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Pakistan's Costly
'Other War'
By Selig S. Harrison
The
Washington Post
February 15, 2006
The usual
explanation for
Pakistan's
failure to go all-out against al Qaeda and Taliban forces along the Afghan
frontier is that Gen. Pervez Musharraf's armed forces and intelligence
services are riddled with Islamic extremists. But there is also another,
equally disturbing, reason. Musharraf has increasingly been forced to
divert ground forces and U.S.-supplied air power from the Afghan front and
from Kashmir
earthquake relief efforts to combat a bitter, little-noticed insurgency in
his strategic southern coastal
province of
Baluchistan.
Musharraf's
"other war" against the Baluch, an ethnic minority of 4.5 million, has
become increasingly bloody in recent weeks. According to U.S. intelligence
sources, six Pakistani army brigades, plus paramilitary forces totaling
some 25,000 men, are battling Baluch Liberation Army guerrillas in the
Kohlu mountains and surrounding areas. The independent Pakistan Human
Rights Commission has reported "indiscriminate bombing and strafing" by 20
U.S.-supplied Cobra helicopter gunships and four squadrons of fighter
planes, including U.S.-supplied F-16 fighter jets, resulting in 215
civilian dead and hundreds more wounded, many of them women and children.
Visiting U.S.
Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told human rights commission
leaders recently that the Baluch conflict is an "internal matter" for
Pakistan to resolve and that the United States has not raised the issue
with Musharraf. This policy should be reversed, not only to stop the
carnage but also because the
United States
has a major strategic stake in a peaceful accommodation between Islamabad
and Baluch leaders. The administration should call on Musharraf to start
negotiations immediately, and President Bush should keep up the pressure
when he visits Islamabad in March.
Multiethnic
Pakistan, dominated by the Punjabis, who control the army, is likely to
become increasingly ungovernable in the absence of a political settlement
with the Baluch. A continued military confrontation in Baluchistan could
well intensify long-festering ethnic unrest in neighboring Sind and
embolden various anti-Musharraf forces throughout Pakistan. Musharraf's
ability to put adequate military resources into the fight against al Qaeda
and the Taliban, already limited, would be further reduced, undermining
U.S. efforts to stabilize Afghanistan.
The strategic
importance of Baluchistan has grown since China started building a port
for Pakistan at the Baluch port of Gwadar, close to the Strait of Hormuz,
with a projected 27 berths, enough for a major Pakistani naval base that
could be used by Beijing. The Baluch ancestral homeland stretches west
beyond Gwadar into adjacent Baluch-majority areas of eastern Iran, where
there is a nascent Baluch rebellion against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Iran
fears Baluch nationalism, but
India is more
ambivalent. New Delhi wants a stable Pakistan that will negotiate a peace
settlement on Kashmir. At the same time, many Indian commentators appear
happy to see Musharraf bogged down in Baluchistan and hope that the Baluch
crisis will force him to ratchet down Pakistani support for Kashmiri
Islamic extremist insurgents.
Musharraf has
presented no evidence to back up his accusations that India is aiding the
Baluch insurgents. But New Delhi
did say on Dec. 27 that it is "watching with concern the spiraling
military violence in
Baluchistan"
and called for political dialogue. Both Baluch and Sindhi leaders have
often said that they would welcome Indian intervention to liberate them
from
Islamabad.
At present, most
Baluch leaders do not call for independence. They are ready to settle for
the provincial autonomy envisaged in the 1973 Pakistani constitution,
which successive military regimes, including the present one, have
nullified. What the Baluch, Sindhis and a third, more assimilated ethnic
minority, the Pushtuns, want above all is an end to blatant economic
discrimination by the dominant Punjabis. Most of Pakistan's natural
resources are in Baluchistan, including natural gas, uranium, copper and
potentially rich oil reserves, both onshore and offshore. Although 36
percent of the gas produced in Pakistan comes from the province,
Baluchistan consumes only a fraction of its production because it is the
most impoverished area of Pakistan. For decades, Punjabi-dominated central
governments have denied
Baluchistan
a fair share of development funds and paid only 12 percent of the
royalties due to the province for the gas produced there.
The Baluch were
forcibly incorporated into
Pakistan
when it was created in 1947 and have subsequently staged two short-lived
rebellions, in 1958 and 1962, as well as a protracted struggle from 1973
to 1977 that involved some 80,000 Pakistani troops and 55,000 Baluch
tribesmen.
The big
difference between earlier phases of the Baluch struggle and the present
one is that Islamabad is no longer able to play off feuding tribes against
each other and faces a unified nationalist movement. Another important
difference is that the Baluch have a better-armed, more disciplined
fighting force. Baluch leaders say that rich compatriots in the Persian
Gulf are providing the money needed to buy weapons in the flourishing
black market.
It is clear that
a continuing Baluch insurgency would pose a major threat to the Musharraf
regime and to
U.S.
interests in Pakistan. Future military and economic aid to Islamabad
should clearly be withheld until Musharraf stops his military repression
in Baluchistan and enters into serious negotiations with Baluch leaders.
Once the present crisis is defused, the United States should launch a
sustained effort to promote a process of democratization in Pakistan that
gives long-overdue recognition to its multiethnic character.
The writer,
former South Asia bureau chief of The Post, is the author of "In
Afghanistan's Shadow," a study of Baluch nationalism. He is director of
the Asia Program at the Center for International Policy.The
Washington Post 15.2.05
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