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In The Media

Kashmir Is More Important Than al Qaeda

Link Copied
By George Perkovich
Published on May 27, 2002

Source: Carnegie

By George Perkovich, Senior Associate

War clouds appear to be dissipating over South Asia. But as Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee said during a recent visit to Kashmir: "Lightning can strike even when the sky is clear." Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf can do much to determine events, as the lightning forecast is crucially dependent on whether he implements pledges to crackdown on militants in Kashmir.

The South Asian crisis has many causes. The most recent are a series of terrorist attacks by ostensibly pro-Kashmir militants against Indian institutions and civilians. On Oct. 1 last year, militants attacked the Kashmir legislative assembly in Srinigar, followed on Dec. 13 by a bloody assault on the Indian parliament in New Delhi. On May 15, three reported Pakistanis killed 34 people, mostly women and children related to army personnel in Jammu, in southern Kashmir. Upward of 700,000 Indian military personnel stand ready to retaliate and "teach Pakistan a lesson" for sponsoring terrorism as soon as the order is given

Pakistan counters that the violence arises unavoidably and indigenously from frustration and outrage over India's occupation of the Kashmir valley. Gen. Musharraf disclaims Pakistani involvement in the latest incidents, and insists that the end to violence will come only when India engages Pakistan in a forthcoming dialogue to "resolve" the conflicting interests and perspectives of India, Pakistan and the Kashmiri people.

Gen. Musharraf may be right that the latest terrorist attacks are aimed at him as well as India. However, his government's failure to roll up groups that infiltrate across the Kashmir divide exposes either duplicity or weakness on the part of the Pakistani president. India's failure to offer decent governance and constructive engagement with Kashmiri dissidents created the current mess and makes New Delhi's self-righteousness difficult to swallow. Still, this does not excuse Pakistan's support of terrorist groups and tactics.

Washington is implicated in this fray because its understandable obsession with hunting down al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan has left it reluctant to exert severe pressure on Pakistan to combat terrorism in Kashmir. Gen. Musharraf and others believe that their cooperation in the hunt for the remnants of al Qaeda will protect Pakistan from suspension of newfound American aid. Indian officials seethe over the United States' apparent willingness to trade battlefield success against al Qaeda for India's security from Pakistan-backed terrorism. Seeing an American double standard, all parties in New Delhi want to rebuff U.S. pleas for Indian restraint.

Every U.S. government war game involving India and Pakistan has resulted in escalation to nuclear exchanges. Indians and Pakistanis dismiss these outcomes as American folly, but neither side offers any reason to think that it would accept defeat rather than risk escalating the conflict. The world's first nuclear war could not only cause horrendous death and destruction but also jeopardize an international security order created largely by the U.S.

Pakistan would opt out of the war against al Qaeda. Since even a short-term Pakistani victory would merely be a prelude for Indian revenge, Pakistan's attention and resources would focus on India. And a war that resulted in a Pakistani defeat of any sort would render Pakistan physically or politically incapable of assisting the U.S. against al Qaeda.

American relations with India would plunge. U.S. President George W. Bush has stated that he seeks to "transform" the U.S.-Indian relationship because India is a rising global power, a leading democracy, a growing market and home to nearly two million high-achieving Indian-Americans. If India were to suffer in a war with Pakistan, Indians would blame the U.S. for "allowing" Pakistan to create the conditions for war.

As unthinkable as it seems, Washington must reprioritize its "battles" in the war on terrorism. Failure to combat terrorism in Kashmir can lead to nuclear war, the collapse of Pakistan and the rupture of U.S.-Indian relations. These threats pose deeper and more lasting danger to the U.S. than the possible loss of Pakistani help in hunting al Qaeda remnants.

Moreover, serious pressure on Pakistan to combat terrorism in Kashmir need not enervate the campaign against al Qaeda. Gen. Musharraf said in his famous Jan. 12 speech that "no organization will be allowed to indulge in terrorism in the name of Kashmir . . . Strict action will be taken against any Pakistani individual, group or organization found involved in terrorism within or outside the country." Pakistan's commitments to law and order and international standards will require internal reforms that the majority of Pakistanis support. The U.S. must exert sustained pressure on Gen. Musharraf to live up to his own promises.

The stakes are so high that the uppermost levels of the U.S. government need to clarify that the war on terrorism in Kashmir is its top priority in relations with Pakistan. Washington must decide that if Pakistan does not act decisively and enduringly, the U.S. will declare Pakistan a state-sponsor of terrorism and suspend budgetary assistance -- even if Pakistan counters with threats to suspend cooperation in the hunt for remnants of al Qaeda. At the same time, the U.S. must persuade New Delhi to offer Pakistan a definite date and an agenda for high-level dialogue that will include Kashmir. The actual "summit" would be contingent upon observable and effective Pakistani exertions to stem insurgent violence in Kashmir.

Indian military preparations and U.S. diplomacy have captured Pakistan's attention and stalled the looming storm. Yet Pakistan has made hopeful promises in the past, only to renege once the pressure lessened. Sustained attention and pressure must be exerted to convince Pakistan to keep its commitments and create the conditions for diplomacy with India.

About the Author

George Perkovich

Japan Chair for a World Without Nuclear Weapons, Senior Fellow

George Perkovich is the Japan Chair for a World Without Nuclear Weapons and a senior fellow in the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Nuclear Policy Program. He works primarily on nuclear deterrence, nonproliferation, and disarmament issues, and is leading a study on nuclear signaling in the 21st century.

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George Perkovich
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Carnegie India does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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