Source: Carnegie
Originally published in the Asian
Wall Street Journal, May 23, 2002
Last week's terrorist attack on an Indian military camp in the disputed territory
of Kashmir has led to India expelling the Pakistani high commissioner to New
Delhi. Members of India's parliament have called for appropriate retaliation,
some demanding war. Ironically, each side is looking toward the United States
to bring pressure on the other to resolve the current crisis.
Pakistan, a Cold War ally and the current staging ground for attacks against
al Qaeda in Afghanistan, expects U.S. diplomatic efforts to prevent Indian military
retaliation. India has expressed disappointment that the U.S. cannot force Islamabad
to clamp down on militant Islamists operating from Pakistan territory. But Washington
may be unable to fulfill either side's desire for action. At best it can act
as an honest broker and help them end the current military standoff. In the
end, the two neighbors must overcome their own history of mutual mistrust and
the legacy of three wars in 54 years.
This is not the first time that the U.S. has been torn between Pakistan and
India, and failed to satisfy either. In return for offering military bases and
intelligence cooperation during the Cold War, Pakistan expected Washington's
support for its position in the dispute over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir.
The U.S. initially backed Pakistan in the United Nations but did not support
its ally's failed military effort against India in 1965. In 1971, Washington
was unable to save Pakistan from dismemberment during the Bangladesh war.
It is unrealistic for Pakistan's military ruler, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, to
now expect U.S. support for the militant insurgency in Kashmir as repayment
for military and intelligence cooperation in the Afghan war. Pakistan may be
an American ally, but India pulls more weight in Washington. With the end of
the Cold War, American suspicions of a non-aligned India with close ties to
the Soviet Union have dissipated. India's economic reforms have moved the country
away from its quasi-socialist practices, opening a huge market to U.S. businesses.
From the American point of view, Pakistan may be America's wartime ally, but
it is India that offers the prospect of long-term friendship.
In a showdown involving conventional warfare, Pakistan would be at a disadvantage.
Its military has received no new weapons from America in a decade. Indigenously
manufactured weapons and arms supplied by China might not be sufficient to effectively
ward off an attack by India, which has been buying modern weapons from a variety
of sources in the international market. This military imbalance means that the
possibility of Pakistan resorting to nuclear weapons in the event of war cannot
be completely excluded.
Islamabad cannot afford to depend exclusively on the U.S. to defuse tensions
between India and Pakistan. It will have to act decisively against Islamic militants
allegedly involved in attacks in India and Kashmir. Proposals for joint India-Pakistan
monitoring of the Line of Control in Kashmir, to stop infiltration of militants
ostensibly acting on their own, must also be seriously considered. Pakistan's
most significant diplomatic successes in its dispute with India, including U.N.
resolutions calling for a plebiscite in Kashmir, were attained during times
of peace. Contrary to the conventional wisdom in Pakistan, militancy and militarist
solutions have not helped in mobilizing international support for Kashmiri self-determination.
India's response to the current situation also should be rational, not emotional.
It is simply not possible to "eliminate" or "liquidate" a neighbor with nuclear
weapons, as some extremists in Mr. Vajpayee's ruling coalition have demanded.
At a time when extremists are under pressure globally, India's insistence on
rubbing Pakistan's nose in the ground would be counter-productive. Not only
would it impair Pakistan's ability to cooperate in the war against terrorism,
it could even give a boost to Pakistani militants. Conflicts with India tend
to unite Pakistanis. If Gen. Musharraf's regime is seen as acting under Indian
duress, support for the militants opposing him could increase.
Gen. Musharraf's refusal to expand his support base beyond the military makes
his domestic position precarious. While supporting Gen. Musharraf in his efforts
against Islamic extremists, the U.S. also needs to ensure that it would still
be able to count on Pakistani help in the anti-terror effort even if there is
a change of regime in Pakistan. In the past, India and Pakistan have managed
to avoid military confrontation whenever civilians were in power in Islamabad,
and a civilian, democratic government in Pakistan would be less dependent on
the military and the Islamic militants for support.
The current crisis provides an occasion to address the root causes of violence
between India and Pakistan. America is already using its influence with Pakistan
to force action against Islamic extremists. It should also persuade India to
get serious about resolving the dispute over Kashmir. Pakistan needs to root
out Islamic extremism for its own sake, not just to fulfil Indian and U.S. demands.
But India also must wake up to the fact that it will continue to have a Kashmir
problem even after the current militancy there is brought under control. Sooner
or later India will have to discuss the future of Kashmir, both with the people
of living there and with Pakistan. So why not do it now, so that a comprehensive
solution to South Asia's security problems can be implemented?
Instead of rattling sabers or hoping for U.S. intervention, the leaders of
India and Pakistan should consider renewing their dialogue directly. India's
lack of enthusiasm for diplomacy is attributed to Pakistan's failure to live
up to its commitments in the past. New Delhi appears to have calculated that
brinkmanship and the threat of war will yield better results for India by forever
diminishing Pakistan's military might. Gen. Musharraf's government would almost
certainly fall if Pakistan loses a limited war. On the other hand, if the military
build-up forces Gen. Musharraf to back down, his position as Pakistan's strongman
will be seriously compromised.
For peace to prevail in South Asia, India and Pakistan must draw back from
the brink. The U.S. seems to have less leverage with India than it does with
Pakistan. In the past, New Delhi has rejected the notion of third-country mediation
in its relations with Islamabad. When U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Richard
Armitage goes to the region in early June, he should seek a reduction in the
current Indian military build-up while insisting on verifiable Pakistani steps
against Islamic militancy. Above all, he should ensure that the U.S. alliance
with Pakistan and friendship with India are not misinterpreted by either side
as an excuse to do as it pleases. These neighbors need to be prevented from
going to war again. They also need to be encouraged to engage in self-sustaining
dialogue.
Mr. Haqqani is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace in Washington D.C. He has served as adviser to Pakistan's Prime Ministers
Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto and as Pakistan's ambassador to Sri Lanka.