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Kashmir: Pakistan’s Lost Cause

Shri Feroze Varun Gandhi, MP
Tue, 27 Oct 2020   |  Reading Time: 5 minutes

In early 1947, Baramulla was the cultural hub of Jammu and Kashmir – straddling the road to Rawalpindi and Srinagar, it was suitably positioned to benefit from trade and cultural winds, while serving as a major transit point for goods to travel east. In October 1947, tribal invaders from the North West Frontier Province in Pakistan stormed the town of Baramulla. Surprisingly, for being tribal invaders, they came adorned with Chevrolet cars and rifles, along with considerable logistical support and a fairly detailed strategic plan (as detailed in a first person account by Major General Akbar Khan, also known as General Tariq, in his book “Raiders in Kashmir”, Wafai Printing Press, 1970). They marched into St. Joseph’s Hospital, killing six people (Chakravarty, Ipshita, October 2017).

And so, the loot of Baramulla began – anecdotal tales tell of raiders simply marching into the main thoroughfares of Baramulla, and confiscating all possessions. Rumours tell tale of the raiders raping and pillaging the town, with Kashmiri Hindu girls forced to pass themselves off as Kashmiri Muslim women. In particular, the raiders were intent on slaughtering the Sikhs. As noted by one observer, “The (tribal) leaders completely lost control over their men; an orgy of killing was the result. This was certainly the case at St Joseph’s College, Convent and Hospital, the site of what was to become one of the most publicized incidents of the entire Kashmir conflict. Here nuns, priests and congregation, including patients in the hospital, were slaughtered; and at the same time a small number of Europeans, notably               Lt. Colonel D.O. Dykes and his wife, an Englishwoman preparing to leave the hospital that day with her new-born baby, Mother Teresalina, a twenty-nine-year-old Spanish nun who had been in Baramulla only a few weeks, as well as Mother Aldertrude, the Assistant Mother Superior, and one Mr Jose Barretto, husband of the doctor, met their deaths at tribal hands (Lamb Alastair, “Incomplete Partition”, Roxford Books, 1997).  By the end of it, Baramulla had been cut off from its hinterland and from its trade route to Rawalpindi and relegated to a backdoor from a trading gateway. Meanwhile, the raiders spawned their own legacy – Andrew Whitehead’s book, a Mission in Kashmir, cites terrorists from Lashkar-e-Taiba tracing their lineage back to the Mujahideen who invaded Baramulla. By November 1947, the raiders were forced to pull back to Uri, as Indian troops gallantly defended Srinagar and recovered territory. By then, the winter snows arrived, enabling the Pakistani Army to reinforce Muzaffarabad and other areas in PoK.

The lesson that Pakistan’s military leaders learnt from this adventure was rather simple – a disciplined force of 2-4 companies of irregulars could have secured Banihal Pass and Srinagar Airport in a matter of a week, foreclosing all options for India to recover the state post accession (Singh, Amarjit, October 2020).  The occupied province of Gilgit-Baltistan was simply handed over to Pakistan by the local British officer in charge. For Pakistan, war did not have to be a formal affair – instead ideologically motivated mercenaries could achieve far greater results with a lower cost. Hybrid and proxy war was here to stay for Pakistan against India.

And this set the pattern for India and Pakistan’s relationship post-independence – Pakistan repeated the same strategy of encouraging armed insurrection in Kashmir by aiding non-state actors as proxies in 1965, followed by an instigation of the Kashmir insurgency between 1988 and 2003, and finally the Kargil War in 1999. In 1965, Pakistan assumed that Kashmir’s Muslim population would simply rise in support of a takeover by Pakistan, aided by the presumably parlous state of the Indian Army after 1962. Operation Gibraltar (named after the eponymous point from where the Umayyad state conquered Spain) was launched, with ~30,000 Pakistani troops from the Azad Kashmir Regular Force crossing the cease-fire line into Gulmarg, Uri and Baramulla, with a focus on occupying key heights and fomenting an armed insurrection. The covert infiltration quickly failed, given prior intelligence gathered by the Indian Army, along with poor coordination between various elements of the Pakistani military (for e.g. the Chief of Army Staff simply did not inform the Air Force).

The 1971 War ended any pretensions of Pakistan to a claim for primacy in the subcontinent, while highlighting that it could  not beat India in a conventional conflict. Post Brasstacks (in 1986), Pakistan’s military increasingly focused on a defensive stance in a conventional military sense, while pushing for unconventional means of conflict. From 1988 onwards, Islamabad increased its backing for the formation and growth of various terrorist groups (e.g. Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, Laskhar-e-Tayyiba, al Badr, Jaish-e-Mohammad, Harakat-ul- Mujahideen..), with the sponsorship of militancy in Kashmir regarded as an effective and rather cheap way of offsetting the power asymmetry between Pakistan and India. Additionally, religious imperatives have become a driving factor, particularly with the ISI, which enjoys significant autonomy – the intelligence agency notably sought to transplant the Afghanistan insurgency model to Kashmir, encouraging foreign militants to participate as part of a wider arena for Jihad. Even now, Pakistan continues its assistance to Kashmiri and foreign militants, offering logistical, financial, doctrinal and training related support – it has become de rigueur for the military to set up training camps for terrorists in PoK, particularly in areas adjacent to Kupwara, Baramulla, Poonch, Rajauri and Jammu districts. While in India, teenagers flock to coaching sessions to gain entrance to prestigious engineering, medical and business related colleges, Pakistan has sought to mould its entire society to encourage teenagers to run for basic courses in weapons handling, demolitions, urban sabotage and general ideological brainwashing under the ISI’s Operations Branch. Such camps are regularly supplied with military related resources (e.g. light weapons, ammunition, explosives, night vision devices..) from the local cantonment. Annual ISI expenditure for fostering insurrection in Kashmir continues to be robust, with estimates in early 2000 highlighting spend of $125-250 million annually (Chalk, Peter, Rand Corporation, September 2001). Funding for this is naturally arranged via circulation of counterfeit currency and sale of illegal drugs, along with foreign contributions. For all the talk about “Aman-ki-Aasha”, the presence of such a state within a state will long prevent the emergence of regional amity. The consequence of such actions has been tragic, with society in Kashmir militarized along with a weakening of the political process; Pakistan has in turn mutilated its own founding ideals and become an Army which happens to own a state.

Now, Pakistan simply seeks to fight with India in a conventional and unconventional stance to maintain parity, with unconventional warfare and tactical nuclear weapons brandished as a key lever for deterrence (Singh, Amarjit, October 2020). The increasing Islamization of the military, combined with continuing ineptness at a strategic level, has meant that the state continues to pour resources into its conventional army, while depriving its citizens of basic needs which India long surpassed.

One had hoped that the new start highlighted by Imran Khan’s ascendancy to power would have tempered the state’s instincts and pushed it in a social democratic direction; sadly, this came to naught, with the new civilian government quickly revealed as an empty cartouche, guided by directions from Rawalpindi. Meanwhile, terror attacks on India continue, with a particular focus on military infrastructure (e.g. Pulwama). India’s strong leadership, led by Prime Minister Modi, has replied in kind, with India undertaking pre-emptive strikes to destroy terror hubs across the border. Furthermore, the state has taken the courageous step of cutting the Gordian Knot by abrogating Article 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution, removing the special status offered to Kashmir. Caught unawares by this step, Pakistan has been reduced to fulminations in the UN General Assembly, while India moves ahead with the task of integrating Kashmir into the Indian Union and offering it the fruits of development. Pakistan’s international isolation is stark, with the recent continuation of the state in the FATF grey list a collective failure of its leadership.

India, under the strong leadership of the Prime Minister, must continue to draw on its innate strengths to devise offensive and defensive measures, emphasising the use of bilateral talks for the resolution of the Kashmir issue, leading to the integration of PoK with India. India retains the upper hand – as such, talks should be offered to Pakistan only to resolve underlying issues, while securing gains made on national security in the last few years. We need to look past an emotional perspective on Pakistan and move towards securing India’s northern frontier.

Shri Feroze Varun Gandhi,  Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha



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POST COMMENTS (18)

Ravin

Oct 29, 2020
Very nice to read an honest depiction about Pakistan's sinful involvement in Kashmir . It is very encouraging to see that India is responding to this islamic terrorism by development projects of creating engineers , doctors and management facilities in these troubled areas .

Vivekananda Dutta

Oct 28, 2020
My first read of something written by Shree Varun Gandhi. Quite impressed with his ability of putting the thoughts into paper. Simply marvelous. The write up is well researched. Keep going 👏👏👏

Aman Kumar

Oct 28, 2020
Very informative article depicting the real issues and historical facts.

Paritosh Vyas

Oct 28, 2020
This is a very well written and Research article by Shri Varun Gandhi. After the BJP came into power in 2014 and the stand taken by it vis-a- visKashmir it is very clear that the Narendra Modi government will never buckle under any pressure and will not hesitate to counter attack in a very hard way if provoked. Removal of article 370 and the latest decision where any Indian can purchase property or land in Jammu and Kashmir are great steps taken. As far as Pakistan, is it it is doomed to perish in the future

Peter Isaac

Oct 28, 2020
Brilliant, informative and very well written, thank you.

Peter Isaac

Oct 28, 2020
Brilliant write up, informative, educative and worth reading over and over again; thank you.

Bratin Chakraborty

Oct 28, 2020
The current conflict has its roots in the post-independence partition.Through this article, it is known how Pakistan has attacked the chest of Kashmir, how the Pakistani Kabilis invaded India and killed innocent people.We all have to build a strong fight against Pakistan.

Surender kumar

Oct 28, 2020
Very well and true explanation of JK real problems about JK general people , students and also new generations.

Surender kumar puranpur

Oct 28, 2020
Very well and true explanation of JK real problems about JK general people , students and also new generations.

Naveen Chopra

Oct 28, 2020
A brilliant piece that dwells on the Kashmir issue holistically and factually. The article should be published in other fora so that it receives widespread publicity and to facilitate comprehension of the vexed issue and Pakistan's involvement, much about which is not truly known to many.

Kailash Barick

Oct 28, 2020
Excellent article for all of us to update our perception on Kashmir & Pakistan in particular. 👍

Sadanand Shivagunde

Oct 28, 2020
Very good article. It must make it to mainstream media in and outside India. Thanks.

MADHUMITA DUTTA

Oct 28, 2020
Very well and true explanation of JK real problems about JK general people , students and also new generations.

Sanjay Tirdiya

Oct 28, 2020
Jammu and Kashmir was never a cause of and for Pakistan. That's exactly the reason that irregulars in the form of the Tribal fighters were used to occupy territory initially in the period of 1947-48. Even the last armed conflict in Kargil saw the Pakistani establishment use it's men in mercenary attire on the high snow clad and extreme peaks around that region, who then lay abandoned after getting killed in the battle with the Indian Army. Even their last rites were carried out by the Indian Army with full religious rituals on this side of the LOC on those very high mountain tops, as the Pakistanis didn't have the guts and morality to stand for their own men. Yet, to render Kashmir as their own cause the ruling elite of Pakistan at whose behest Imran Khan threatened the world with nuclear war in our region from the august forum of the UNGA and jihad too, they drove out Hindus from their own thousands of year homeland three decades back, which is exactly the reason even while crying hoarse about the actions of the Indian security forces of eliminating cross border aided terrorists and the concurrent abrogation of Article 370 being being akin to putting the people of Jammu and Kashmir into a harassing lockdown, they never speak of and for the persecuted Hindus that live outside of their homeland as refugees. This is evidence that Pakistan has a cause in Jammu and Kashmir which but has to be bereft of Hindus driven out from their own homeland three decades back,

Jagat Mohanty

Oct 28, 2020
Well Articulate , True facts about Kashmir.

Jitender Kumar Singh

Oct 28, 2020
Very Well Thought Out Article On & About Kashmir!! Good Read!!

Sanjeev Deb

Oct 28, 2020
Brilliant & concise narration !! Captures the basic essence of the Kashmir problem and offers a simple , easily comprehensible root cause analysis.. Congratulations on a well drafted piece.. You should write more often 👍👌

Arjun Behura

Oct 28, 2020
An excellent piece of analysis! In the context of our neighbour called Pakistan, we must help along a decaying, suppurating body of evil to meet its end faster.

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