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How India betrayed Pakistan

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By Basharat Hussain Qizilbash | Published: September 18, 2010

Many Pakistanis are eager to establish strong friendly relations with India; however, the more cautious ones remind us not to be totally oblivious of its past attitude towards Pakistan. Why is there such a trust deficit? Trust, in plain words, means that the entity you trust will not fail you in any situation that demands fairness, protection or discretion. Could there have been better situations to test our trust in India than, when, we, as a newly born nation were struggling for survival?
We expected India to be fair and prudent in its discretion while dealing with us. It had several big leaders - Gandhi, Nehru, Patel - to name a few, tall enough to lay the foundations of a trustworthy relationship with Pakistan but their words and deeds instead created such a huge trust deficit that hasn’t been bridged, till today.
The list of Indian betrayals is long and it starts from the time when the date of transfer of power was announced by the British. Had the original date of June 1, 1948, been followed then instead of two months, the provinces that became Pakistan would have had 11 months to organise themselves before partition. However, the Congress secretly hobnobbed with the British Viceroy Mountbatten to have the date of partition advanced to August 1947 in order to deny Pakistan the opportunity to establish itself on a sound basis from the very beginning.
Next, the colonial economy was so organised that the Muslim majority in East Bengal was made totally dependent upon the port city of Calcutta (now Kolkata). A plebiscite in Calcutta was expected to result in favour of Pakistan. This was not acceptable to the Congress. So it again entered into a clandestine agreement with Mountbatten to secure this crucial city. This is not just an allegation. Much later, in the daily The Hindu of January 15, 1950, Sardar Patel himself spilled the beans: “We made a condition that we could only agree to partition if we did not lose Calcutta. If Calcutta is gone then India is gone.”
Millions of farmers of Pakistan’s Bengal were dependent on Calcutta for selling and exporting their jute, however, India started a trade war by refusing to buy our jute and blocked its export through Calcutta as well. The crisis compelled Pakistan to search for a trade agreement but what the Indians felt about us could be imagined from the callous remark of the leader of an Indian delegation: “What can you do with your jute except sell it to us? Burn it? Throw it into the Bay of Bengal?” So what kind of relationship could have been established between the two countries on the basis of such Indian
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Another opportunity to build a trustworthy relationship was wasted by India when it deprived Pakistan of its due share of one-third of the military stores, as per decision of the Joint Defence Council. By being fair and just, India could have allayed Pakistan’s sense of insecurity by transferring its military share, besides winning our gratitude in bonus. But it was not to be so.
To understand the nefarious Indian designs, one has to read John Connell’s Auchinleck: A Critical Biography, in which Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck in his capacity as the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian armed forces, as well as a member of the Joint Defence Council, informed the British government on September 28, 1947: “I have no hesitation whatever in affirming that the present Indian Cabinet are implacably determined to do all in their power to prevent the establishment of the Dominion of Pakistan on a firm basis….The Indian leaders, Cabinet Ministers, civil officials and others have persistently tried to obstruct the work of partition of the armed forces….It is becoming increasingly impossible for myself and my officers to continue with our task. If we are removed, there is no hope at all of any just division of assets in the shape of movable stores belonging to the former Indian army. The attitude of Pakistan, on the other hand, has been reasonable and cooperative throughout.” The fact of the matter is that Auchinleck was forced to resign. Moreover, Sardar Patel ensured that not a single piece of defence machinery reached Pakistan. India even refused to give us the machinery for Bren-gun and fuse-filling factories that was lying packed and uninstalled.
Yet, another classic example of India’s Machiavellian duplicity came to the fore on the issue of water distribution of rivers and canals in Punjab. This issue was dealt by Committee B of the Arbitral Tribunal, which was to expire on March 31, 1948. This committee with equal representation from India and Pakistan unanimously agreed that the pre-partition shares of water would not be changed but the day after the Arbitral Tribunal ceased to exist, India stopped the supply of water in every canal coming into Pakistan threatening agriculture over 1.66 million acres. The precarious Pakistani condition was exploited to the hilt by India when a delegation headed by Ghulam Muhammad comprising Shaukat Hayat and Mumtaz Daultana was not given any choice but was made to sign a statement without changing a word or a comma by Nehru’s government on May 4, as a condition for restoring the flow of water. If it were not a blackmail, pure and simple, then what was it?
The threat potential of this ‘water bomb’ was highlighted by David E. Lilienthal, a former head of the Tennessee Valley Authority, US, who, after visiting the subcontinent commented in the August 1951 issue of the Collier magazine: “With no water for irrigation (Pakistan) would be desert….No army, with bombs and shellfire, could devastate a land as thoroughly as Pakistan could be devastated by the simple expedient of India’s permanently shutting off the sources of water that keep the fields and the people of Pakistan alive.” In a timeless observation, he termed the water dispute “pure dynamite, a Punjab powder keg” and warned that “peace in the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent is not in sight with these inflammables around.” This is indeed the context of today’s “water tensions.”
When lifetime opportunities presented themselves to build a genuine trustworthy friendship with Pakistan, it was India that frittered them away by betraying Pakistan’s trust. When we trusted India to be just, it deceived us. When we expected it to be prudent in its discretion, India showed indiscretion, and when we thought that it would allay our sense of insecurity, it tried to make us defenceless. In this backdrop, can Pakistanis afford to ignore George Santayana’s advice: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Email: qizilbash2000@yahoo.com



How India betrayed Pakistan | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
By Basharat Hussain Qizilbash | Published: September 18, 2010

Many Pakistanis are eager to establish strong friendly relations with India; however, the more cautious ones remind us not to be totally oblivious of its past attitude towards Pakistan. Why is there such a trust deficit? Trust, in plain words, means that the entity you trust will not fail you in any situation that demands fairness, protection or discretion. Could there have been better situations to test our trust in India than, when, we, as a newly born nation were struggling for survival?
We expected India to be fair and prudent in its discretion while dealing with us. It had several big leaders - Gandhi, Nehru, Patel - to name a few, tall enough to lay the foundations of a trustworthy relationship with Pakistan but their words and deeds instead created such a huge trust deficit that hasn’t been bridged, till today.
The list of Indian betrayals is long and it starts from the time when the date of transfer of power was announced by the British. Had the original date of June 1, 1948, been followed then instead of two months, the provinces that became Pakistan would have had 11 months to organise themselves before partition. However, the Congress secretly hobnobbed with the British Viceroy Mountbatten to have the date of partition advanced to August 1947 in order to deny Pakistan the opportunity to establish itself on a sound basis from the very beginning.
Next, the colonial economy was so organised that the Muslim majority in East Bengal was made totally dependent upon the port city of Calcutta (now Kolkata). A plebiscite in Calcutta was expected to result in favour of Pakistan. This was not acceptable to the Congress. So it again entered into a clandestine agreement with Mountbatten to secure this crucial city. This is not just an allegation. Much later, in the daily The Hindu of January 15, 1950, Sardar Patel himself spilled the beans: “We made a condition that we could only agree to partition if we did not lose Calcutta. If Calcutta is gone then India is gone.”
Millions of farmers of Pakistan’s Bengal were dependent on Calcutta for selling and exporting their jute, however, India started a trade war by refusing to buy our jute and blocked its export through Calcutta as well. The crisis compelled Pakistan to search for a trade agreement but what the Indians felt about us could be imagined from the callous remark of the leader of an Indian delegation: “What can you do with your jute except sell it to us? Burn it? Throw it into the Bay of Bengal?” So what kind of relationship could have been established between the two countries on the basis of such Indian
PrintFacebookDiggStumbleUponText Size
Another opportunity to build a trustworthy relationship was wasted by India when it deprived Pakistan of its due share of one-third of the military stores, as per decision of the Joint Defence Council. By being fair and just, India could have allayed Pakistan’s sense of insecurity by transferring its military share, besides winning our gratitude in bonus. But it was not to be so.
To understand the nefarious Indian designs, one has to read John Connell’s Auchinleck: A Critical Biography, in which Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck in his capacity as the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian armed forces, as well as a member of the Joint Defence Council, informed the British government on September 28, 1947: “I have no hesitation whatever in affirming that the present Indian Cabinet are implacably determined to do all in their power to prevent the establishment of the Dominion of Pakistan on a firm basis….The Indian leaders, Cabinet Ministers, civil officials and others have persistently tried to obstruct the work of partition of the armed forces….It is becoming increasingly impossible for myself and my officers to continue with our task. If we are removed, there is no hope at all of any just division of assets in the shape of movable stores belonging to the former Indian army. The attitude of Pakistan, on the other hand, has been reasonable and cooperative throughout.” The fact of the matter is that Auchinleck was forced to resign. Moreover, Sardar Patel ensured that not a single piece of defence machinery reached Pakistan. India even refused to give us the machinery for Bren-gun and fuse-filling factories that was lying packed and uninstalled.
Yet, another classic example of India’s Machiavellian duplicity came to the fore on the issue of water distribution of rivers and canals in Punjab. This issue was dealt by Committee B of the Arbitral Tribunal, which was to expire on March 31, 1948. This committee with equal representation from India and Pakistan unanimously agreed that the pre-partition shares of water would not be changed but the day after the Arbitral Tribunal ceased to exist, India stopped the supply of water in every canal coming into Pakistan threatening agriculture over 1.66 million acres. The precarious Pakistani condition was exploited to the hilt by India when a delegation headed by Ghulam Muhammad comprising Shaukat Hayat and Mumtaz Daultana was not given any choice but was made to sign a statement without changing a word or a comma by Nehru’s government on May 4, as a condition for restoring the flow of water. If it were not a blackmail, pure and simple, then what was it?
The threat potential of this ‘water bomb’ was highlighted by David E. Lilienthal, a former head of the Tennessee Valley Authority, US, who, after visiting the subcontinent commented in the August 1951 issue of the Collier magazine: “With no water for irrigation (Pakistan) would be desert….No army, with bombs and shellfire, could devastate a land as thoroughly as Pakistan could be devastated by the simple expedient of India’s permanently shutting off the sources of water that keep the fields and the people of Pakistan alive.” In a timeless observation, he termed the water dispute “pure dynamite, a Punjab powder keg” and warned that “peace in the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent is not in sight with these inflammables around.” This is indeed the context of today’s “water tensions.”
When lifetime opportunities presented themselves to build a genuine trustworthy friendship with Pakistan, it was India that frittered them away by betraying Pakistan’s trust. When we trusted India to be just, it deceived us. When we expected it to be prudent in its discretion, India showed indiscretion, and when we thought that it would allay our sense of insecurity, it tried to make us defenceless. In this backdrop, can Pakistanis afford to ignore George Santayana’s advice: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Email: qizilbash2000@yahoo.com



How India betrayed Pakistan | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online

Crapy article just to satisfy himself that yeah, its not pakistan who betrayed.
He complains about why pakistan got independence 1 year early:rolleyes::rolleyes:
Greatest assumption is that 2 months time wasnt enough for pakistani provinces to organize, but more than enough for large india.

He remember of millions farmers of East pakistan dependent on Kolkatta, but doesnt give account to millions more dependent on indian side..

It also showed how much deeply britishers were committed for indian partition,they knew in there long term plan they would earn bread from two foes, unfortunately at that time some people dont understand.
 
woooo thankfully everything single stuff on this article i already knew by reading a school book of my relative.

This is one good thing our government has done never let out next generation forget about what India did and is doing with us.
 
"Had the original date of June 1, 1948, been followed then instead of two months, the provinces that became Pakistan would have had 11 months to organise themselves before partition. However, the Congress secretly hobnobbed with the British Viceroy Mountbatten to have the date of partition advanced to August 1947 in order to deny Pakistan the opportunity to establish itself on a sound basis from the very beginning. "

At least one of the fallacious statements in the whole thesis is to be found here.
The British were aware of Mr. M.A. Jinnah's failing health already; as a matter of fact they had even calculated a time-line. This information was kept secret among only the higher echelons of the British establishment and they took particular care that the Congress leaders were not even able to get even a whiff of this. They knew clearly that the plan for partition of India could fall through if Mr. Jinnah were to depart from the scene.
That is the real reason for advancing the transfer of power. The writer of this piece should thank the British for their decision.
It is a matter of fact that Mr. Jinnah passed away on 11th Sept 1948. If this date is juxtaposed on the events that took place, history (arguably) may have taken some other turn.
As for his other submissions, i reserve my comments.
 
India is eternal enemy of Pakistan from day 1 for the obvious reasons.

1. Hindu coloring of freedom movement by Nehru and Gandhi
2. India annexed the Pakistani share of treasury and ammunitions
3. India annexed the legally acceded state of Junagarh to enforce a plesbestite.
4. But it has enforced policy of duplicity when it comes to Kashmir. In a nutsell whatever floats the boat in India favour is accecptable.
5. India interfered in east-Pakistan by terrorist infiltration.
6. Indias nuclear blast were primarily show of muscle to Pakistan.
7. India has always done its best to taint Pakistan on international fronts / forums.
 
India is eternal enemy of Pakistan from day 1 for the obvious reasons.

1. Hindu coloring of freedom movement by Nehru and Gandhi
2. India annexed the Pakistani share of treasury and ammunitions
3. India annexed the legally acceded state of Junagarh to enforce a plesbestite.
4. But it has enforced policy of duplicity when it comes to Kashmir. In a nutsell whatever floats the boat in India favour is accecptable.
5. India interfered in east-Pakistan by terrorist infiltration.
6. Indias nuclear blast were primarily show of muscle to Pakistan.
7. India has always done its best to taint Pakistan on international fronts / forums.

and despite india's hard effort Pakistan still exists and we're stronger than ever Alhamdolillah :pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:
 
5. India interfered in east-Pakistan by terrorist infiltration.

I'm assuming this is referring to the IA's training of irregulars in Bengal? I would love some more information on this guerilla conflict if anyone can help.
 
India interfered in east-Pakistan by terrorist infiltration.
I'm assuming this is referring to the IA's training of irregulars in Bengal? I would love some more information on this guerilla conflict if anyone can help.
What these guys will never tell you is what is the chronology of India supporting the organization ? Was it BEFORE the Genocide by the Pakistani Army ? Or was it AFTER, when India had a massive refugee-influx and a humanitarian crisis to deal with, when hordes upon hordes of women were raped and killed or machine-gunned by the military in erstwhile East-Pakistan circa March 1971.

The Entire NSA Archives for the same are open for you to explore on the same.
 
What these guys will never tell you is what is the chronology of India supporting the organization ? Was it BEFORE the Genocide by the Pakistani Army ? Or was it AFTER, when India had a massive refugee-influx and a humanitarian crisis to deal with, when hordes upon hordes of women were raped and killed or machine-gunned by the military in erstwhile East-Pakistan circa March 1971.

The Entire NSA Archives for the same are open for you to explore on the same.

then going by your logic Pakistan is doing the right thing by supporting Kashmiri rebels because your coward army is massacring and raping Kahmiris am i right?
 
What these guys will never tell you is what is the chronology of India supporting the organization ? Was it BEFORE the Genocide by the Pakistani Army ? Or was it AFTER, when India had a massive refugee-influx and a humanitarian crisis to deal with, when hordes upon hordes of women were raped and killed or machine-gunned by the military in erstwhile East-Pakistan circa March 1971.

The Entire NSA Archives for the same are open for you to explore on the same.

Like I said I know nothing beyond the fact that these forces were trained. I made no moral assertions.
 
Based on the neutral accounts the Mukhti Bahini terrorist started harrasing the Begnali intelactual base by sending threats to them and their families to turn their back against Pakistan. One the fake uprising was fabricated and news started going upstream then India unleashed upon camps of terrorist on east-Pakistan backed by their own regular army. The terrorist would engage the PA and then the fire would be returned by IA regulars. Sending PA personal in total shock and awe as to what is happening. Today the Indians portray themselves as part of reactive politics in doing the right thing however any think tank would understand that such measures cannot take place without 3-6 years of careful pre-planning. Much of the brain behind this staging was blessing of KGB and Indias "treaty of friendship and co-operationg" with soviet union.

Soviet union assisted by creating naval blockade of Pakistan hence amputing its ability to transfer weapons, ammunition and troops in sufficent numbers. PA has to rely on PIA flights and whatever they could move through air. The presence of soviet navy at the right time in right place with right muscle pretty blew the cover of KGB involement in amputation of Pakistan.

When uncovered by CIA, it forced Pakistan to take stake in Afghan war at any cost. While many people only remember ISI role in training afghan jehadis they fail to look on other fronts ISI opened against Soviet union. A large number of qualified professional were sneaked out with the help of covert ISI agents and the menance of narcotics abuse was unleashed in mainland Russia by ISI-CIA hired smugglers to break the fabric of soviet society.


The alleged Pakistani massacares in east-pakistan was last resort damage by outnumbered and outgunned troops totally left to fend on their own in completely unfamiliar and untrusted terriotry with no aircover, transport and escape routes. It wasnt even clear if surrender was an option and to which authority and a big "IF" their surrender would be accecpted along the lines of Geneva conventions of they would be left at mercy of angry mob / mukti bahini / disbanded east-pakistani millitia. Regarding war crimes if such a reality did exisit then the UN plus international body would have come into action with a tribunal like it did for Germany, Serbianca and Yugoslav war crimes. However the alleged Bengaldeshi war crimes rehotric has no backing other than the Indians and their Bengali fanboys.

Most of the so called refugees were border lying inhabitants driven out by tactical violence of Mukhti Bahini. The PA was heavily outnumbered and concentrated in the heart of Dhaka in a country of population larger than west-Pakistan it would need a lot of manpower and ariel offences to create a humanitarian crisis indians boasts about without much evidence.

One would have little faith in nationalist uprising by a socialist puppet who was gunned down for his own treason by the millitary. The role of Mukhti Bahini was totally exposed once they were fomalised as personal millitia of mujeeb to openly terrorise Bengladeshis in their homeland they so desperatly fought to liberate from "evil Pakistan".
 
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