P.C.Dogra
Former
Director General of Police Punjab
Churchill called Hindus beastly people
with a beastly religion. In a meeting with Mountbatten, he described Muslims as
Britain’s allies and accused him of planning and organizing ‘the first victory
of Hindustan (He refused to call it India) against Pakistan by sending British
trained soldiers and British equipment to crush and oppress the Muslims in
Kashmir and that it was an act of gross betrayal”
British intention was to put in place a very
week federal structure of India
which will break in to many nations in no time. Mountbatten wanted to set up
independent Hyderabad in the belly of India, also wanted Maharaja of Kashmir to accede
to Pakistan.
But he was helpless at the hands of Sardar Patel who will not let his
machinations work and could tell him bluntly on his face. Western powers also
wanted to appease and are even now appeasing the Muslim Umma by placating Pakistan on Kashmir.
The presentation will delineate all such designs right from 1947 onwards.
We start with Edwina Mountbatten. It has
been revealed by Lady Pamela Hicks, the daughter of late Viceroy in her book
“India Remembered; A Personal Account of the Mountbattens during the transfer
of power” and later corroborated in an interview to Karan Thapar that it could
have been possible that Jawaharlal Nehru took the decision to refer Kashmir to
the United Nations under the advice of Mountbatten and that later used Edwina
Mountbatten’s emotional influence on Pandit ji for getting it through.
“Gilgit agency had been acquired by the
British from an extremely reluctant Maharaja Hari Singh on 60 years lease basis
in 1935. But towards the end of July 1947, it was returned to him. Then there
was a revolt against the Maharaja by Gilgit scouts led by a Scotsman Major
Brown. Christopher Thomas says in his book Fault Line in Kashmir that
“It is entirely possible that the British incited the revolt to ensure that
this strategically vital region came under Pakistan’s jurisdiction in the
expectation that Pakistan would cooperate in the Western defence pacts to block
Russian ambitions”
General Ismay Chief of staff to
Mountbatten as also Field Marshal Lord Montgomery were of the view that
“British strategy required the use of bases in the sub continent and that the
relations with the whole Mussalman block had to be considered” C.Das Gupta says
in ’War & Diplomacy in Kashmir’ “By August 1947, the British
authorities had determined that their strategic interests in the subcontinent
lay primarily in Pakistan. This was buttressed by the view that Britain’s relations with the ‘whole Mussulman
bloc’ would be jeopardised in the absence of close ties with Pakistan”
Lt. General L.P.Sen, the then Brigade Commander who led the first
counter offensive against the Pak forces has pointed out in his book ‘Slender
was the Thread’ that “Major General Akbar Khan who led the Pak tribals, was
a regular officer of the Pakistan army and had established his HQrs at
Rawalpindi in the same building where Pak army Hqrs had been located. How was it that the British C-in-C of Pak
army was not aware of it?” Bias is apparent from what Philip Ziegler says in Mountbatten-the
official biography that “Secretary of state for Commonwealth Relations
while spelling out the British approach observed “It would have been natural
for Kashmir to eventually have acceded to Pakistan on agreed terms, because of
her predominantly Muslim population”
What happened after a reference was made to the U.N? As per H.V.Hodson
from his book The Great Divide, Pt Nehru said “He was shocked to find
that power politics and not the ethics were ruling the United Nations and was
convinced that the United Nations organization was being completely run by the
Americans and that Senator Warren Austin, the American representative had made
no bones of his sympathy for the Pakistan cause. Similarly Mr Noel Baker, the
secretary of state for common wealth relations and leader of the United Kingdom’s Delegation had been as hostile
to India
as Warren Austin. The belief spread was that the United Kingdom wished to
please the cause of Muslim solidarity in the Middle East and that the United
states wished to rehabilitate their position visa-vis the Arabs after their
advocacy of partition of Palestine.”
Sardar Patel had always been opposed to any reference to the Security
Council. Indirectly hinting on the role of Mountbatten, Gen. Ismay and some
others, Patel told Arthur Henderson, British Under Secretary of state
“Unfortunately, it is my experience that the attitude of an average Englishman
in India is instinctively against us….We should never have gone to the UNO…At
the UNO, not only has the dispute been prolonged but the merits of our case
have been completely lost in the interaction of power politics….We were
terribly disappointed at the attitude of your delegation….it was we maintain,
the attitude of Noel Baker that tilted the balance against us. But for his
lead, I doubt if The USA and some other powers would have gone against us”
In 1953, Mr Adlai Stevenson the then
Governor of
Illinois (USA) met Sheikh Abdullah in Sri
Nagar. In August 1953, Manchester Guardian disclosed that he (Mr Stevenson)
“seems to have listened to suggestions that the best status for Kashmir could
be independence from both India
and Pakistan”
and that Sheikh Abdullah had been encouraged by Adlai Stevenson. “Sheikh was
suspected of planning a session of the constituent Assembly which instead of
ratifying the accession to India,
would declare the vale of Kashmir,
independent.” According to New York Times July, 1953 “Kashmir
valley would gain independence, possibly guaranteed by both countries and the
rest of the state would be partitioned between them roughly along the present
cease-fire line. It was said that John Foster Dulles, U.S Secretary of State
supported a solution of this nature”
Ex. US ambassador Dennis Klux has observed
in his book titled “Disenchanted allies” that in 1953, U.S. President Truman
endorsed the UN Commission suggestion of arbitration to solve Indo-Pak
differences on Kashmir. Pt. Nehru rejected it though in his meeting with John
Foster Dulles, he agreed that partition might be a better way to solve the
problem than the plebiscite”
Again in 1957-58, South Asia specialists
of the U.S.State Deptt, put major sources of India-Pak tensions–Kashmir, Indus water and arms race in to a single negotiating
basket for working out the solutions for all these problems. President Dwight
Eisenhower reacted enthusiastically to the proposal. Pt Nehru however did not
give a positive response.
Kennedy, the then US President decided to
send a team headed by Averall Harriman to the sub-continent. The British
dispatched a parallel mission headed by Common Wealth Relations Secretary
Duncan Sandys. Nehru scuttled the negotiations and wrote “To give up valley to Pakistan or to countenance its
internationalization, poses political and strategic problems for India
which render such solutions impossible”
State Deptt experts outlined yet another
solution ie joint India-Pakistan presence in the valley and partition of the
rest of Jammu and Kashmir
and sought President’s approval to step up U.S involvement. Kennedy agreed and
proposed former World Bank President Eugene Black to serve as the mediator.
Nehru how ever rejected the proposal.
Admittedly under USA
pressure, talks were held with Pakistan
in 1962- 63. Indian delegation led by
Sardar Sawaran Singh proposed modification of the cease-fire line in favour of Pakistan.
Six rounds of talks were held. How ever in 1963, Kennedy approved the release
of US-UK paper outlining elements of settlement which were as follows:
·
Giving both India and Pakistan a substantial position in
the vale
·
Ensuring India
access through the vale for defence of Ladakh.
·
Ensuring Pakistan’s interest in the head waters of Chenab river.
·
Ensuring some
local self rule in the vale and free movement of people to India and Pakistan and enhancing economic
development.
In April 1963 Ambassador Galbraith raised
the Kashmir issue twice with Pt. Nehru. Prime
Minister took a hard line against the partition of the valley and wrote to
Kennedy that “I am convinced that these ill considered and ill conceived
initiatives, how ever well intentioned they may be, have at least for the present
made it impossible to reach any settlement on this rather involved and
complicated question”
Stephen Philip Cohen gives the glimpses of
the US
strategy in his book ‘The Idea of Pakistan” that “American officials now seem
to accept facilitation as a legitimate and a useful role. The formula to deal
with such issues is not to wait until they are ripe for resolution or turn away
or to search for a definitive solution when none is available”
Strobe Talbot says in his book ‘Engaging India’ that “The first full cast session of the US-Indian dialogue took place in July 1998 at Frankfurt Air port. Jaswant was prepared to talk about his Govt. converting the line of control in to an international boundary”
Now let us talk about one much discussed personality ie Farooq Kathwari, a member of the influential Council on Foreign Relations. He is chairman of the Kashmir Study Group which he founded in 1996. Its members are all well up in the policy making higher echelons of the US Govt. It published a report, titled “Livingston Proposal: Kashmir, A Way Forward.” Also known as the Farooq Kathwari report, the document aims at diluting Indian sovereignty in the State of Jammu and Kashmir, envisages creation of two Kashmir entities - one each on either side of the LOC and each with its own government, constitution or a single Kashmiri entity with its own constitutional framework and Government. Indirectly, it is the US vision of settling the Kashmir dispute.
Praveen Swami in his article in Frontline
referred to the then
Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah's conclave with Farooq Kathwari whom he described as United States based secessionist leader and assessed it as part of a larger U.S. sponsored covert dialogue on Jammu and Kashmir. One can say that as a follow up to this, in March 1999 Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz met at Colombo. The agreement, inter alia, suggested plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir on regional/district basis, division of Jammu province along Chenab River on communal lines, “maximum possible autonomy to Kashmir and its adjoining areas” and “annexation” of the remaining areas of Jammu province and Ladakh region by India. Singh and Aziz were to meet again after a month to give concrete shape to this agreement. However we saw the Kargil invasion. Round about this time, Rand Corporation, considered to be a prominent Think Tank that influences the policies of USA published a report elaborating on various options for the settlement of Kashmir.
Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah's conclave with Farooq Kathwari whom he described as United States based secessionist leader and assessed it as part of a larger U.S. sponsored covert dialogue on Jammu and Kashmir. One can say that as a follow up to this, in March 1999 Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz met at Colombo. The agreement, inter alia, suggested plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir on regional/district basis, division of Jammu province along Chenab River on communal lines, “maximum possible autonomy to Kashmir and its adjoining areas” and “annexation” of the remaining areas of Jammu province and Ladakh region by India. Singh and Aziz were to meet again after a month to give concrete shape to this agreement. However we saw the Kargil invasion. Round about this time, Rand Corporation, considered to be a prominent Think Tank that influences the policies of USA published a report elaborating on various options for the settlement of Kashmir.
In his address to the United
Nations General Assembly in the autumn of 2002, Secretary General Kofi Annan
identified hostility between India
and Pakistan
as one of the most perilous threats to global peace and security. He ‘gladly’
acknowledged and strongly welcomed efforts made by ‘well placed’ U.N.
member-states to persuade the two countries to reduce tension. And that if another confrontation between
India and Pakistan threatened to ignite war, Annan warned “the international
community might have a role to play” Later a top US official source indicated
that during discussion in New York, Annan and US President George W. Bush “had
agreed on their hope to move beyond crisis management to real solutions on
Kashmir”
The US Embassy in Pakistan had prepared a goal paper
in 2002. It had fixed 2005 as the target year for solving the Kashmir issue by
achieving (A) Regular movement of civilian traffic across the LOC (B) Kashmir
politicians assume prominence in political discourse (C) Evolve a framework for
eventual political resolution of the Kashmir problem. In a way, it had started
happening with our Prime Minister’s desire to make the borders irrelevant and
Musharraf’s plan of demilitarization and joint governance.
What was Musharraf’s formula? He told reporters everywhere that “I came
out with a broad outline which included gradual demilitarization of the Line of
Control and Kashmiri cities; maximum self-governance on both sides of the Line
of Control; a joint governing mechanism for Kashmir; to include Pakistanis,
Indians and local Kashmiri leaders and most important a porous Line of Control…
I wanted to make the Line of Control irrelevant” This Pakistan-promoted option
had the heavy endorsement of Washington.
Again in a follow up to
Musharraf’s formula, former US President
Bill Clinton suggested a Northern Ire land’s Good Friday Agreement which
creates a broadly inclusive power sharing arrangements providing for equal
representation in the Govt for the pro-British (Unionists) and pro-Irish
(Nationalists) and the cross border
institutionalised framework.
The then U.S Commander General David
Petraeus had a strategy security review with Ahmed Rashid, an acknowledged
authority on Taliban and Afghanistan. Rashid projected his latest proposal,
called "grand bargain", central argument of which draws the same
connections between solving terrorism in Afghanistan
and solving Kashmir which President Obama has been advocating that Pakistan would be persuaded to stop supporting
terrorism if India can be persuaded
to solve Kashmir.
Go for a Kashmir solution for a ticket to UN
Security Council membership and fulfilling your
big power aspirations’ This is what . That was the broad message of
President Barack
Obama.
Bob Woodward's latest
book "Obama's War" gives the clearest insight into Obama's thinking
on the matter. Here top US
policy makers are shown mulling on defusing the Kashmir
situation as part of an exit strategy for US. "Why can't we have
straightforward talks with India
on why a stable Pakistan is crucial?", Obama is reported as musing at one
meeting. President Obama's strategy for dealing with Afghanistan and
Pakistan always needed a
settlement of Kashmir.
Bruce Riedel, author of
the Obama administration's Af-Pak strategy, has canvassed the centrality of the
Kashmir issue to peace and stability in the
region. In fact, the solution Washington has
in mind is on the same lines of what
Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh and Pakistan's
deposed military leader Pervez
Musharraf broadly agreed on. Riedel said before the scheduled visit of
President Obama to India
that he will quietly help Islamabad and New Delhi to get back to the deal, Musharraf and Singh had
negotiated.
S. Rajagopalan wrote
from Washington in The Pioneer dated April 2010 that "Pentagon has emerged
as an active lobbyist for more pressure on India to take Pakistan's concerns
more seriously and that Admiral Mike Mullen, the then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and the US
Govenment's the then prime interlocutor with the powerful Pakistani
Army Chief Gen.
Ashfaq Kayani, was for
"encouraging New Delhi to cooperate more
with Pakistan". Recently another columnist Siddharth Varadarajan wrote from Washington that US had moved from de-hyphenation to dual-hyphenation- “Whether valid or not, Obama administration and the rest of the world see a link between Afghanistan and the India-Pakistan relationship, between the ongoing military instability on the Afghanistan- Pakistan border and the unsettled relationship between New Delhi and Islamabad.
with Pakistan". Recently another columnist Siddharth Varadarajan wrote from Washington that US had moved from de-hyphenation to dual-hyphenation- “Whether valid or not, Obama administration and the rest of the world see a link between Afghanistan and the India-Pakistan relationship, between the ongoing military instability on the Afghanistan- Pakistan border and the unsettled relationship between New Delhi and Islamabad.
I shall end my presentation with two
quotable quotes from our Prime Minister that “Gilani is a man of peace” and
that Pak army wants peace with India.
Let us keep our fingers crossed. As discussed above, syndicate of Western
powers led by USA are
determined to foist upon us their diabolic designs on Kashmir.
We ought to be more watchful about the intentions of the world powers, build up
the military muscle, dominate the world economy, play the diplomatic cards with
confidence and the cleverness of Chanakya otherwise we will loose Kashmir which
will open the floods gates of secessionist activities across the country.
P.C.Dogra
Former
Director General of Police Punjab
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