Pakistan-India
showdown: What you’re not being told
Darius
Shahtahmasebi
RT,
27
February, 2019
A
recent terrorist attack in Kashmir could set the stage for a major
conflict between India and Pakistan as India begins bombing Pakistani
territory. As always, the root causes of these are being ignored by
the media.
On
February 14, India was rocked by a suicide-bombing which took place
inside Jammu and Kashmir. The attack targeted a convoy of security
personnel vehicles, killing at least 42 Central Reserve Police Force
(CRPF) officers (as well as the bomber himself).
Responsibility
for the attack was claimed by a Pakistan-based Islamist group called
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). JeM’s main goal is to steal Kashmir away
from India and unite it with Pakistan, to ensure that Pakistan is
ruled by Sharia law, and to drive Western forces out of Afghanistan.
Its other eventual priority is to drive all Hindus and non-Muslims
from the Indian subcontinent.
The
attack has drawn such negative publicity that the United Nations
Security Council (UNSC), finally agreeing on something for once,
identified India as a victim of terrorism and asked member states to
cooperate actively with New Delhi to bring these attackers to
justice.
After
India vowed a “jaw breaking response” to the attack, Pakistani
Prime Minister Imran Khan authorised his military to “respond
decisively and comprehensively to any aggression or misadventure”
by India. In case it wasn’t clear, both of these volatile states
currently sitting on the cusp of war possess nuclear weapons.
Apparently,
despite this underlying nuclear catastrophe, someone thought it was a
good idea for Indian fighter jets to begin pounding Pakistani
territory just today, in order to take part in what India’s foreign
ministry coined a “non-military pre-emptive action” against JeM.
The recent incursion into Pakistani airspace forced the Pakistani air
force to scramble to respond, which in turn led the Indian jets to
“release [their] payload in haste while escaping.”
In
the process, India claimed that it had killed a “very large number”
of terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and jihadis. To be fair,
India, for its part, had warned it was ready for war with Pakistan.
It was also pushing for Pakistan to be included on a terror-watch
blacklist, all the while threatening to weaponize the flow of water
to Pakistan as a means of leverage conventional military means can’t
buy.
After
the raid, Pakistan has understandably asserted its right to
self-defense. But self-defense of what – Pakistan’s sovereignty
or self-defense of JeM? (If in fact, India was targeting JeM
fighters). Actually, that was exactly what the Indian foreign
ministry claimed was the rationale for the attacks – Pakistan’s
inaction for combating its own homegrown terrorists. And this is
where international law can get even murkier as it delves into the
“unwilling and unable” justification for the use of force on a
sovereign state. In India’s eyes, Islamabad is either unwilling or
unable to combat the terrorist threat inside its borders (or perhaps
this is just a PR stunt aimed at China’s expanding influence over
Pakistan).
But,
okay, fine – let’s accept the rationale of the terrorist threat.
If we are going to ignite a powder keg that would begin with
two-nuclear armed nations and eventually draw in Iran, Saudi Arabia,
the UAE and China, we should at least examine the context in which
Pakistan and India are facing a serious threat of terrorism.
Following
the money
The
United States and its allies have had a curious relationship with
Pakistan and terrorism for years, as anyone who knows their history
will know. What they might not remember, however, is that in February
2007, then vice president, Dick Cheney, made a trip to Pakistan to
meet with President General Pervez Musharraf. According to PBS, the
secret US-backed campaign against Iran by the terror group known as
Jundullah was high on Cheney’s agenda.
A
few months later, ABC News reported that Jundallah, which is
“responsible for a series of deadly guerrilla raids inside Iran has
been secretly encouraged and advised by American officials since
2005.”
The
report explains that “US relationship with Jundullah is arranged so
that the US provides no funding to the group, which would require an
official presidential order or ‘finding’ as well as congressional
oversight.” Not to mention that former Pakistani army chief,
retired General Mirza Aslam Baig, further explained that “the U.S.
supports the Jundullah terrorist group and uses it to destabilize
Iran.”
Okay,
so the US supported the Jundullah group in Pakistan against Iran, but
what does that have to do with the current situation at hand? Well,
it appears that JeM and other terrorist organisations in Pakistan
receive direct support from key US allies, including and especially
Saudi Arabia.
For
example, an action request cable archived by Wikileaks, documenting
the illicit finance activities in Afghanistan and Pakistan, stated
that “it has been an ongoing challenge to persuade Saudi officials
to treat terrorist financing emanating from Saudi Arabia as a
strategic priority.”
“Still,”
the cable continues, “donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most
significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.”
Not
surprisingly, Saudi Arabia “remains a critical financial support
base” for – wait for it – “Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, LeT
[Lashkar-e-Taiba] and other terrorist groups.” The LeT is a
Pakistan-based terrorist organisation which also has a strong focus
on Jammu and Kashmir, where the recent terror attack took place (and
India’s initial response). Both LeT and JeM have received
overwhelming support from Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) since the early 1990s. In fact, LeT became part of the United
Jihad Council in 1993, an umbrella group for militant Islamists
operating in Kashmir and in doing so, formed a direct alliance with
JeM. As far as the US State Department is concerned, the two groups
are almost all but completely synonymous.
The
ISI itself had been a prime recipient of billions of US aid,
particularly under the administration of George W. Bush. The
Wikileaks cable clearly shows that the US was well aware elements
within the ISI were maintaining ties to the LeT.
The
cable also noted that Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE have provided support
to LeT and other terrorist groups operating in the region as well.
All of these countries are US allies.
Furthermore,
a separate Wikileaks cable confirmed that Saudi Arabia and the UAE
have been funnelling money not just to LeT but to JeM directly,
stating that:
“Locals
believed that charitable activities being carried out by Deobandi and
Ahl-e-Hadith organizations, including Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the Al-Khidmat
Foundation, and Jaish-e-Mohammed were further strengthening reliance
on extremist groups and minimizing the importance of traditionally
moderate Sufi religious leaders in these communities. Government and
non-governmental sources claimed that financial support estimated at
nearly 100 million USD annually was making its way to Deobandi and
Ahl-e-Hadith clerics in the region from ‘missionary’ and ‘Islamic
charitable’ organizations in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates ostensibly with the direct support of those governments.”
Saudi
Arabia itself has been considered to be somewhat of a safe haven for
jihadists targeting India, including and especially the LeT. An
investigation also found that Saudi Arabia funnelled funds to
anti-Indian terror groups through Hajj pilgrims, and the Diplomat
lamented that JeM hunts for potential recruits among the 150,000
devout Indians visiting Mecca every year.
So,
to summarise: the US has a long and documented history of backing
anti-Iranian Sunni-based Pakistani terror groups. Saudi Arabia and
its Gulf allies have been funnelling financial support to the LeT,
who has a direct alliance and operates in the same area as the JeM
(who also receives direct funding from Saudi Arabia), which recently
claimed responsibility for an attack which killed at least 40 Indian
police personnel.
It’s
not exactly rocket science. Call me a little bit suspicious, but
perhaps this is why Saudi Arabia was quite open in its assurances to
Islamabad that it need not go after JeM directly, even while the
group’s leadership apparently continues to live comfortably inside
Pakistan.
And
what no one really seems to be talking about is the implications this
wider geostrategic struggle has for the region. Saudi Arabia wants to
win Pakistan over in a tug-of-war game in which Islamabad finds
itself in the centre, and in doing so, is committing $10 billion to
build an oil refinery in the Gwadar port project, which actually puts
a major Saudi project on Iran’s border.
Most
disturbing is the revelation that Saudi Arabia is also being rumoured
to have nuclear weapons “on order” from Pakistan. If it isn’t
bad enough that India and Pakistan have nuclear weapons and are now
potentially launching air strikes into each other’s territory, the
idea that these apocalyptic weapons could one day end up in the hand
of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the country currently launching a
genocidal war in Yemen and backing known jihadists right across the
wider region, all the whilst constantly threatening war with Tehran,
is nothing short of suicidal.
According
to Israeli media, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s (MBS)
recent visit to Pakistan has essentially cemented Pakistan’s
inclusion in anti-Iran Arab NATO. Will these countries rush to
Pakistan’s aid as it is pummelled by Indian fighter jets? Or will
diplomacy and cooler heads eventually prevail?
Thankfully,
we can trust the media to ask these all-important questions, and not
focus its entire energy on yet another regime-change operation in yet
another oil rich country, right?
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