By Imtiaz Gul
The writer heads the independent Centre for
Research and Security Studies, Islamabad and is author of Pakistan: Pivot of
Hizbut Tahrir’s Global Caliphate
Within hours of the Uri attack, many Indians
began drumming up the idea of surgical strikes into Pakistan. This chorus takes
one back to the outrage that the November 26, 2008 Mumbai attacks had caused across
India. Then, the tone and tenor that most Indians, including some of their best
writers such C Raja Mohan, deployed was one of punishing lessons for Pakistan
through surgical strikes.
And this forces me to recall a conversation
I had with one senior military official. Then I had dismissed this as a typical
propaganda against President Asif Ali Zardari. But the new situation prompts me
to place this conversation on record, particularly because ex foreign minister
Khursid Kasuri too narrated an encounter along the same lines.
One late evening in early December on that
year, President Zardari summoned a meeting with prime minister Yousuf Raza
Gillani and the army chief General Ashfaq Kayani. The subject being the furious
Indian mood.
At one point, the president threw a question
at both Kayani and Gillani; “what if we allowed the Indians a few symbolic
strikes at certain insignificant places. This could help in cooling down their
rage,” the official had recounted.
A baffled General Kayani, the official said,
looked at Gillani for his opinion.
“I think this could be counter-productive
for us, politically unwise,” Gilani said.
Emboldened by this, Kayani finally spoke
out; Mr President, how can we afford this politically. A single shot fired from
across the border would amount to declaration of war and my own army officers,
our people will lynch us if did not respond to it.
With this the meeting came to an abrupt end.
Once in the car, the embittered army chief called up the chief and asked
him to scramble jets for a round-the-clock aerial patrol of the eastern border
regions.
The near corroboration of this came last
year from the former foreign minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri who stated
in his book “Neither A Hawk, Nor A Dove “ released last year. He says India had
planned air strikes in Pakistan following the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks to
target Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jamaatud Dawa in Muridke near Lahore.
Kasuri’s source of information was a US
Senators’ delegation led by John McCain and Lindsey Graham. They came to Lahore
from India and had requested Kasuri for a quiet meeting. President Bush had
sent the Senators to sniff the mood both in India and Pakistan.
Kasuri has offered a detailed account of
that meeting in his book (Page 428-29).
Senator McCain wanted to know from me………
what the reaction of the Pakistan army and the public at large would be if
there was a limited air-raid on Muridke, writes Kasuri, adding he was
“horrified at the mere suggestion.”
The Senators, also accompanied by Richard
Holbrook, the then special Pak-Afghan Envoy, later travelled on to Islamabad
for meetings with the army chief and President Zardari.
The dialogue between Premier Gilani, General
Kayani and President Zardari took place only a couple of days after the
Americans had left.
Records also suggest that shortly before the
US Senator’s visit, India’s top military, political and intelligence leadership
had in a secret meeting on December 2, 2008, mulled the aerial/surgical strikes
against targets in Pakistan.
It means the notion of surgical strikes has
been an active though – at least in the hawkish civil-military circles for
quite some time, the way the US arrogated upon itself the right of preemptive
aerial or drone strikes. This despite the fact that such attacks brazenly
contravene
the international law. Carrying out such an
attack based on mere allegations is not only totally unlawful also against the
fundamental principle of national sovereignty of the target country. Even if
there were evidence of some mischief, the only sanction for pursuing this
mischief in another country is through the United Nations.
But geo-politics of course hardly cares for
the international law or the UN approval. Iraq and even Afghanistan represent
the telling examples of unilateral action by mighty nations. India’s current
leadership also tends to ape the US when talking of Pakistan, often invoking
phrases that we used to hear from President Bush, Richard Armitage and
Condolezza Rice. Most US Congressmen, too, still peddle more or less the same
skewed narrative on Pakistan – shaped mostly by the influence. And if this
belligerence continues, normalisation of relations will remain elusive. The
entire region is likely to suffer the consequences of this jingoism.
Published in The
Express Tribune, September 21st, 2016.
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