Monday 24 May 2010

Weak Pak, Strong Pak

A friend of mine wrote a blog about our relations with Pakistan and what should India's future goals in this regard be. And he sums them up with this:

"Lets face the facts, a weak Pakistan is very much in our interest. For three decades after the liberation of Bangladesh, Pakistan was weak enough to not bother India. At the same time, we should try everything we can to enhance good relations with other neighbours like Sri Lanka and Nepal. Two hostile neighbours is more than enough. It is to the distinct advantage of the big power nations to preserve Indo-Pak balance of power and it is high time India looks out for its own interests. Peace is what is ultimately desired and we’ve tried enough times to achieve peace without bloodshed. If it takes war to achieve lasting peace, so be it."

It is of course clearer and more informative than any of mine but I still have some couter arguments for him and others with similar opinion.

To begin with, I don't agree that in this age, peace can only be achieved through war. US and Europe have hardly reached the levels of pre 9/11 calm and the threats have only increased after laying Afghanistan and Iraq to dust. The religious leaders in Middle East have now found a common enemy to attack and 'inspire' the youth which was perhaps slipping away. The latest terror-attemptee felt "US threatened Islam."

Coming back to India v/s Pak. Well we might go to war or weaken the nation covertly. But is a chaotic Pak better than a managed one? To begin with, the Taliban is hurting Pak too and that is essentially because of weak leadership. And in that environment what if, God forbid, The BOMB falls in to Taliban's hands? They are not going to think twice before dropping it. I doubt if the deterrence logic will work with them.

Is it a coincidence that the bomb blasts increased in India after Musharraf quit? I know that Musharraf was the man behind Kargil but what would you rather have? Military insurgency or Mumbai 7/11? The attacks happened because the army and ISI lost control of their own home-grown Jehadis who were earlier building bases on Tiger Hills under clear orders. Plus, a stronger leadership is more likely to move them towards development and education than a weaker state. It is a general rule that the dissatisfied youth rebels while the better-off stay aloof.

Moving on, India may or not decide to support the Baloch's right to self determination simply because we can never pressurise Pakistan. It will only distort our shambolic relations more and neither are the Baloch going to be grateful. Think of Bangladesh here. We played a big role in freeing them but they only have contempt for the Big Brother of the sub continent.

So I think we should take measures to build our own security and intelligence and make efforts to build a more lawful Pakistan. Even Chanakya, although endorsing war, was in favor of strong neighbors as chaos has a habit of spilling over.

PS: We are also incapable of terrorist activities against another nation as our dissatisfied youth can find multiple enemies in this multicultural nation itself.

Bizzare Bihanis

Cousin(in the car): Why aren't belts compulsory here. Even in Jaipur they are.

Ashtung: Because people wear tight pants here

9 comments:

akhilm176 said...

You make a good point. Will reply in a blog post soon. I'm happy that you read my blog :)

Manoj Bharadwaj said...

I liked it :)

Sharan said...

"strong neighbors as chaos has a habit of spilling over"

So very true. A weak neighbour is an open invitation for terrorist groups to use their territory as a base. With a strong neighbour atleast external agents will be thwarted.

Its a double edged sword, cos a lot depends on how relations are maintained with the neighbour, but a weak neighbour is no solution

Unknown said...

@Akhil: waiting for that.. let's see where we finally agree...andd... I try reading good stuff :)

@Manoj: Thanks

@Sharan: glad to see someone agreeing :)

Anonymous said...

BJ: just a thought...what will happen if about a million refuges turned up at the pakistan border expecting India to set up camps and feed them? will we...wont we? our economy will go bonkers!
A weak pakistan is definitely in our favor unless above happnens...a strong pak might mean India as a punching bag again...a weak pak is busy fending off its own people rather than uniting them against India. As for the extremists, let them feed on Pakistan slowly and steadily, long enough to let India build its own 'deterrence' against such elements.

Ashtung said...

@BJ: The refugee condition.. what's the hypothesis behind? Sorry I fail to understand...

Punching bag: u r right there... but they will also care about education over madrassas, food over bombs and jobs over Jihad... What I am proposing is perhaps as bad in the short term but is definitely better in the long term..

Besides, a known devil is better than an unknown one (Kargil better than Mumbai 7/11)

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

BJ @ 'Ashtung'(;)): well in case pakistan breaks up...where will the 'aam aadmi' look at for taking care? western border is Afganistan+Iran.. forget afganistan for setting up refugee camps...Iran maybe..Left is India where we still share an 'emotional bond' which is a gaga point whenevr peace talks take place! if extremists take over...i think my hypothesis wont be much off target. More than extremists spillover after pak breaking up..will be the people spillover.

Ashtung said...

@BJ: Refugees are always a problem, however inhumane it may sound.. And perhaps this problem can be huge and u r right that India will never back out if it comes to that.. So basically u r making the same point as i am, albeit with a different perspective and issue