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India's Greatest Ally: Pakistan

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Several weeks ago, I made the acquaintance of a high-ranking Indian military official who was passing through Abu Dhabi. Our meeting coincided with reports of U.S. air strikes on targets in Pakistan near to the Afghan border. During our candid discussion, the attaché pounded his fist over the desk, insisting that any attack on Pakistan inevitably hurts India. "Target Pakistan and you send shockwaves into India," he said.

India has, for years, found itself in a predicament with regard to its relationship with Pakistan. While it may be in the country's interest to take firmer action against Pakistan whenever it receives credible evidence of a plot, the two countries will accomplish far more in deterring security threats if they work together. While relations have been hot and cold between the two countries over the years, they are ultimately an extension of one another and therefore must recognize that attacks and counterattacks will reverberate across their borders.

India must also realize that Pakistani citizens are just as victimized by the threat of terror as they are. This year alone, some 600 terror-related incidents have been carried out on Pakistani soil, killing nearly 2,000 people - mostly civilians. While these attacks in Pakistan can be viewed as a domestic - and not transnational - problem, it is fair to expect some level of cooperation from the victimized portion of Pakistan's population. India should capitalize on this by positioning itself as a partner for peace. To do so credibly, however, it must demonstrate that it is cracking down on the domestic fundamentalism that has emerged within its borders, leaving many of its own citizens - Muslims especially - feeling vulnerable and victimized.
The deterioration of law and order in some of Pakistan's Northwestern regions has created a near-impossible security situation for Pakistan's intelligence and military but it also puts India between a rock and a hard spot. It is in neither country's best interest to engage in a military confrontation. For India, this is a waste of important resources. For Pakistan, it is a no-win situation as the country has no match for India's mighty military.

Given the tumultuous relationship between the two countries, it is important that they work together to ensure that intelligence is shared on such security matters and that Pakistan in particular is doing what it can to deter radicalism from spilling over its borders. India is a large country with more than a billion residents presenting an utterly impossible security challenge. It cannot expect to ensure its security and protect its borders without the help of its neighbors. In the fight against terrorism, Pakistan is, perhaps ironically, India's greatest ally.

Vivian Salama at PostGlobal: India's Greatest Ally: Pakistan - PostGlobal at washingtonpost.com
 
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Reasons for Pakistan to make peace with India: Pakistan’s realization if it does not end its support for the militants operating in Kashmir, India is going to by confronting Pakistan and isolating it. Pakistan’s realization if it wants to be considered a responsible nation, it must distant itself from the cloud of militants that currently spawn all over there. Pakistan’s realization that economy is what decides if a country fails or succeeds rather than war.
 
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While I may not agree to the notion of Pakistan being the greatest ally, I agree definitely that Pakistan is a cornerstone of Indian Defence Planning. Reasons for the same are as follows:

a. Being the site for training and logistic support for militants from all over the world for operations in both Afghanistan and Kashmir, it allows certain controls on these organizations and enables easier intelligence ganthering rather than having them underground and spread all over which would require far greater resources.

b. If Pakistan remains economically and militarily strong, then it can overcome the various secessionist demands from Sindh, Waziristan, NWFP and Gilgit regions which allow the maintenance of Pakistan as one country preventing it from breaking up into weaker states lacking a strong central government in which cases the so called jihadi outfits will gain prominence enabling massive amount of manpower and resources for waging terror attacks all over.

c. Striking Pakistan now post-Mumbai will only strengthen the Pakistani unity making even the jihadists and other fundamentalist PA battles in NWFP and FATA unite with Pakistan to fight the Indian invasion which is contrary to Indian intentions. India would not want them united as that would then lead to increased fundamentalisation of Pakistani Armed Forces which would only worsen Indo-Pak relations.

d. As long as Pakistan battles militants in NWFP and FATA the attention of foreign fighters will be there. For this very reason India is restraining itself as also encouraging US in afghanistan as that keeps the pressure off India in J&K where the local populance is increasingly turning away from insurgency which has ruined the valley and want to come into the mainstream for enjoying the economic benefits of a booming economy. The Kashmir militancy is now more foreign cadre based rather than Kashmiri.
 
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Several weeks ago, I made the acquaintance of a high-ranking Indian military official who was passing through Abu Dhabi. Our meeting coincided with reports of U.S. air strikes on targets in Pakistan near to the Afghan border. During our candid discussion, the attaché pounded his fist over the desk, insisting that any attack on Pakistan inevitably hurts India. "Target Pakistan and you send shockwaves into India," he said.

India has, for years, found itself in a predicament with regard to its relationship with Pakistan. While it may be in the country's interest to take firmer action against Pakistan whenever it receives credible evidence of a plot, the two countries will accomplish far more in deterring security threats if they work together. While relations have been hot and cold between the two countries over the years, they are ultimately an extension of one another and therefore must recognize that attacks and counterattacks will reverberate across their borders.

India must also realize that Pakistani citizens are just as victimized by the threat of terror as they are. This year alone, some 600 terror-related incidents have been carried out on Pakistani soil, killing nearly 2,000 people - mostly civilians. While these attacks in Pakistan can be viewed as a domestic - and not transnational - problem, it is fair to expect some level of cooperation from the victimized portion of Pakistan's population. India should capitalize on this by positioning itself as a partner for peace. To do so credibly, however, it must demonstrate that it is cracking down on the domestic fundamentalism that has emerged within its borders, leaving many of its own citizens - Muslims especially - feeling vulnerable and victimized.
The deterioration of law and order in some of Pakistan's Northwestern regions has created a near-impossible security situation for Pakistan's intelligence and military but it also puts India between a rock and a hard spot. It is in neither country's best interest to engage in a military confrontation. For India, this is a waste of important resources. For Pakistan, it is a no-win situation as the country has no match for India's mighty military.

Given the tumultuous relationship between the two countries, it is important that they work together to ensure that intelligence is shared on such security matters and that Pakistan in particular is doing what it can to deter radicalism from spilling over its borders. India is a large country with more than a billion residents presenting an utterly impossible security challenge. It cannot expect to ensure its security and protect its borders without the help of its neighbors. In the fight against terrorism, Pakistan is, perhaps ironically, India's greatest ally.

Vivian Salama at PostGlobal: India's Greatest Ally: Pakistan - PostGlobal at washingtonpost.com

The situation within Pak is for Pak to decide & handle. When the rot starts spreading to the region outside its borders & the state expresses inability to handle / control ' non state' players living & operating inside Pak territory it would be wrong to expect sympathy & understanding from a victim.
 
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Its regional ripple effect and upto an extent very right , whatever bad happens in Pak / India effects all one way or another.
 
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This is mallicious propoganda.A strong pakistan is not in indian's interest.It is better to let them stew in the cesspool they have created.We have a security fence along border and better we use are resources to help pakistan become more pure(aka afghaistan) while we use the time to bolster our economy and military
 
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This is mallicious propoganda.A strong pakistan is not in indian's interest.It is better to let them stew in the cesspool they have created.We have a security fence along border and better we use are resources to help pakistan become more pure(aka afghaistan) while we use the time to bolster our economy and military

Ant you doing it already....and by the way the feeling is mutual, stong India isnt in Pakistans interest either.
 
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This is mallicious propoganda.A strong pakistan is not in indian's interest.It is better to let them stew in the cesspool they have created.We have a security fence along border and better we use are resources to help pakistan become more pure(aka afghaistan) while we use the time to bolster our economy and military

Cesspool is the nickname of your country my friend where 500 million people do their No.1 and No.2 outside. Don't worry the maoists and Naxals and others are working on making your Mahan nation even greater.

It is also islolated from the west and all other important players except for Mother Russia.
 
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