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April 25, 2012

How To Win Arms Race With India

Filed under: China,india — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 8:06 am

Shaheen-1A

6th Century Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu wrote, ‘For to win one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the acme of skill. To subdue the enemy without fighting is the acme of skill’. Since the past sixty years we have been winning victories in battles against Indian aggression despite that nation’s larger conventional military force. The score was settled in 1998 when we proved to the world our own nuclear capability. This was a necessary achievement for the protection of Pakistan, and has surely prevented any number of nefarious plans against our homeland. However, geopolitical shifts since the past fifteen years require a strategic reassessment, and we may have a unique opportunity to ‘win without fighting’.

Last week, India test launched its Agni-V missile, a nuclear capable missle with range over 5,000 km. The three-stage, solid-fuelled ICBM was successfully test-fired on 19th April, placing for the first time under India’s nuclear threat all of China. According to Indian media reports, this was the purpose of developing the long range missile.

India could have gone for a higher strike range but believes the solid-fuelled Agni-V is “more than adequate” to meet current threat perceptions and security concerns. The missile can, after all, even hit the northernmost parts of China.

India, of course, cannot match China in terms of its vast nuclear and missile arsenals. But missiles like Agni-V and the 3,500-km Agni-IV, tested last November, will certainly add teeth to its credible minimum nuclear deterrence posture.

The successful test startled China. Even while responding with guarded reaction, it was clear that China is not happy with India’s arrogant challenge of a new arms race.

“India should not overestimate its strength. Even if it has missiles that could reach most parts of China that does not mean it will gain anything from being arrogant during disputes with China. India should be clear that China’s nuclear power is stronger and more reliable. For the foreseeable future, India would stand no chance in an overall arms race with China,” the Global Times newspaper said.

India made its challenge and China has clearly accepted the challenge.

Neither did Pakistan sit on the sidelines following the latest Indian aggression. On Wednesday, Pakistan responded with the successful launch of Haft-4 Shaheen-1A missile with range up to 3,000 km putting all of India well within reach.

Pakistan has successfully demonstrated its capabilities to counter any Indian aggression with maximum deterrent capabilities. However this latest Indian missile launch was a challenge not to Pakistan but to China. Is it wise for Pakistan to involve itself in this affair? Now is the time for Pakistan to play its cards close to our chest and quietly sit on the sideline while India and China engage in an arms race that will sap India’s economic and defence resources and further orient their military focus to the East. We must avoid the natural instinct to involve ourselves and respond to India’s mistakes. Obviously this does not mean that we should not keep our defences prepared for all costs. It only means that we should do so quietly and bide our time so we allow India to weaken itself by becoming obsessed with China. This is the path to subduing the enemy without fighting and will prove that Pakistan not only has the assets to defend our borders, but the strategy also.

June 9, 2011

Agencies Must Beware Iran’s nuclear ploy

Filed under: Iran — Tags: , , , — admin @ 11:29 am

Much is being made of the claims by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that the US has designs on our nuclear assets. As we examine and investigate these claims, we must beware that Iran has its own security strategy and we have our own security strategy also and we must not allow ourselves to be duped and become a pawn in Iran’s strategy.

According to a news report, Ahmadinejad claims the Iranian intelligence has precise information about a US plot.

Speaking at a media conference in the Iranian capital, Ahmadinejad said, “We have precise information that America wants to sabotage Pakistan’s nuclear facilities in order to control Pakistan and to weaken the government and the people of Pakistan.” The president added, “The United States would then use the UN Security Council and some other international bodies as levers to prepare the ground for a massive presence (in Pakistan) and weaken the national sovereignty of Pakistan.”

As is admitted by the news report, “The Iranian president did not give details nor revealed the source of his information”. Besides having no evidence, this statement by the Iranian president has caused some hairs to stand on end. But let us evaluate this claim with cold reason.

While there have been many concerns stated about American designs on the national assets, the US has not made any attempt to seize or destroy the nation’s defensive arsenal. Even when America’s Enemy #1 and most wanted man Osama bin Laden was discovered hiding in Abbottabad, still the Americans did not make any move against our nuclear sites. Many believed that Abbottabad was a pretext for invoking Chapter 7 of the UN, but over a month has passed and still this has not materialised either.

Ahmadinejad wants our assetsLet us now examine the other player in this drama which is none other than Iran itself. Iran has long been a troublesome neighbor of Pakistan, playing against Pakistan to serve its own interests. The port of Chabahar is a perfect example being only 100 miles from Gwadar port of Pakistan. Iran has worked to secure the prominence of its own port over Pakistan’s to support its own isolated economy.

It is not only economic battles, though, as it also must be noted that Iran and Pakistan have become deeply suscpicious of each other in the area of security since the post-Cold War fight in Afghanistan during the 1990s. During this time Pakistan supported the Pakhtun Taliban while Iran supported the Tajik Norhter Alliance. This resulted in the rise of a low-intensity ‘proxy war’ between the two nations as Shia Iran became fearful of sectarian fighters in the Taliban. This situation strained to the level near to all out war when the Taliban executed several Iranian diplomats in 1998 and Iran deployed their troops to the Afghan border in response. Iran continues to see Taliban/al Qaeda jihadis as a threat to their own brand of Islamic revolution.

Can it be any coincidence then that after al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is found in Abbottabad and then Taliban/al Qaeda join forces to attack Pakistani security posts in PNS Mehran as well as Peshawar and Kharian and other areas that Iran has renewed interest in Pakistan’s nuclear assets?

As our intelligence agencies investigate the Iranian claims and discuss with Ahmadinejad’s own security agencies they should beware of being played as a pawn by the Iranianians in two ways.

1. Iran could be looking for information on our strategic sites in order to target them in case of threats from Taliban
If Iranian security agencies are concerned about the possibility of infiltrators assisting PNS Mehran attacks, they may be looking for further intelligence about our own strategic resources and security sites in order to target them in case of continued attacks by Taliban forces.

2. Iran could be looking to get transfers of technology in order to build a deterrent against Taliban. Even more troubling is the possibility that the Iranians are attempting to use our natural religious sympathies to put our guard down so that we will give them some strategic technology for their own use. While they would certainly whisper convincing words about uniting against an imperialist threat, the true end game would be to secure their own predominance in the region and to use the technology as a deterrent against Afghanistan or even Pakistan ourselves once the Americans leave the region.

Either of these scenarios are both plausible and possible and must be watched closely. The Foreign Office has responded to the Iranian statement correctly by saying that Pakistan will not be used as a pawn in Iran’s attempts to gain their own nuclear assets. Pakistan’s strategic resources are for the security of Pakistan only. Also, while there has been no attempt to invoke Chapter 7 of the UN til date, transfer of technology to Iran would make such a verifiable certainty as even China would not stand up for us in such an event.

Intelligence agencies should discuss with the Iranians about these claims by Ahmadinejad to determine if there is any proof in the pudding, but they must do so with a clear vision and not allow the Iranians to pull any red, white, and blue wool over our eyes as a ploy to get access to our own defenses.

September 7, 2010

Is RAW Behind Anti-Pakistan Journalist Latest Lies?

Filed under: China,india — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 9:04 pm

Source: Pakistan Media Watch

A column in the New York Times newspaper by American commentator Selig Harrison has raised quite a bit of media attention around a conspiracy theory that the government is giving Gilgit Baltistan to China, a claim publicly denied by the Foreign Office. As with most conspiracy theories of this magnitude, a little basic research demonstrates that Mr Harrison and his claim of Pakistan ceding territory to China are unreliable.

While it took me all of 15 minutes to discover that Mr Harrison’s reputation precedes his remarks in the US, our own media seems to be more than willing to repeat the wildest conspiracies without the least effort in fact-checking. More troubling is that the Mr Harrison’s conspiracy seems to have been fed to him in part by Pakistani media.

The first suspicion I had about Mr Harrison’s claim was that it was simply too outrageous to be believed without some proof. Of course, Mr Harrison provides none in his column.

Most troubling, as I said, is that Mr Harrison’s claim appears to be based at least in part on rumours by unnamed journalists. He says that his sources for this conspiracy theory are:

…reports from a variety of foreign intelligence sources, Pakistani journalists and Pakistani human rights workers…

First, what foreign intelligence sources? While it would certainly be in keeping with journalistic practice to hold confidential the name of an informant, it is not unusual to at least report what agency the informant is associated with. Without playing into alternate conspiracy theories, it is well documented that intelligence agencies partake in disinformation campaigns designed to sow discord in targeted nations. Considering the location in question, is it not important to know which foreign intelligence agency is making these claims?

Second, it is quite troubling that some representatives of Pakistani media have been feeding such stories to foreign reporters. Considering Mr Harrison’s background (as we will explain below), it is worrisome that these Pakistani journalists went to Mr Harrison to promote their story. Certainly Mr Harrison will refuse to expose who these Pakistani journalists are, which is too bad. While there is reason to protect the identities of “whistle blowers” against official corruption for fear of their safety, there is little public good gained by allowing journalists to spread unsubstantiated rumours.

But let’s look at Mr Harrison’s claims directly. Many of Mr Harrison’s claims are nothing more than hysterical conjecture.

Mystery surrounds the construction of 22 tunnels in secret locations where Pakistanis are barred. Tunnels would be necessary for a projected gas pipeline from Iran to China that would cross the Himalayas through Gilgit. But they could also be used for missile storage sites.

I could not help but think of the famous American claims about Iraq’s “aluminum tubes”. The idea that China, which shares a border with China, would need to store missiles under Gilgit-Balochistan makes no sense. Unfortunately for Mr Harrison’s conspiracy theory, though, building tunnels for a gas pipeline would be a perfectly reasonable explanation for an increased presence of Chinese workers in the region. It’s just not quite as scary.

Of course, this is not the first claim that Mr Harrison has made about the break up of Pakistan. The Pakistan Policy Blog noticed this trend of Mr Harrison’s back in 2008, noting that “Selig Harrison has made a career of predicting the imminent break-up of South Asian states”. In 2006, Mr Harrison reported for the French newspaper Le Monde Diplomatique that Baluchistan and Sindh were preparing to quit the nation.

While there is no denying that we have seen groups of separatists and ethnic strife in the country (what country has not experienced such?), Mr Harrison’s reports consistently take on a tone of imminent national dissolution that is simply not supported by the facts. Four years after Mr Harrison’s prediction in the French media and no such calamity has occurred, of course. Yet Mr Harrison continues to predict the breakup of Pakistan. Perhaps he believes that if he simply wishes hard enough, it will come true?

Joshua Foust, a respected American journalist and intelligence consultant on South Asia, wrote a scathing profile of Mr Selig Harrison in 2008 in which he calls Mr Harrison’s writings on Pashtunistan, “silly, over-hyped nonsense” and says,

As it is, Harrison casts a very unconvincing shadow on the discourse over the Pashtunistan issue. It merits serious discussion—separatist movements always do. But placing them in their proper context, both historically and socially, is just as important as making a case you’ve been trying to make for years. As it is, Harrison seems to rely on mischaracterization, hyperbole, and “the soft bigotry of low expectations” (to borrow a phrase and avoid slinging charges of Orientalism)—hardly the stuff of a world-renowned regional expert. I hesitate to accuse Harrison of wearing ideological blinders, as I can’t really figure out what his ideology is, simultaneously blaming the West for subjugating the Pashtuns while granting them unlimited power to unite, declare independence, and bring down that very same West.

But that’s par for the course for most writing these days on Pashtuns, and even on Afghanistan. It just doesn’t add up. My question here, though, is the same as it was for Ann Marlowe: who the hell keeps paying him to write? I have to assume it is simply the ignorant, those more aware of his reputation than his recent scholarship, without the means to fact-check what he writes so long as it confirms their biases. That is a major loss to the field, that rigor. But, as with the curious longevity of Thomas Johnson (whom, ironically enough, Marlowe has called “brilliant”), it doesn’t seem to be that unoriginal, either.

Today, of course, Mr Harrison is not talking only about a separatist rebellion, but he has added a twist by claiming the government is “handing over de facto control of the strategic Gilgit-Baltistan region in the northwest corner of disputed Kashmir to China”. His evidence? Chinese PLA workers building roads and bridges.

Mr Harrison’s column, it is important to note, appears on the Opinion page of the New York Times. It does not even pretend to be an objective or investigative report, nor should it. Mr Harrison makes clear his position when he writes,

What is happening in the region matters to Washington for two reasons. Coupled with its support for the Taliban, Islamabad’s collusion in facilitating China’s access to the Gulf makes clear that Pakistan is not a U.S. “ally.”

This is a position in direct conflict with the official positions of the US and Pakistan. It is simply Mr Harrison’s opinion, and possibly an attempt to change the direction of Pakistan-US relations. Something, it seems, he has been trying to do for years.

An opinion column with no evidence, a discredited author, and sources from unnamed foreign intelligence agencies. One has to ask why the Pakistani media has been so ready to republish such rubbish. In fact, The News republished the piece in full today. The Nation makes note of the author’s “obsessive anti-Pakistan posture”, but then reproduces most of the author’s claims.

Worse still, who are the members of the Pakistani media who are feeding such conspiracy theories to foreign journalists? This blog has been criticized in the past for suggesting that there is a cycle in which Pakistani conspiracy theorists posing as journalists feed outrageous stories to the international press, who then repeat them, giving them the credibility needed to be repeated yet again in mainstream Pakistani media. But we see here an example of exactly this.

Actions of the media have consequences. Those consequences can be good – as when the media uncovers evidence of corruption or brings attention to pressing issues. Or they can be bad – as when the media causes confusion and distraction by placing more importance on sales than on research and facts. While we cannot control what discredited commentators like Selig Harrison write in the international media, we should not be fueling a cycle of misinformation and conspiracy theories. We should be setting an example of journalistic excellence that provides honest and accurate information at home and abroad.

August 30, 2010

China rejects visit by Kashmir general

Filed under: China,india — Tags: , , — admin @ 7:50 am

Source: Financial Times

Simmering tensions between China and India flared on Friday after Beijing rejected an official visit by the army general responsible for overseeing India’s troubled Muslim-majority province of Jammu and Kashmir.

The spat centres on Beijing’s refusal of a visa for General B.S. Jaswal, chief of the Indian army’s northern command including the restive Kashmir region, which is being rocked by angry anti-India protests .

Gen Jaswal’s trip to China was part of a routine exchange of high-level army officers intended to build confidence and maintain communication lines between the giant neighbours. The two countries went to war in 1962 and still have uneasy relations.

Incensed by Beijing’s rejection, New Delhi summoned the Chinese ambassador on Friday for an explanation. “While we value our exchanges with China, there must be sensitivity to others’ concerns,” the Indian foreign ministry said. “Our dialogue with China on these issues is ongoing.”

November 29, 2009

Need for a Charter of Security

Filed under: Defense — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 2:14 pm

Ali Malik makes some important arguments for Pakistan’s need for a ‘Charter of Security’ on his blog yesterday. As the world waits for American President Barack Obama to annouce the US plans for increasing troops in Afghanistan (and who does not think the Americans will increase troops there?), and PM Gilani says that an American troop increase would yield risks to Pakistan, we should be thinking about how to update our own defense planning so that it is most effective in the new situation. Malik argues quite well that this new ‘Charter of Security’ can be fashioned after the ‘Charter of Democracy’ that helped bring the country forward.

Just when it is a pathetic situation to be in as being world’s 7th nuclear power, it offers an opportunity as well. For just 5 years back, the country had no internal doctrine as well just as it does not have an external doctrine. The political forces in the country, the biggest two, seized the moment and initiated a dialogue which led to the Charter of Democracy. Charter of Democracy provided a comprehensive consensus on the movement ahead on the internal issues and is fast turning into the first consensus document since 1973′s constitution. Slowly but gradually, it is helping democracy take root in the country and address the balance of power between civilian institutions. And despite political opportunism (which must be taken as a ground reality), it has helped set the game plan and rules which act as a deterrence when the hostility goes overboard.

What the nation needs is a same effort on the lines of Charter of Democracy for its security and foreign policy doctrine. All political parties and political leadership has either been naive or cautious in not treading the courses on security doctrine which fall out of the realm of existing cliche. It is high time that country’s leadership comprising all segments of a diverse Pakistani nation sit together and answer some fundamental questions like

  • What should be the broader objectives of our foreign policy? And in line of these objectives what goals should we pursue across the globe in line with the existing ground realities to best serve Pakistan’s interests?
  • Where lies the ownership of the policy?
  • Who will be responsible to implement what goals?
  • To what degree should the intervention be part of our security doctrine?
  • A candid analysis of how soft power can help further our security/foreign policy objectives?
  • Do we want to be an expansionist state or not?
  • Who would have the power to modify and monitor the objectives?
  • What should be the role of 6 key external players (US, China, Saudi Arabia, UK, Iran and India) in Pakistan’s international relations?
  • How to devise a mechanism to review and change the foreign policy objectives in line with ever-changing world around us?

Malik also makes the important point that working towards a ‘Charter of Security’ provides an opportunity to bring to the table US and China as key external partners. Like it or not, US and China represent the most powerful nations in the world right now, with US being the world’s single superpower. But unlike the cold-war when US and USSR were enemies, US and China are strategic partners and every day are working more closely together on shared interests.

A critical external element in this strategy will be to take US and China on board. I think of a number of international issues that they are trying to settle between them, a consensus policy on Pakistan should be a priority. US must realize that her decision to abandon Pakistan in 1990s has cost her influence here that turned out to be China’s gain. As a fair bargainer, it should be willing to pay the price for her action while trying to consolidate what it could.

By bringing on board the US and China with this ‘Charter of Security’, Pakistan would be creating a strategic partnership with the world’s most powerful nations that would ensure access to military technology, training, and resources necessary to provide for our defense. 

Most importantly, though, this strategic partnership would send a strong and unmistakable signal to India and other nations that they cannot play taunting games or make attempts to infringe on our security and sovereignity.

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