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Tough Stand by India’s Modi on Militants Raises Risks With Pakistan

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The New York Times – October 23, 2016

As an opposition leader, Narendra Modi was a vocal critic of India’s government for not responding more forcefully to cross-border attacks from militants based in Pakistan. As prime minister, Mr. Modi has not shied away from openly retaliating in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir against the militants — and stirring up nationalist passions.

Now, with his tough stance, there are growing concerns that Mr. Modi may have narrowed his options, raising the risks of war with India’s nuclear-armed rival, Pakistan.

Experts are worrying about what India will do when Pakistan-based militants carry out another attack in India, as is almost certain. And how will Pakistan respond?

“We’re not at the point of no return, but we are in very dangerous waters,” said Bruce Riedel, a fellow at the Brookings Institution who served in the Central Intelligence Agency, where he advised several American presidents on South Asia.

“When we get to the next terror attack, which is probably only a matter of time, the prime minister has boxed himself in, and he can’t take the route his predecessors did and choose to use solely diplomatic alternatives without some loss of face,” Mr. Riedel said.

After Pakistan-based militants attacked an army base in Kashmir in September, Mr. Modi publicly declared retaliatory strikes in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan region. Previous governments had made similar forays but only in covert operations.

Mr. Modi followed the strikes with a campaign to isolate Pakistan diplomatically — he denounced the country as “a mother ship of terrorism” at a summit meeting last week — and they have unleashed a nationalist fury within India that may be hard to contain.

That frenzy, stoked by the Indian news media, “is in danger of pushing India into conflict,” said Myra MacDonald, the author of “Defeat Is an Orphan: How Pakistan Lost the Great South Asian War.”

Pakistani did not retaliate after India’s strikes last month, and instead tried to play them down. To acknowledge them would have forced Pakistan to retaliate, experts say, and Pakistan is not eager to plunge into a war.

But the Pakistani Army cannot realistically deny anything took place after each incident, said Ajai Shukla, a retired Indian Army colonel who writes about defense for the Business Standard newspaper in New Delhi.

“The Pakistani military would be forced to retaliate in the event of a more prominent strike,” in part to guard its image as the ever-vigilant protector of Pakistan, he said. And there is no predicting where such a conflict could lead, the experts say.

“The big danger here is once you get started up the escalation ladder, how do you cool it off?” Mr. Riedel said.

“I’m scared,” Mr. Shukla said. “We’re not Israel bullying Gaza, or the U.S. with Haiti. We’re the fourth-biggest army confronting the 11th-biggest army.”

Still, many praise Mr. Modi for deftly handling the diplomacy around the September military strikes so Pakistan did not feel compelled to retaliate, and the United States and other nations were supportive. “Modi walked a very fine line that worked for him this time,” Mr. Shukla said.

He said he believed Mr. Modi was confident that he could find a way to respond to the next militant attack without allowing the situation to spiral out of control. The latest strikes were too small to deter militant activity but might be strategically helpful by making Mr. Modi seem unpredictable and irrational to a Pakistan accustomed to a more muted response from India, Mr. Shukla said.

The nuclear-armed neighbors have been facing off ever since gaining independence from Britain in 1947. They have fought three wars and routinely shoot each other’s soldiers in border disputes.

In January, several militants infiltrated an Indian Air Force base and engaged in a daylong battle before they were killed. India said they were members of the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Muhammad group, and Pakistan arrested several members in response.

Then in September, militants attacked an army base near the line of control separating Indian-controlled Kashmir from the Pakistani side, killing 19 soldiers. India said items found on the slain militants bore Pakistani markings, but Pakistan denied involvement.

Mr. Modi’s more aggressive public response has resonated with a public that has grown increasingly frustrated by the inability of successive governments to stop militant attacks that India believes — and in some cases has proved — emanate from Pakistan.

Since 2001, militants have struck the Indian Parliament, Mumbai’s top hotels and the city’s main train station, in addition to military targets, among others.

Mr. Modi’s predecessors were more risk averse by nature, Mr. Shukla said. “Modi is better at brinkmanship than they were in these actions where there’s an element of risk,” Mr. Shukla said. “Manmohan Singh would not take that risk and would place India’s economic development ahead of it,” he said, referring to the previous prime minister.

That willingness to take risk derives in part from Mr. Modi’s ambition. Where his predecessors looked at Pakistan as a problem to be managed, the Modi administration seems to believe it can solve the Indian-Pakistani conflict, Ms. MacDonald said. “That’s dangerous, because I don’t think they can solve it,” she said.

In his swearing-in ceremony in 2014, Mr. Modi invited Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan to India, signaling an interest in making peace. He later visited Lahore for an impromptu visit with Mr. Sharif. But despite Mr. Modi’s overtures, the militant attacks have continued.

Harsh V. Pant, a professor of international relations at King’s College in London, said he believed Mr. Modi viewed as a personal affront the fact that “his overtures to Pakistan have gone in vain.”

In reality, Mr. Sharif does not have full control over militant groups in his country, Mr. Riedel said. In Pakistan, power is divided between the democratically elected government and the military, whose powerful intelligence wing, experts say, is tied to some militant groups that carry out attacks in India. The leaders of the groups roam freely in Pakistan, some seen as local heroes. “Prime Minister Sharif knows better than most that there are limits to how far he can push the army without the army pushing him out the door,” Mr. Riedel said.

In the nationalist fervor that has gripped India, a leading Bollywood film producers group voted to ban employing Pakistanis, and a major cinema organization said it would not screen films with Pakistani actors. The mainstream news media has jumped into the fray, with a popular television talk show host, Arnab Goswami, berating the Indian superstar Salman Khan for not supporting the ban on Pakistani actors.

Nationalist sentiment has spiraled so high that even Mr. Modi may be powerless to contain it, Mr. Shukla said. “He’s gotten onto the tiger, and now he can’t get off,” he said.

With elections coming up in Uttar Pradesh, India’s largest state, Mr. Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party will be motivated to keep nationalist sentiment high because it has quickly subsumed economic development as the party’s main election platform there, Mr. Shukla said. But as useful as Mr. Modi might believe that frenzy is in winning votes, it is confirming fears in Pakistan that India is the aggressor and is not interested in peace, Ms. MacDonald said.

“The message that the Indian government wants to give to Pakistan is we do want peace but we want you to get rid of” the militant groups, she said. In Pakistan, she said, “what’s coming across now is the opposite, and that’s created an atmosphere where a lot of people are rallying behind the army.” That pressures the Pakistani government against exercising restraint in the future.

And in the “media frenzy,” there is little room for either side to initiate dialogue, “on the fringes of a meeting, to pick up the threads and talk,” Ms. MacDonald said. “It’s a very dangerous situation,” Mr. Riedel said, “one big terrorist attack from disaster.”
 
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Once festival season passes, you will see more assertive Modi. He will create lots of trouble for Pakistan on the border. He is of the view, rather than Pakistan creating trouble for India, why not turn the table and India creates trouble for Pakistan.
 
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Once festival season passes, you will see more assertive Modi. He will create lots of trouble for Pakistan on the border. He is of the view, rather than Pakistan creating trouble for India, why not turn the table and India creates trouble for Pakistan.

Modi is just waiting for the Pakistan Army Chief to change and observing local disturbances created by Imran Khan who appears to be pushing for a coup before he makes his move for war. This is all preparation waiting for the right time to strike it seems. It appears from the report that Modi is being encouraged by the West to go to war ...

The Pulse
Imran_Khan-386x257.jpg

Image Credit: Jawad Zakariya / Wikimedia Commons
The Return of the Maverick Khan
All those who thought Imran Khan was a spent political force may soon be prompted to reconsider.

By Abdul Basit
October 23, 2016


Pakistan’s political landscape is porous and highly unpredictable, making it extremely difficult to write-off any political figure or entity for low public ratings or poor electoral performance. Sudden developments can revive the dwindling fortunes of a political underdog or precipitate the downfall of a stable political actor.

Against this backdrop, all those who think Imran Khan has become a spent political force in the labyrinth of Pakistan’s topsy-turvy politics might be compelled to reconsider their opinions soon. His critics and detractors call him a foolhardy politician prone to whimsical decisions and impulsive thinking. Indeed, Kaptaan, as he is known, is a political maverick, but that is his brand of politics.

Generally, his regular calls for dharna (protests), agitational street politics, and the ensuing failures on all counts, coupled with defeat in the recent by-polls, are all considered reasons for his political decline. This point of view has some merit but misses a finer point: Khan’s political resilience and regenerative capacity as a gutsy fighter.

His recent warnings to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his government on the Panama Papers issue are not empty threats. Buoyed by his impressive Raiwind rally, once again Khan is on a solo mission. He has threatened to lock down Islamabad on November 2, along with marching on the prime minister’s Raiwind residence if his demands are not addressed.

Khan’s overall popularity might have declined in the last two years but his support base has remained intact, albeit indifferent — similar to the case of the angry PPP jiyalas (die-hard-supporters) in the 1990s who did not vote for any other political party if they did not vote for the Bhuttos. Khan’s supporters and fans are a tad disappointed in him but they have not abandoned him per se. Khan still enjoys the reputation of a clean, upright, and honest politician, a feat no other politician in Pakistan can claim.

For its part, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has once again mishandled the Panama Papers crisis: initially, by dragging its feet on the issue in the press, and then in the parliament over disagreement with the combined opposition over the Terms of References (TORs) to constitute an inquiry commission to probe the allegations. The government assumed that eventually the issue would fizzle out. However, to his credit, Khan has kept the issue alive and now is coming out on the streets demanding the revelations be addressed.

By not providing a political opening to Khan through accommodation, at the initial stage, the government has backed itself into a corner. It will be extremely difficult to wriggle out of this situation without some give-and-take and that is a political trap for the PML-N. Compromising on the Panama Papers issue has short and long-term political costs.

Eventually, the situation will move towards political gridlock. Prime Minister Sharif cannot afford to cave to Khan’s demands as his persona and family reputation are at stake given the alleged involvement of his children in the leaks. On the contrary, ideally, Khan will not settle for anything less than the Sharif’s scalp.

Both Khan and Sharif will take a zero sum approach to their conflict, where the losses of one will be gains for the other. This is Khan’s last chance: if he scores a major political gain, it will enable him to frame the agenda for the next parliamentary elections — whenever they take place — around issues of corruption, accountability, transparency, and financial misappropriation. This suits Khan and hurts Sharif.

Given the above, the government is confronted with a proverbial catch-22. If it sacrifices the prime minister to save the system, it will cost the party tremendously in the next election and constitute a moral victory for Khan. Moreover, sacrificing Sharif to save the system is indirectly accepting that Khan’s allegations were right and the Sharifs are guilty as accused.

On the other hand, if the government decides to seek the middle ground, providing Khan a face-saving out by allowing the passage of a pending anti-corruption bill, even then Khan will claim credit for it and will continue pinching the government at every forum. Khan’s objective is to score political gains and whether the specific allegations of the Panama Papers leak are proven or not is now immaterial.

In addition, if the government decides to go down a confrontational path and arrest Khan, it will make him a political hero, which would result in a groundswell of public sympathy for him. Speculations are rife that ahead of the November 2 deadline, the government is thinking of putting leaders of Khan’s party — Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) — under house arrest and launching massive crackdowns against PTI workers.

For Khan, this is a do-or-die situation. In the coming days, he is likely to become more aggressive; he will come out with full force and will try to make life miserable for the Sharifs. This is a fight until the end and the winner takes all. Whoever blinks first will be knocked out.

The author is an Associate Research Fellow (ARF) at the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR) of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Singapore.
 
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Interesting,

Pakistani did not retaliate after India’s strikes last month, and instead tried to play them down. To acknowledge them would have forced Pakistan to retaliate, experts say, and Pakistan is not eager to plunge into a war.

This line speaks for itself.


“The message that the Indian government wants to give to Pakistan is we do want peace but we want you to get rid of” the militant groups,

Fair, this is what GOI & the people of India want . Peace is the only option for development .

Mr. Modi’s more aggressive public response has resonated with a public that has grown increasingly frustrated by the inability of successive governments to stop militant attacks that India believes — and in some cases has proved — emanate from Pakistan.

Correct here too,

But as useful as Mr. Modi might believe that frenzy is in winning votes, it is confirming fears in Pakistan that India is the aggressor and is not interested in peace, Ms. MacDonald said.

Here is the dichotomy.

How can anyone in Pak ( this includes the GOVT, PA, ISI & the public at large) expect to carry on ' business as usual' by sending terrorists to India and not expect India to not retaliate ?

The call is for Pak to take, Modi & India has made its stand pretty much clear.
 
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I agree, India has very less options. Now, until Modi is at the helm of India's affairs, talks are out of question. In an event of another attack, India has only two options left. One go to war against Pakistan, or two, bring in more sustained pressure from International community to put on sanctions. One thing for sure, the recent events show that Pakistan lacks the will for a war. So war may not be pursued. My guess is that second option will likely be pursued.
 
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I agree, India has very less options. Now, until Modi is at the helm of India's affairs, talks are out of question. In an event of another attack, India has only two options left. One go to war against Pakistan, or two, bring in more sustained pressure from International community to put on sanctions. One thing for sure, the recent events show that Pakistan lacks the will for a war. So war may not be pursued. My guess is that second option will likely be pursued.

why do you say "Pakistan lacks the will for a war" ? War is not in pakistan's interest. but pakistani army might not do what is in their best interest.
 
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whole world was not able to defeat ISIS and taliban in 20 years. indians expect to defeat pakistan army who defeated both.

why do you say "Pakistan lacks the will for a war" ? War is not in pakistan's interest. but pakistani army might not do what is in their best interest.
pakistan ramy is part of pakistan. soldiers are our brothers and sons. they are not different. they want what is good for us.
 
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whole world was not able to defeat ISIS and taliban in 20 years. indians expect to defeat pakistan army who defeated both.


pakistan ramy is part of pakistan. soldiers are our brothers and sons. they are not different. they want what is good for us.

pakistan might not do what is in their best interest. i did not mean to split the pakistani army from pakistan.
 
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why do you say "Pakistan lacks the will for a war" ? War is not in pakistan's interest. but pakistani army might not do what is in their best interest.
No countries have the will for war.. But they are forced to go for that.. Repeated terrorists attacks forcing us to move towards that threshold point.. But for Pakistan, this war is for what??
 
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War is never an option, war should only be persuaded when it becomes a necessity. The path of Peace is the only path of progress but not by sacrificing unity and integrity of india.
The ball is in pakistan court, if they want peace, peace will prevail otherwise forces will meet at front, and everyone know what will be the result except some delusional folk from across the border.
 
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