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KARGIL:  IN PERSPECTIVE 
                                                                      
          The Kargil developments have three dimensions--military, diplomatic and political.  
          Militarily, it is a joint counter-insurgency operation in our territory by the army and the air force, but it is the most technically complex and professionally difficult counter-insurgency operation ever undertaken anywhere in the world due to the following reasons:  

*  Our forces are confronted with not indigenous insurgents, but an invading force of well-trained, well-armed and experienced mercenaries-cum-terrorists of Afghan war vintage buttressed by Pakistani army regulars.It is invasion across the legally-sanctified Line of Control (LOC) under the cover of insurgency.  
The difficult terrain in this area with 15,000 feet plus high ridges gives the initial advantage to the invader and the breaker of international law and treaties.Since the invaders' encampments are located on high ridges and not at ground level and at a distance of about 6 kms from Pakistani territory, aircraft manoeuvrability is restricted lest inadvertent violations of Pakistani air space lead to unwise escalation and diplomatic incidents.  

*  It is not a counter-insurgency operation with no holds barred, but one carried out in carefully measured pace with voluntarily-assumed  do's and dont's to avoid a wider conflagaration.  

         The Indian Air Force operations have two main objectives:  

*  To soften the encampments as a prelude to ground operations by the army.  
*  To monitor the activities in the encampments through aerial surveillance before and during the army operations.  

   The Army operations have four objectives:  

*  To protect the civilian population.  
*  To prevent any further ingress by the invaders.  
*  To frustrate the invaders' attempts to disrupt communications on the vital Srinagar-Leh road.  
*  Ultimately, to clear the infiltrators from the ridges occupied by them,end the occupation of Indian territory and restore the sanctity of the LOC.  
          
     The difficulties faced by the Air Force arise from the following:  

*  The location of the encampments at high altitudes, which reduces the distance between the encampments and the aircraft and thereby makes evasive action more difficult.  
*  The supply by the Pakistan Army and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to the invading force of the Stinger shoulder-fired, heat-seeking missiles and other sophisticated anti-aircraft weapons, which the ISI had received from the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for use against Soviet aircraft during the Afghan war.The reported use of a Stinger by the invaders against an IAF helicopter has discredited past US assurances, discounting the dangers of the likely use of this weapon by the insurgents and terrorists in Kashmir because of the limited life period of their batteries and the non-supply (as claimed by the US) of any fresh batteries to the ISI after 1988.  
        
      The difficulties of the Army are due to the following:  

*  The high ridges occupied by the invaders make the Army's advance slow and costly in human terms.  
*  The advance is made more difficult by the continuous heavy artillery support provided by the Pakistan Army to the invaders, which renders dangerous the transport of troops to the higher ridges by choppers.  
*  The continuous reinforcement of the encampments by the Pakistani Army and ISI rear bases located in Pakistani-controlled territory. To avoid an unwise escalation, the Indian Army and the Air Force have to forego the legitimate right to hit at the rear bases.  
      
      Reports available so far have identified the composition of the invading force as consisting of the following:  
-  Pakistani army regulars.  
-  Mercenaries of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM), which was declared as an international terrorist organisation by the US in October,1997.  
-  Mercenaries of the Lashkar-e-Toiba, the militant wing of the Markaz Dawa Al Irshad.  
-  Mercenaries of the Al Badr, which consists  of many Afghans.  
-  Members of bin Laden's Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami also known as Tehrik-e-Jihad  and also as  Al Qaeda (The Base).  
    
      These organisations  are all members of the International Islamic Front For Jihad Against the US and Israel formed by Osama bin Laden last year and their leaders had signed the fatwa issued by bin Laden in February last year calling for terrorist strikes against the US and Israel.  
       In view of the difficulties faced by the Army and the Air Force and the care and caution required of them to avoid a wider conflagaration, it would not be reasonable to expect quick results. The ultimate vacation of the aggression on our territory and the restoration of the sanctity of the LOC and the time and tactics required for these objectives have to be left to the Army and the Air Force and their professionalism.All that the rest of the population need do is to stand united behind them and let them know that the nation's prayers, good wishes and admiration are with them.  

DIPLOMATIC DIMENSION  
   
     Diplomatically, the Pakistani objective was to bring the Kashmir issue back in the media headlines and on the international agenda and manoeuvre its diplomatic moves in such a way as to have its violation of the sanctity of the LOC and occupation of Indian territoty legitimised through international intervention.  
      It has not so far succeeded. The issue is back in the media headlines, but for reasons which are detrimental to Pakistan. Since 1995, India has been saying that the Kashmir insurgency was no longer being waged by indigenous Kashmiris, but by mercenaries of various Pakistan and Afghanistan-based terrorist organisations instigated, trained and armed by the ISI, but the international community exhibited misgivings about the validity of the Indian contention.  
     Now, Western intelligence organisations, through their own independent enquiries, have identified the invading force in the Kargil sector as consisting of Pakistan-backed mercenaries of Afghan war vintage, with close links to bin Laden.  
   
       Most Western analysts, having access to their intelligence officers, have concluded as follows:  

*  There has been a violation of the LOC by a Pakistani-backed invasion force.  

*  The operation has all the hallmarks of an ISI operation and could not have been undertaken without the knowledge of the Pakistani Prime Minister, Mr.Nawaz Sharif.  
    
     In this connection, it would be worthwhile to quote from the New Delhi-datelined despatch of  Mr.Julian West of the "Electronic Telegraph" of the UK (May 30):  
"Western intelligence believes that many (of the invaders) are Afghan, Pakistani and even international Muslim militants backed by Pakistan's ISI. Principal among these is Al Badr, a terrorist group linked to Osama bin Laden.An intelligence source, who believes about 3,000 to 5,000 militants are currently being trained in various camps run by the Pakistani intelligence in Pakistan and possibly Afghanistan, said:" This current operation has all the hallmarks of the ISI....It could not have been launched without the knowledge of the Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif.".  
        Discussing the likely Pakistani motives, he then adds:  
"What puzzles many observers, however, is why Mr.Sharif---who only three months ago signed a declaration of entente with India----should instigate what amounts to a virtual declaration of war. The answer may lie in Pakistan's long-standing wish to internationalise the Kashmir issue, as well as a desire to tie up Indian troops and embarrass India's caretaker Government.  Western intelligence sources also believe that the ISI is simply pursuing its customary agenda of fomenting instability within the territories bordering Pakistan."  
          Mr.Shujaat Bukhari, the Srinagar correspondent of "The Hindu" of Chennai, has reported (June 4) as follows from Kargil:  
"In Batalik, 80 per cent of the intruders are stated to be Afghan and Taliban militiamen with a significant number from the Osama bin Laden camp."  
      How did these people come to the Kargil-Dras-Batalik area? To answer this question, one has to go back to the first week February, when Mr.Strobe Talbott, the US Deputy Secretary of State, visited Islamabad for talks on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. He was accompanied by Mr.Karl Inderfurth, Assistant Secretary of State, Gen. Joseph Ralston, Vice-Chairman, US Joint Chiefs of Staff, and a team of CIA and FBI officers handling the operation for the capture and extradition of bin Laden.  
      On February 1, Maulvi Jalil Akhund, the Deputy Foreign Minister of the Taliban Government in Afghanistan, was flown from Kandahar to Islamabad in a special ISI plane. Initially, he met Mr.Nawaz Sharif and his Foreign Minister,Mr.Sartaj Aziz. Thereafter, Mr.Inderfurth went to Mr.Aziz's house and met Maulvi Akhund there.  
        Mr.Inderfurth then went to Peshawar and met the moderate, anti-Taliban Mujahideen leaders based there and sought their co-operation in tracing bin Laden and his accomplices wanted by the FBI.  
        During their meetings, Mr.Talbott and Mr.Inderfurth reportedly made it clear to their Pakistani and Afghan interlocutors that the US was determined to capture bin Laden, with their co-operation, if possible, and without it, if necessary,  
       Rattled by these warnings, Mr.Sharif went to the ISI headquarters and had discussions  with Gen.Pervez Musharraf, his Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), and Lt.Gen. Ziauddin,the new ISI Director-General,on what to do with bin Laden and his 1,000 folllowers---about 300 belonging to his Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami and the remaining 700 from the HUM, the Lashkar and the Al Badr, who were camping in Afghan territory adjoining Pakistani border.No announcement was made about what was decided.  
       On February 13, Mr.Mohammad Tayyab, a Taliban spokesman, told a Press conference at Kandahar as follows:  
"bin Laden has disappeared. We didn't ask him to leave. We don't know where he is."  
       On March 2, Zafar Iqbal of the Laskar-e-Toiba told a press conference at Muzzafarabad in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir that the Lashkar had invited bin Laden to join the "freedom struggle" in Kashmir. He added: "Osama is our erstwhile colleague. We had fought jointly against the Soviet troops in Afghanistan."  
       The US refused to accept the Taliban's claim that bin Laden, his lieutenants and their force of about 1,000 had left Afghanistan and intensified satellite surveillance of the area to locate them. The US Congressional committees dealing with national security held frequent meetings at which Mr.Inderfurth was required to report progress in tracing bin Laden and his group.  
        The satellite surveillance was reported to have indicated that during March, the Pakistan Army and the ISI transported this entire group to the Skardu region of the Northern Areas (NA) and then helped them in creating new  sanctuaries for themselves on the ridges in the Kargil area.While the individual presence of bin Laden and his lieutenants in the Kargil area has not yet been established, there is no doubt about the presence of their followers in this area.  
      Thus, the US and other Western powers have their own independent evidence regarding Pakistan's use of bin Laden's mercenary force from Afghanistan for attempting to change the LOC in this sector through occupation of Indian territory.It is this which explains their strong support for the Indian version of the recent developments and their action in spurning Pakistan's attempt to have the issue internationalised in order to secure post-facto legitimisation  of its proxy invasion.  
      At the same time, despite the independent, authentic evidence available with them, the US and other Western powers are not prepared to go to the extent of condemning Pakistan, declaring it a State-sponsor of International Terrorism, suspending the execution of the IMF's rescue package for the Pakistani economy and re-imposing the other economic sanctions which were lifted or eased by the Clinton Administration last year.  
      The Nawaz Sharif Government also seems to be reasonably confident that while the US might exercise political and moral pressure on it, which it could withstand, it would not go to the extent of taking any punitive action against it. This confidence arises from the ISI's role in Kosovo.  
      It is not widely known that the working relationship between the ISI and the CIA continues to be strong, though possibly not as strong as during the Afghan war. During Mrs.Benazir Bhutto's second tenure as Prime Minister from 1993 to 1996, the CIA had used the ISI for training the Bosnian Muslims and for acting as a conduit for the supply of arms and ammunition to them. The supplies were made from the surplus stocks of the Afghan war weapons left with the ISI.Many retired ISI officers, including Lt.Gen. Hamid Gul, DG of the ISI in the late 1980s, were deputed to Bosnia to act as advisers to the Bosnian Muslims.The US did not look upon the HUM and the Lashkar-e-Toiba as terrorist organisations at that time and had encouraged them to go to Bosnia to assist the local Muslims against the Serbs.  
      Similarly,the ISI has been closely involved since the beginning of this year in the training of the Kosovo Liberation Army and in the supply of arms and ammunition to them. By using the ISI as the intermediary,the CIA is able to maintain its deniability of any role in training and arming the KLA.Mr.Shabaz Sharif, the brother of Mr.Nawaz Sharif, and the Chief Minister of Punjab, has been co-ordinating this operation for the training of the KLA and had made a low-profile visit to Washington at the beginning of the NATO air strikes for discussions with officials of the CIA and the State and Defence Departments on this issue.  
      In view of this, it may not be realistic on our part to expect the US to go to the extent of taking any punitive action against Pakistan unless and until the Indian forces are able to get the smoking gun in the form of capture alive or dead of bin Laden and/or any of his lieutenants figuring in the FBI's wanted list.Even if we get the smoking gun, the US might still wriggle out of  taking any punitive action against Pakistan by saying that there is no evidence that the Pakistani Government was aware of the presence of bin Laden and/or his associates in the Kargil area.  
     The US took a similar excuse during the Mumbai blasts of 1993. The Indian investigative agencies captured hand-grenades of Austrian design from the perpetrators of the blasts and got a certificate from the Austrian factory which sold the design to Pakistan that the grenades had been manufactured with the machinery supplied by it to Pakistan. They also recovered chemical explosive timers of US ordnance manufacture which had been supplied by the CIA to the ISI.Despite this, officials of the Clinton Administration took the stand that this evidence, though proving that the explosive material and the hand-grenades used in Mumbai had come from Pakistan Govt. stocks, did not necessarily prove that the Nawaz Sharif Government was aware of this.  
        However,this  should not make us relent in our efforts to collect and collate all evidence having a bearing on this subject and present it to the international community.  

POLITICAL DIMENSION  

    The political dimension relates to the questions whether it was wise to have started a comprehensive and composite dialogue process with Pakistan at Lahore and whether we should resume even a limited dialogue with Pakistan till the status quo ante is restored.As two nuclear powers with a common land border, there is no alternative to a dialogue and to keeping the lines of communications  open in the best as well as in the worst of times.India's trust in the words of Mr.Nawaz Sharif has been belied and we have been stabbed in the back . One should condemn the stabber and not the stabbed for not all the time looking over his shoulder. At  the same time, there is a valid case for avoiding overexpectations from any dialogue with Pakistan because of the mindset of its leaders and the byzantine nature of the society and its power structure.While continuing to maintain a dialogue with Pakistan, we should keep in view the fact that in the history books for Pakistani children, it is not Akbar, but Aurangazeb who is projected as an ideal ruler to be emulated. We should be wiser by the post-Lahore events  and avoid walking into another trap.  

B.Raman                                                   (5-6-99)  
 
(The writer is Additional Secretary (Retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently,  Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.
E-mail: corde@vsnl.com  )  

   

 

 

 

 

 

 
            
               
 

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