 57-year old over repeated
song of panic they sang was that India would invade them if
they took hands off from the terror machines which spawned
like dragon seed in Pakistan. There were all ingredients of
the witches brew which many sensitive Pakistani analysts themselves,
considered to be songs of hypocrisy sung by those who wanted
to keep the people of Pakistan as their eternal colonial serfs
more than anything else.
By now the 1947, 1965, 1971
and 1999 conflicts should have taught the military rulers
of Pakistan the lesson that using costly wars and proxy wars
to keep the hounds of democracy at bay from their seats of
power would not fool the people of Pakistan and the rest of
the world for all times. No more Kargils, was a sentiment
which had been brewing strongly and angrily at least in the
Northern areas of Pakistan like Gilgit and Baltistan. They
felt cheated, humiliated and deprived of their "right
of self determination" for the last 57 years.
Before asking questions of India
or the democratically ruled Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir,
ruled by the elected representatives of the Kashmiri people
from Jammu, the Valley and the Ladakh areas, they should first
answer questions asked by the once-Kashmiri people of the
Pak Occupied Kashmir and areas cleverly amputated away from
Kashmir like Gilgit and Baltistan. What kind of "self
determination" did they enjoy under the Pak Military-Fundamentalist-Terrorist
combine's dispensation? How safe are were their lives, dignity
and properties ?
What kind of respect and consideration
did the Pakistani military rule show for the Pakhtoon tribes
of South Waziristan, for the Baluchi tribals and for the Shias
from Sindh to Gilgit ? Were they all not suffering from a
series of "Little Kargils" let lose on them in the
local military operations of aggression and deceit backed
by a flood of lying propaganda to confuse the people of Pakistan,
the Muslim world and their world at large ? When they failed
in the big Kargil in 1999, would they succeed in these "Little
Kargils" at home in 2004?
I have no intention of sitting
in judgment on the people of Pakistan who were no different
from the people of India, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Nepal,
Bhutan or Iran, or for that matter people of any other country
in the world. I am sure they too craved for a better and dignified
quality of life, freedom from hunger, unemployment and corruption
and see their country progress and develop peacefully and
with pride.
But did the big Kargil and the
"Little Kargils", or for that matter all the wars
fought by the military emperors and their satraps, against
their neighbours and against the constituents of Pakistan
itself, bring them the fulfillment of their small and simple
dreams of food, shelter and clothing with the dignity and
pride which the simple people of the agrarian state so cherished
?
The final lesson which Pakistan
must learn from Kargil, and also India, is that no wars can
solve any problems between the two countries. Bullying language
and nuclear blackmail cannot defeat India and certainly cannot
fill the bellies of the hungry and the unemployed people of
Pakistan or the territories grabbed by the generals over the
years by wars of aggression and deceit.
Five years after Kargil, having
lost the war of guns and grenades, Pakistan's war of diplomatic
double-talk and saturated propaganda bombing too has not convinced
either its Western allies and the Europeans, or some of the
other Muslims countries, that Pakistan should be given the
sanction of annexing Kashmir by military aggression.
In India, we must learn that
carrying on the blame-games, five years after a war has been
fought and won valiantly, will do nobody and good. We must
have full faith in our Armed Forces, assure them all the facilities
for modernization including the latest weapons and equipment
and keep our defences in high gear and our fighting men super
fitness.
There might be more Kargils
ahead because striking at neighbouring countries with their
armed forces, dressed as guerillas and mercenaries or mujahideen
was a tactic which had been honed into a fine art by Pakistan.
Since the uncalled for and shameful
1947 invasion of Kashmir by looting complements of Afridi
and Mashuds from the North West Frontier, backed by full fledged
Pakistani Armed Forces, the story has not changed. Infiltrators
being sent to Kashmir in 1965 by President Ayub Khan, the
1971 surprise attack by Pakistan which brought a crushing
and humiliating defeat for it and loss of East Pakistan, and
Kargil operation in 1999, had all been the repeat misadventures
that ended in disasters.
The peace initiatives, continuing
between the two countries, are thin rays of hope. May they
be fruitful some day. The lesson for us must remain, "Keep
your faith in God but your, gunpowder dry". That would
be the befitting tribute the nation could pay to its martyrs
of Kargil, who made the supreme sacrifice in defence their
nation. - (ADNI)
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