AgNoStiC MuSliM
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This idea was offered by one of our members S-2 on another forum - I am reproducing it here to gage responses - let the opinions flow!
We rarely speculate in this section. There's an active war, needless to say, that's heating up considerably.
I've a thought, though (surprising, I know). I'd like everybody's accumulated objections to a joint Indo-Pak Mountain Corps of two divisions stationed in Afghanistan with a Corps H.Q. staffed jointly on synchronized rotations of one year to foster internal cohesiveness and knowledge-base.
Pakistan claims of Indian intrigue with Baluchi separatists may be allayed by having Pakistani forces within Afghanistan, particularly if they were to operate in these suspected regions adjacent to Baluchistan.
Pakstan has recently tried to turn the tables of logic by contending that it is THEY, not Afghanistan, that is under attack from within Afghanistan. Fine, then fight these "infiltrators" from Afghanistan.
Each nation has security and cultural interests in Afghanistan. Each nation faces the same enemy at home and stands to lose equally from a taliban victory in Afghanistan. Each nation could stand to foster a closer affinity to one another through the professional engagement of high-quality forces in a mutual endeavor of high visibility.
A corps of highly-trained and culturally-attuned Indians and Pakistanis, numbering 15,000-25,000 would be invaluable to Afghanistan and NATO. It would also provide a shared investment/incentive in Afghanistan's success. The consultative and coordination process would adhere and bind these forces closely. ISAF would command this coalition contribution.
I'm thinking that I'm on to something.
It won't happen. Most capable of making this occur will find ways to say "no" instead of "yes". Maybe we make the Corps one nation and one division larger adding Turkey.
Their troops will always deploy between India's and Pakistan's.
That's zero-sum thinking expressed here and it's zero-sum thinking that's anticipated by the GoP. I win-you lose. Falling back on stock assumptions won't move us forward.
Nobody should be allowed to dominate Afghanistan, except Afghanis. As both India and Pakistan fear the other's meddling, invite both in to OPENLY do the bidding of the Afghan government to establish security under command of ISAF. I think this endeavor would force a greater transparency of intent and moral rectitude onto all participating shoulders.
There are, to make this work, real operational and logistical impediments which must be overcome. Units would have to be formed and exercised to gain trust in ability and commitment. Indian infantry in contact would have to, perhaps, come to trust that Pakistani CASEVAC would fly into a hot LZ to pick up wounded. That's, obviously, a major confidence-building measure that highlights the need for joint training and exercises before deployment.
I've no doubt, though, that if the word comes down from on-high, both armies will do their level-best to cooperate effectively. The stronger the word, the more enthusiastically this mission will be embraced by the troops. It's a function of officer and NCO leadership to co-opt troops into taking ownership of missions and responsibilities.
The near, medium, and long-term benefits are what's most important. Near term stability leads to medium-term dialogue and engagement. Long-term? Who knows? Maybe issues today are rendered irrelevant by time and circumstance.
Poorly defined borders can be disputed into infinity by stable nations to everybody's benefit. But you have to be STABLE first. Stable nations will talk FOREVER about crap like borders. Meanwhile they establish joint border commissions that do the job that needs doing. After awhile the condition takes on a semblance of permanency.
Well, we know that, at times, Pakistani forces have fought and died fighting these "miscreats" (I just LOVE that wonderfully-exploited description). We obviously know the leanings, quality, and cultural impediments to any F.C. forces. I, less so for XII Corps troops around Peshawar.
But I'm looking for their best troops. Mountain-trained and skilled/adept in fundamental soldier skills and small unit operations. I'm sure that they have them- probably facing you somewhere, in fact, or as a strategic reserve. India will, naturally, not send less. Better troops. Better effects achieved in Afghanistan and, consequently, with India/Pakistan.
"not happening , simply put no politician on either side of the LOC will stake his career on a joint indo-pak operation in Afghanistan."
Until some of that changes, there'll be no improvement. The prevailing paradigm is bankrupt and proven so. Both nations have legitimate interests and the best way to approach this is recognition and facilitation. That's best accomplished by sharing the work and outcome (hopefully rewards).
Hope attitudes can change.