Wednesday, October 25, 2006
EDITORIAL: How is Pakistan ââ¬Ëequalââ¬â¢ to India?
President Pervez Musharraf has said that India must accept Pakistan as its ââ¬Ëequalââ¬â¢ for peace in the region: ââ¬ÅI respect the Indian prime minister but it is regrettable that India wants to keep its domination in the region and wants Pakistan to be a weaker force. India should come out of its phobia (sic!) of being a greater nation and should talk to us at an equal levelââ¬Â. He said his government would not allow anyone to interfere in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal matters and that India should set its own house in order before telling others what to do. The next observation by the president was even more interesting: ââ¬ÅThere are no separatist movements in Pakistan (sic!) but in India 21 separatist movements are taking place, thus India should not consider us a weaker nationââ¬Â. In the same breath he said ââ¬Åtalks with India on Kashmir were on the right pathââ¬Â and progress was being made. As a part of his foray into the countryââ¬â¢s foreign policy, he also promised to ââ¬Ëreviewââ¬â¢ Pakistanââ¬â¢s policy on Israel after the Lebanon invasion, as if this review would somehow tip the balance of power in the Middle East.
The president thinks India should treat Pakistan as an equal on matters of peace. This is fine if it is meant in terms of intrinsic rights and wrongs. But the hidden reference here is apparently to the ââ¬Ënuclear parityââ¬â¢ which the two states achieved in 1998. Apparently an atomic bomb complete with a credible delivery system is supposed to be ââ¬Ëan equaliserââ¬â¢. Pakistan has always chafed under the feeling that it was militarily unequal to India which had three times more firepower than Pakistan. So Pakistan initially relied on its big-power links to overcome this numerical imbalance. It obtained weapons systems which were considered better in technology than Indiaââ¬â¢s. Therefore when it fought wars with India there was always something that gave Pakistan an edge, whether it was better aircraft or better tanks. Of course, the fact that this didnââ¬â¢t matter in the final analysis because Pakistan never won any war against India was conveniently ignored by this doctrine.
Pakistan has always thought militarily because it is completely dominated by military men who think nothing of politicians who have made a hash of democracy whenever they have been in office. Indeed, politicians who have ruled Pakistan fitfully have usually come out of the crotch of the army as its protégées. They too were broken to thinking like the generals: get better weapons, get F16s or AWACS or anything to get an ââ¬Ëedge over Indiaââ¬â¢. The thinking was repetitive but the same. Add to that the parrot-like recitation of the ââ¬Ë21 separatist movementsââ¬â¢ in India and you have a dubious ââ¬Ënational strategic doctrineââ¬â¢. General Musharraf may dislike General (Retd) Hameed Gul but, with a thousand apologies, we should like to remind him that he is simply regurgitating what that man has unloaded on the nation a thousand times before him? Where is President Musharrafââ¬â¢s originality?
We accept that smaller states with weak institutions have a more intense nationalism when they are under the onus of revisionism, but there should be limit to unoriginality. Every general-president who has lost a war to India has said the same thing. Therefore we should spell out the truth: Pakistan canââ¬â¢t defeat India and canââ¬â¢t wrestle Kashmir by force. But that is not the doctrine. Instead it is to ââ¬Ëwound India with a thousand cutsââ¬â¢ until it weakens to such an extent that its ââ¬Ë21 separatist movementsââ¬â¢ rear up and bring it down from within. In other words, India is to be nudged for it to crumble from within so that Pakistan can simply tip it over at the right time. How ridiculous can you get?
There are many ââ¬Ëthird worldââ¬â¢ things where Pakistan and India are indeed at par. The red tape, the delay of law, the abysmal state of their courts at the level of the lower judiciary, the persistent poverty of the masses, the almost zero level of infrastructure needed for a good modern economy, etc. But Indiaââ¬â¢s size and Indiaââ¬â¢s problems that once made it vulnerable in comparison with Pakistan are slowly disappearing and President Musharraf should worry about it if he feels adversarial these days to boost his image at home.
Indiaââ¬â¢s growth rate is steadily much higher than the ââ¬ËHindu rateââ¬â¢ it used to have. It is also not dependent on external stimuli like security pacts and jihad against communism from 1950 to 1987 or support to the war against terror after 9/11 to take it out of its troughs. In fact its economy looks like dominating Asia together with China in the decade ahead. Its companies are in the multinational race and are buying up first world companies. Its education has always been better while Pakistan was handing its seats of learning to the clerics and their violent ââ¬Ëyouth wingsââ¬â¢. Indian scientists and scholars are spread out in the world proving their excellence while Pakistanis are suffering discriminatory regimes put up by the first world to avoid getting hit by terrorist attack. Indiaââ¬â¢s poverty may be on the decline, but in Pakistan, despite President Musharrafââ¬â¢s success in the economic sector, it may still be on the increase. India is expected to attract foreign investment in the coming months because law and order there is better than the one obtaining in Pakistan. India has developed a large middle class which attracts global funds looking for consumer markets. Unlike Pakistan, which spends 4.5 percent of its GDP on defence (not counting the militaryââ¬â¢s trespass into jobs that used to belong to the civil servants) while the biggest spender India is still safely below 3 percent, the point over which purchase of weapons may affect the quality of life of a country.
It is therefore regrettable that there should be the hint of menace in President Musharrafââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëmessageââ¬â¢ to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The world will not miss the contrast of the two personalities. No one likes braggarts, especially when they are using rhetoric to grab at whatever is left of the support they enjoy at home. If the president implies that India is interfering in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal affairs, the world is more likely to disbelieve him and instead point to the internal dangers faced by Pakistan. As for President Musharrafââ¬â¢s ability to ââ¬Ådisallow anyone to interfere in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal mattersââ¬Â, the last time he tried in Waziristan to do exactly that he ended up making a deal that looked like capitulation.
Not long ago, President Musharraf was ââ¬Ëoriginalââ¬â¢. He talked about Pakistan as a ââ¬Ëtrade corridorââ¬â¢ and thought about it, not in terms of ââ¬Ëstrategic depthââ¬â¢, but as a ââ¬Ëcommercial hubââ¬â¢. Why should he revert to the defeated rhetoric of the generals of yore? This ââ¬Ëequal of Indiaââ¬â¢ spiel is fine if it is meant to refuse dictation but dangerous if it is avowed as a strategic doctrine. The last time we took it seriously we were ââ¬Ëseparatedââ¬â¢ from East Pakistan; meanwhile, Indiaââ¬â¢s 21 separatist movements have not stopped it from making progress.
Such rhetoric is passé. Let us get concrete about ourselves. *
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\10\25\story_25-10-2006_pg3_1
EDITORIAL: How is Pakistan ââ¬Ëequalââ¬â¢ to India?
President Pervez Musharraf has said that India must accept Pakistan as its ââ¬Ëequalââ¬â¢ for peace in the region: ââ¬ÅI respect the Indian prime minister but it is regrettable that India wants to keep its domination in the region and wants Pakistan to be a weaker force. India should come out of its phobia (sic!) of being a greater nation and should talk to us at an equal levelââ¬Â. He said his government would not allow anyone to interfere in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal matters and that India should set its own house in order before telling others what to do. The next observation by the president was even more interesting: ââ¬ÅThere are no separatist movements in Pakistan (sic!) but in India 21 separatist movements are taking place, thus India should not consider us a weaker nationââ¬Â. In the same breath he said ââ¬Åtalks with India on Kashmir were on the right pathââ¬Â and progress was being made. As a part of his foray into the countryââ¬â¢s foreign policy, he also promised to ââ¬Ëreviewââ¬â¢ Pakistanââ¬â¢s policy on Israel after the Lebanon invasion, as if this review would somehow tip the balance of power in the Middle East.
The president thinks India should treat Pakistan as an equal on matters of peace. This is fine if it is meant in terms of intrinsic rights and wrongs. But the hidden reference here is apparently to the ââ¬Ënuclear parityââ¬â¢ which the two states achieved in 1998. Apparently an atomic bomb complete with a credible delivery system is supposed to be ââ¬Ëan equaliserââ¬â¢. Pakistan has always chafed under the feeling that it was militarily unequal to India which had three times more firepower than Pakistan. So Pakistan initially relied on its big-power links to overcome this numerical imbalance. It obtained weapons systems which were considered better in technology than Indiaââ¬â¢s. Therefore when it fought wars with India there was always something that gave Pakistan an edge, whether it was better aircraft or better tanks. Of course, the fact that this didnââ¬â¢t matter in the final analysis because Pakistan never won any war against India was conveniently ignored by this doctrine.
Pakistan has always thought militarily because it is completely dominated by military men who think nothing of politicians who have made a hash of democracy whenever they have been in office. Indeed, politicians who have ruled Pakistan fitfully have usually come out of the crotch of the army as its protégées. They too were broken to thinking like the generals: get better weapons, get F16s or AWACS or anything to get an ââ¬Ëedge over Indiaââ¬â¢. The thinking was repetitive but the same. Add to that the parrot-like recitation of the ââ¬Ë21 separatist movementsââ¬â¢ in India and you have a dubious ââ¬Ënational strategic doctrineââ¬â¢. General Musharraf may dislike General (Retd) Hameed Gul but, with a thousand apologies, we should like to remind him that he is simply regurgitating what that man has unloaded on the nation a thousand times before him? Where is President Musharrafââ¬â¢s originality?
We accept that smaller states with weak institutions have a more intense nationalism when they are under the onus of revisionism, but there should be limit to unoriginality. Every general-president who has lost a war to India has said the same thing. Therefore we should spell out the truth: Pakistan canââ¬â¢t defeat India and canââ¬â¢t wrestle Kashmir by force. But that is not the doctrine. Instead it is to ââ¬Ëwound India with a thousand cutsââ¬â¢ until it weakens to such an extent that its ââ¬Ë21 separatist movementsââ¬â¢ rear up and bring it down from within. In other words, India is to be nudged for it to crumble from within so that Pakistan can simply tip it over at the right time. How ridiculous can you get?
There are many ââ¬Ëthird worldââ¬â¢ things where Pakistan and India are indeed at par. The red tape, the delay of law, the abysmal state of their courts at the level of the lower judiciary, the persistent poverty of the masses, the almost zero level of infrastructure needed for a good modern economy, etc. But Indiaââ¬â¢s size and Indiaââ¬â¢s problems that once made it vulnerable in comparison with Pakistan are slowly disappearing and President Musharraf should worry about it if he feels adversarial these days to boost his image at home.
Indiaââ¬â¢s growth rate is steadily much higher than the ââ¬ËHindu rateââ¬â¢ it used to have. It is also not dependent on external stimuli like security pacts and jihad against communism from 1950 to 1987 or support to the war against terror after 9/11 to take it out of its troughs. In fact its economy looks like dominating Asia together with China in the decade ahead. Its companies are in the multinational race and are buying up first world companies. Its education has always been better while Pakistan was handing its seats of learning to the clerics and their violent ââ¬Ëyouth wingsââ¬â¢. Indian scientists and scholars are spread out in the world proving their excellence while Pakistanis are suffering discriminatory regimes put up by the first world to avoid getting hit by terrorist attack. Indiaââ¬â¢s poverty may be on the decline, but in Pakistan, despite President Musharrafââ¬â¢s success in the economic sector, it may still be on the increase. India is expected to attract foreign investment in the coming months because law and order there is better than the one obtaining in Pakistan. India has developed a large middle class which attracts global funds looking for consumer markets. Unlike Pakistan, which spends 4.5 percent of its GDP on defence (not counting the militaryââ¬â¢s trespass into jobs that used to belong to the civil servants) while the biggest spender India is still safely below 3 percent, the point over which purchase of weapons may affect the quality of life of a country.
It is therefore regrettable that there should be the hint of menace in President Musharrafââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëmessageââ¬â¢ to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The world will not miss the contrast of the two personalities. No one likes braggarts, especially when they are using rhetoric to grab at whatever is left of the support they enjoy at home. If the president implies that India is interfering in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal affairs, the world is more likely to disbelieve him and instead point to the internal dangers faced by Pakistan. As for President Musharrafââ¬â¢s ability to ââ¬Ådisallow anyone to interfere in Pakistanââ¬â¢s internal mattersââ¬Â, the last time he tried in Waziristan to do exactly that he ended up making a deal that looked like capitulation.
Not long ago, President Musharraf was ââ¬Ëoriginalââ¬â¢. He talked about Pakistan as a ââ¬Ëtrade corridorââ¬â¢ and thought about it, not in terms of ââ¬Ëstrategic depthââ¬â¢, but as a ââ¬Ëcommercial hubââ¬â¢. Why should he revert to the defeated rhetoric of the generals of yore? This ââ¬Ëequal of Indiaââ¬â¢ spiel is fine if it is meant to refuse dictation but dangerous if it is avowed as a strategic doctrine. The last time we took it seriously we were ââ¬Ëseparatedââ¬â¢ from East Pakistan; meanwhile, Indiaââ¬â¢s 21 separatist movements have not stopped it from making progress.
Such rhetoric is passé. Let us get concrete about ourselves. *
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\10\25\story_25-10-2006_pg3_1