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Friday, April 19, 2024

Ex-Foreign Secretary sends letter to New York Times, demolishes Imran Khan’s slanderous op-ed

Dear Mr Baquet and Mr Bennett,

I have seen Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Op-Ed in your paper (August 30). That NYT should publish such a slanderous propaganda piece that not only distorts facts but even manufactures them does not reflect well on standards that you apply when accepting to publish opinion pieces by foreign leaders.

It does not seem normal by any yardstick that any serious publication should lend its columns to one foreign leader to attack another country and its leader with such malice. The NYT or any publication with an international reputation should not, I believe, allow itself to be used as a propaganda tool by one country against another. When a foreign leader is invited to state his position on issues of concern to his country, it should be made sure, in my view, that he does so in a measured and dignified manner and not use the opportunity given to him to vilify the leader of a third country. The NYT has failed in this regard. 

What is Imran Khan’s credibility in  denouncing Bharat and PM Modi the way he has? He has been put in position by the Pakistani military, which explains his allergy to barbs within Pakistan that he is a “selected” Prime Minister. This contrasts with Modi’s election as Prime Minister through the largest democratic exercise ever in human history, with a voting electorate of over 600 million, virtually two times the entire population of the United States.

It is the same Imran Khan who has put in prison all the major leaders of opposition – former Prime Ministers and Presidents included. He is the one who, with his refrain in Urdu that he who was a friend of Bharat was a traitor, castigated Nawaz Sharif for reaching out to Bharat. And today he vaunts his own offers of peace to Bharat. 

NYT would recall that Imran Khan was called ‘Taliban Khan’ because of his support for the Taliban and opposition to US/NATO operations in Afghanistan. He supported the extremist Islamic organisation Tehreek-e-Labaik to blockade Islamabad in a bid to bring down Nawaz Sharif.

His Islamist leanings are apparent from his speeches in which he repeatedly evokes  his obsessive vision of creating a welfare state in Pakistan, not a modern welfare state based on contemporary values of democratic, liberal societies, but one based on Mohammed’s fourteen centuries old Medina model. How is this different in essence to what the Islamic State and other extremist Islamic organisations advocate for Muslim countries- a reversion to the golden age of Islam of Mohammed’s era marked by justice, equality and the Sharia to overcome the political, economic and social problems they face today. Please think about this.

Imran Khan’s so-called peaceful overtures to Bharat have been accompanied from day one by a call to resolve the Kashmir issue as a pre-condition. He talks about Bharat and Pakistan needing to address shared problems of poverty as a priority, but makes any step towards  normalisation of relations, including in trade, dependent on a resolution of the Kashmir problem.

He does not spell out the solution, except to call for self-determination for the people of Kashmir as per the UN resolutions. For one, in adopting this position he violates the 1972 Simla Agreement which stipulates clearly that the issue will be decided bilaterally by Bharat and Pakistan alone. Even if, theoretically, the UN resolutions were to be the basis, Pakistan has violated them by not withdrawing its irregular and regular forces from Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) as a pre-requisite before other steps could be taken to hold a plebiscite. Please look at these resolutions.

It is important to underline also that the UN resolutions were not based on Article 1 of the UN Charter and do not make any allusion to self-determination – the word is mentioned nowhere in the texts. The consent of Bharat and Pakistan to hold a plebiscite was only to decide the issue of J&K’s accession either to Bharat and Pakistan, with no third choice- that of independence- that any true exercise of self-determination under the UN Charter would have involved.

Bharat and Pakistan have discussed the Kashmir issue numerous times since independence, with attempts also at mediation by the UN and third countries. Since the mid-1990s the two countries have had a structured dialogue, including on Kashmir. Both sides are fully aware of each other’s position.

Imran Khan should be asked in his new avatar as a peace-maker what fresh ideas he has to propose to break the impasse. As things are, Pakistan is in illegal occupation of large parts of the erstwhile State of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) that acceded to Bharat in its entirety. Pakistan has gained enormously geo-politically from this occupation, as it now has contiguity with China and Bharat has no contiguity with Afghanistan.

Imagine a situation in which Pakistan had no land link with China – the whole geo-politics of the sub-continent would have been different. What more does Pakistan want? More Bharatiya territory on the basis that what it has illegally occupied belongs to it, but what Bharat possesses legally must also be shared with Pakistan? 

Pakistan behaves as if the Kashmiris are Pakistani citizens and that Pakistan is responsible for them. J&K is a composite state like other Bharatiya states, with people belonging to Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist faiths. Pakistan’s concern is sectarian, as it is limited to the Muslims. The whole of Bharat with 180 million Muslims has almost as many Muslims as Pakistan has.

Bharat does not accept any right of Pakistan to speak on behalf of the Muslims of Kashmir, or the Muslims of Bharat. Pakistan maintains that Kashmir is an unfinished agenda of Bharat’s partition, which means that its objective is to divide Bharat once again on religious grounds, with all the horrors that the first partition produced. 

The NYT editors should contrast Bharat’s treatment of the Muslims of Kashmir with China’s treatment of Tibetans and the Muslim Uighurs next door. Bharat has not interfered in the religious practices of Muslims in J&K, destroyed their religious sites, brought about demographic changes, or imposed a language on them that is not their own. It hasn’t done ideology-based social engineering as China  is doing in Sinkiang.

Bharat has not incarcerated a million Muslims in re-eduction camps as the Chinese have done. Pakistan’s attitude towards the Uighurs is mercenary as it is dictated by its economic dependence on China. Imran Khan recently supported China’s treatment of the Uighur Muslims in the Human Rights Council at Geneva. His Muslim solidarity is selective.

Imran Khan is raising the issue of human rights violations in J&K and shedding tears over curfew in Kashmir and cutting off communications there. He should be careful in taking this propaganda line. He is the leader of a country that has used its air force and heavy weaponry against its own Muslims in South and North Waziristan, internally displaced a million of its own citizens to facilitate military operations.

Pakistan has used heavy artillery to kill Baloch leaders. Its blasphemy laws terrorise its minorities. The jihadi organisations that populate its territory such as the Sipahi-e-Sahiba kill Shias, attack Christian churches and Sufi mosques. The Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed have been  declared international terrorist organisations by the relevant UN Security council committee.

The United States and France, amongst others, have declared the PoJK (Pakistan occupied Jammu & Kashmir) based Hizbul Mujaheddin as a terrorist organisation. Bharat, by contrast, does not have a domestic version of jihadi organisations perpetrating terrorism in Pakistan; it is not using its air force or heavy weaponry against its own population. It has not displaced a million Kashmiris from their villages.

On the contrary, Muslim extremists chased out about 450,000 indigenous Kashmiri Hindus from Kashmir in 1990 with threats of violence against them, in an act of ethnic cleansing. The Bharatiya authorities have dealt with the Kashmir problem fuelled by a foreign power with great restraint because democracies act differently than military dominated states like Pakistan.

For Bharat, Pakistani state sponsored terrorism is a core issue and unless Pakistan ends this, the basis of any productive dialogue does not exist. The Bharat-Pakistan dialogue has broken down periodically because of major terrorist attacks against Bharat sponsored by Pakistani agencies.

Imran Khan claims he seeks a dialogue but is unwilling to acknowledge that jihadi terrorism is an issue that he needs to address. His line is that Pakistan is not involved in terrorism against Bharat, that Pakistan itself is a victim of terrorism, that Bharat must provide proof, and that Bharat unnecessarily blames Pakistan for home-grown terrorism in Kashmir provoked by the human rights violations of Kashmiris by Bharat’s repressive policies.

How does this denial square up with actual acts of terror sourced to Pakistan, the most reprehensible being the attack on Bharat’s parliament in 2001 and in Mumbai in 2008 that killed 166 people. Bharat has suffered other attacks in and outside Kashmir over the years. The list is long and  includes cities, religious, scientific, economic and military targets in J&K and across Bharat.

Even the U.S. is exhorting Pakistan to end cross-border terrorism against Bharat. To build deniability, Pakistan has, over the years, also developed local assets in Kashmir to commit acts of terror so that it can purvey the argument that it is not involved. Does this mean that the eruption of Al Qaida and Islamic State elements in various Muslim countries has nothing to do with the core custodians of this ideology that spread their message across the Ummah and obtain receptive recruits?

Imran Khan’s protestation of innocence on the issue of terrorism is spurious. Pakistan has provided safe havens to the Taliban leadership while denying its presence on its soil. It sheltered Osama bin Laden for years near its military cantonment. It has refused to act against the Haqqani group despite American prodding. The Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani group have killed thousands of American/NATO soldiers in Afghanistan. The former U.S. Chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, in a testimony to the U.S. Congress, called the Haqqani group an extension of Pakistan’s ISI.

During his recent visit to the United States, Imran Khan admitted that Pakistan had 30,000 to 40,000 militants on its soil who had fought in Afghanistan and Kashmir. The NYT editors could well have asked him where they have disappeared before publishing his diatribe against Bharat. If Pakistani agencies have been complicit in Taliban/ Haqqani group terrorist attacks in Afghanistan when Pakistan has no religious differences or territorial claims on Afghanistan, to think that it is not deeply involved in terrorism against Bharat in pursuance of both religious and territorial objectives is to deny reality.

If Imran Khan was genuine about making peace with Bharat he should have gone beyond statements of intent and taken some concrete steps on the ground. He could have tried and punished those responsible for the 2008 Mumbai terrorist carnage in which six Americans were also killed. He could have put away Hafiz Saeed for good, particularly as he has a $ 10 million U.S. bounty on his head.

He could have done the same with regard to Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar responsible, amongst others, for the Pathankot and Pulwama attacks. Instead, Pakistan worked with China for years to prevent his designation as an international terrorist by the UN, until it became untenable for China to do so.

Imran Khan could have repatriated Kulbhushan Jadav after the adverse judgment of the International Court of Justice against Pakistan. If Pakistan is not guilty of promoting infiltration of terrorists into J&K, it could alert Bharat’s agencies about possible infiltration attempts so that they could be prevented by Bharatiya security forces. This would conform to counter-terrorism cooperation between civilised states.

In short, Imran Khan could show his sincerity by taking credible and irreversible steps to curb the jihadi groups in Pakistan targeting Bharat.

Some of Imran Khan’s key advisers have been applauding his peace talk as a calculated strategy to contrast him as a peace maker with Modi-led Bharat’s intransigence. His Foreign Minister Qureshi has referred to the Kartarpur Corridor as a “googly”. One of Pakistan’s retired generals has said the other day on Pakistan TV that the Kartarpur Corridor is intended to promote the Khalistan movement. Qureshi has made the astonishing statement that Pakistan is ready for a dialogue with Bharat provided Bharat reverses its decision on Article 370, releases the detained Kashmiri leaders and allows him to meet them. This non-seriousness shows the reality of Imran Khan’s bogus pretensions about seeking dialogue and peace with Bharat.

Under cover of its nuclear capability Pakistan has been promoting terrorism in Bharat with a sense of impunity. Bharat has been hesitant to retaliate because of escalation concerns, until 2016 when Bharat conducted limited surgical strikes against terrorist camps across the Line of Control and in 2019 struck at Balakot in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan after the Pulwama suicide attack that the UN Security Council too condemned.

No other Pakistani leader has spoken so frequently about a nuclear stand-off with Bharat, threatening Bharat implicitly with use of nuclear weapons, as Imran Khan. Pakistan, unlike Bharat, does not subscribe to a No-First-Use(NFU) nuclear posture. It is in this background, to deter Imran Khan’s adventurism and loose talk about nuclear weapons that the Bharatiya Defense Minister has stated that no change is envisaged in Bharat’s NFU policy, but that  any change will depend on future developments. Imran Khan is going to town on this, including in his Op-Ed in your paper, ignoring his own nuclear transgressions that, regrettably, have been overlooked by the U.S. all along. 

Imran Khan is behaving as if  Pakistan was sparing Bharat terrorist mayhem because of the existence of Article 370 of the Bharatiya Constitution. In actual fact, right from 1989 Pakistan has sponsored terrorist attacks against Bharat even when this Article was in force. Not only that, this article was no insurance against Pakistan’s aggression against J&K in 1965, in 1971 and in 1999 in Kargil. What is then the value and relevance of Imran Khan’s argument that the nullifying of Article 370 is a provocative new step that will invite violence? He is, in fact, openly instigating violence in J&K with his statements as and when the current restrictions there are progressively lifted.

Much is being made by Imran Khan about the change in status quo in J&K. Bharat has made it clear that the change in the constitutional status of J&K within the Bharatiya Union does not change Bharat’s present external borders or affects the Line of Control with Pakistan in J&K and the Line of Actual Control with China in Ladakh.

In fact, Pakistan and China have collaborated to change the status quo in J&K much more materially. In 1963, Pakistan ceded the Shaksgam Valley of Pakistan occupied J&K (PoJK) to China. China then constructed the Karakoram Highway through PoJK. Pakistan has changed the status quo in Gilgit Baltistan in 2009. The construction of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a major geo-political change in the status quo by making the Chinese presence permanent on PoJK, besides bringing in Chinese civilian and military personnel close to Bharat’s borders. China will never agree to any future settlement of the Kashmir issue that might mean losing control over the CPEC.

In the article you have published, Imran Khan talks of hundreds being blinded by pellet firings in Kashmir. Where has he got this figure from?  Can NYT vouchsafe for this? He talks of nullifying of Article 370 and Article 35 A as being illegal under the Constitution of Bharat. The issue is before the Bharatiya Supreme Court which has not yet pronounced on the matter. How has Imran Khan reached this conclusion? Has the Pakistan Supreme Court heard the matter in place of the Bharatiya Supreme Court and given him its finding?

He is claiming that “thousands of Kashmiris have been thrown into prisons across India”, and NYT has chosen to publish this rubbish, without verification. Kashmir may be locked down but not the rest of Bharat, and Bharatiya as well as foreign correspondents in Bharat would report this if it were true.  Kashmiris defying the curfew are being shot and killed, he says, suggesting that this is happening in large numbers, which is patently propagandistic, and it is regrettable that he has used the NYT to purvey lies.

“We have already prepared multiple options” for working on as regards Kashmir, he  says. One ridiculous one has been divulged by Foreign Minister Qureshi. Others, which he has kept secret from Bharat, might be even more ludicrous. 

It is to be hoped that NYT and others will make an effort to take a balanced view of the situation in J&K and the challenges Bharat faces there. The problems of governing a population of 1.25 billion of great diversity democratically, and integrating a Muslim population of 180 million- almost as large that of Pakistan- are not to be minimised.

The religious hostility of Pakistan, the progressive radicalisation of Pakistan’s own population, the jihadi organisations on its soil, the resurgence of the Taliban next door in Afghanistan, the surfacing of the Islamic State there, all impact deleteriously on Kashmir’s traditionally moderate Islam.

The West has seen how much its democracy and society have come under strain because of terrorism and religious extremism. It has experienced the difficulties of integrating its Muslim minorities. How much its commitment to human rights and individual freedoms is being tested as a result is becoming increasingly apparent. Bharat’s problems are far bigger in magnitude and much more complex, but Bharat has shown great resilience in dealing with them. This should be better understood and appreciated abroad, including by NYT.

Sincerely yours

K.Sibal

Former Foreign Secretary to the Government of Bharat.


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