AgNoStiC MuSliM
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I disagree strongly here. Pakistan was not involved in supporting the infiltration for purposes of carrying out terrorist attacks. Nothing in all the literature on Pakistani support for covert activities going back to the Afghan Jihad suggests that deliberate attacks on civilian targets was ever considered as a part of covert ops, directly or through proxies.Tell me then, who has benefitted till now from the hundred of attacks on India(without including Kashmir)?
Yet we find time and again, Pakistan helping the infiltrators cross the LoC. These terrorists blow themselves up all over India, not just Kashmir, so how has Pakistan benefitted from that as well?
Does that mean Pakistan has not been involved? NO. Pakistan was actively involved in such asymmetric war on India for over a decade and a half.
The problem has always been that the nature of acting covertly through proxies, especially in such an emotionally and ideologically charged environment as Kashmir, left open the possibility of various groups, or even factions or individuals within groups, engaging in acts that were not endorsed by their handlers.
Technically, as the seat of power of an occupying authority, I am not sure whether an attack on the Indian parliament qualifies as 'terrorism'.And ofcourse Pakistan did not benefit from the attack on the Parliament as India responded with threats. Musharraf was MADE to publicly disown these groups and promised to crack down on them. He also put the accused under house arrest-which he ironically set free exactly a year after the attacks.
So the logic of Pakistan not benefitting by an attack on Indian Parliament does not hold. Pakistan has done a hundred other things which apparently dont benefit it, but Pakistan has done so nonetheless.
For the Kashmiris, the Indian government is the authority that perpetuates the occupation and orders the presence of overwhelming military force. Yes, geo-political and economic interests, and the aftermath of 911, determined that the attack be declared a terrorist attack, but from an academic point of view the Indian parliament was a legitimate target IMO.
That said, I still disagree that Pakistan had any interest in carrying out such an attack, given the 911 factor - it was way too early for that and the global response (regardless of the legitimacy of the target) could have been predicted by a half wit.