I feel that the underlying facts presented here are sound and well explained. I still feel there is a certain degree of liberal interpretation of those facts in terms of the extrapolated theory. That isn't to say your assertions are implausible or even improbable. For example:
" prime target of Hindutva are Pakistan and Indian Muslims (both of which Bangladesh hates) "
I feel it is a gross generalisation to state that Bangladesh hates or even is indifferent towards Pakistan and Indian muslims.
Thanks for your excellent well reasoned response.
From personal experience as a Pakistani who has travelled frequently to Bangladesh, and based on anecdotal experience of Indian Muslims shared with me, I do maintain that Bangladeshis have an intense hostility to both Pakistan and Indian Muslims. There are individuals and exceptions to the rule and most of the experiences shared on this forum is among ex-pats and overseas diaspora. Obviously if a Pakistani runs into a Bangladeshi in a mosque in Detroit fist cuffs will not fly.
But the differences are stark !
Bangladeshis wherever possible set up their own mosques, a common phenomenon in UK. Overseas Indian Muslims and Pakistanis share mosques amongst themselves, and with Arabs, Malaysians etc.
Bangladeshis club Indian Muslims as "Bihari" (with another epithet not to be repeated in consideration of forum rules) referring to the 500,000 or so wretched debris of war left behind in their land.
The insularity of the Bangladeshi mindset blocks the reality that not all Indian Muslims are Biharis and they are a diverse lot from Laccativian islanders to Ladakhis.
But returning to the topic:
- Bangladesh never condemns the killing of Indian Muslims and supports the position that pogroms and massacres of Muslims in India is India's internal affair. The only time the Bangladeshi parliament passed a resolution on an event ( NOT India) was in 1983 when they condemned the Nellie massacre of illegal Bengali Muslim immigrants in Assam.
- Bangladesh supports the Hindutva cultural agenda in show piece participation in religious ceremonies to Hindu deities, with Sheikh Hasina recently attributing the good harvest in Bangladesh to a certain female deity . Remarkably this is a statement that even the staunchest Hindutva advocate in India would not have made because they know better that the faith in India is very diverse with each region Southern, Western etc, having its own preferred deity and praise of one over the other is inappropriate.
However, your general point that Pakistan must be extremely wary of Dhaka's machinations politically holds true. It is appropriate to sound a warning in this regard, so that Pakistanis continue to pursue a political strategy to thwart any risk of a genuine India-Bangladesh alliance forming against Pakistan.
Will refer you to my OP again.,
The reality is that the Bangladesh India alliance is cast in stone and due to population and climate change can only get stronger with Bangladesh's eventual capitulation.
Sino-Pak trade leverage may be instrumental in this sense. A more productive relationship involving all 3 countries would severely hamper India's relationship with Dhaka.
This is unlikely to happen. China has its own reasons to wrest Bangladesh away from India. Basically they want to keep India off balance in the North East.
Even the Chinese are realists and realize that any gains in Bangladesh can only be short term. Eventually the geography, population and India's encirclement is against them, and given India's huge media, and linguistic cultural push, the Chinese like the Pakistanis before them are doomed to fail, The language and ethnic chauvinism in Bangladesh is so intense that it overrides religion and geography, a fact realized far too late by Pakistan.
What China can do is create a lobby in Bangladesh such that Bangladesh does not end up fighting it alongside the border in the NE. This task is far more achievable because there is no ground hostility against China as there is against Pakistan and IMs.
I sense that many Bangladeshis would actually prefer to be rid of Indian arrogance within their country's dealings once and for all. Pakistan should seize this opportunity, and your comments serve as a timely reminder of this situation as it stands presently.
Bangladeshi attitudes to Indian "arrogance" are meant for gullible Pakistanis who are unaware of the close military economic relationship between Bangladesh and India. By stirring emotional sentiments such as "Ummah " and "people to people " contact, the Bangladeshis hope to have their cake and eat it too.
It is hopefully an insurance that if the situation goes bad in the scenario described in my OP
they will be let of the hook.
We don't know if that cuts much ice with Pakistan's Nuclear Command Authority and if the sledgehammer hangs equally over Bangladesh.
I suspect it does,