Discredit Pak army in the eyes of ordinary people, don't push them into rallying behind it
India has to neutralise Pakistan as China's force multiplier, and the ordinary people are a potential ally vis-a-vis its military
This was written and published before the ceasefire, but its main points remain relevant
Discredit Pak army,, cultivate the people
#OperationSindoor #IndiaPakistan #IndiaChina
India has delivered humiliating punishment to Pakistan, firing missiles and other ordnance to destroy targets in Pak Occupied Kashmir and Pak Punjab, in response to the terrorist killing of 26 tourists in Pahalgam on April 22. India has maintained that it does not want to escalate further, although Pak attacks would be foiled. This is the right thing to do.
India has revoked the Indus Waters Treaty. India should make it clear that the intention is not to deprive the people of Pakistan of their share of the water from the rivers that flow West from the Himalayas – Jhelum, Chenab and Indus – but to renegotiate the treaty to make it more fair to Indian Punjab than the original treaty of 1960 had been.
Many Indians are obsessed with the idea that Pakistan is India’s enemy. It would be more correct to say that the Pakistani state sees India as its enemy. India moved out of Pakistan’s league long ago. India’s principal rival is China. The rest of the world wants India to become powerful enough to countervail China. China dislikes the idea of India as an Indo-Pacific power, leave alone as a global power. Beijing sees Pakistan as the instrumentality to translate their wish to contain India in the little league, even as China consolidates its position as the global rival to the United States.
China has been building its national power with focused investment in industry, defence and education at all levels, including basic research in every discipline of human knowledge, leading to new capability in key technologies. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute tracks the development of 64 technologies, which it has identified as building strategic capability. China today leads the world in 57 of those key technologies.
At present, those who rule Pakistan are willing to let their country serve as a force multiplier for China, harassing India as and when required, immobilizing a section of our forces on the western front, and preventing their redeployment to the north, and keeping India locked into what the world sees as a perpetual, regional rivalry.
Beijing views with quiet satisfaction the jingoistic obsession of sections of Indian media, particularly social media, with wreaking havoc on Pakistan. The more the Indian public discourse is suffused with enmity towards Pakistan, the greater the pressure on the government to succumb to that sentiment. That works to Beijing’s advantage, and India’s strategic disadvantage.
Does this mean that India should turn the other cheek to dastardly Pak-sponsored attacks such as the one at Pahalgam? Absolutely not. India should punish and discredit the Pakistani armed forces, as India has in the present context. India will chase the attackers and their backers to the ends of the earth, said Prime Minister Modi. And so we should.
But who are the backers of the terrorists? The entire nation of Pakistan? Or is it the Pakistani deep state, which sees nuclear-armed Pakistan as the sword arm of Islam, which gains added strategic depth by clever use of terror? The Pakistani deep state is frustrated to see few takers for its grandiloquent power projection even among Islamic countries. Each of Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkiye sees itself as the foremost Islamic power and resents the fact that it is low-income, backward, misgoverned Pakistan, overtaken by Bangladesh in per capita income, that has the nuclear bomb, and not they.
The Pakistani army and its image as an invincible, nuclear-armed force and defender of the nation are key to the integrity of Pakistan as a nation-state. Pakistan rejects the no-first-use doctrine, and has nuclear-capable missiles and tactical nuclear weapons to counter India’s superiority. China has supplied Pakistan with submarines capable of air-independent-propulsion, which can stay submerged longer, without having to come up for oxygen, to house nuclear missiles that give it second-strike capability, meaning, the capacity to strike back, even if an initial wave of attacks takes out known nuclear weapons in their silos.
India cannot control what the Chinese government does. Nor can it directly constrain the Pakistani state. However, it can influence Pak public opinion about India and the credibility of the Pak state, including the military. The Pak state and its military derive their authority ultimately from the people of Pakistan.
India must neutralize Pakistan as China’s force multiplier. In this, the people of Pakistan are potential allies, through whom to constrain their army and the rest of the state machinery.
India’s punitive actions discredit the Pak armed forces in the eyes of the ordinary people. It is vital to feed this disenchantment with the armed forces and the deep state, and not create a situation in which the people rally behind the armed forces. That means de-escalation of hostilities and pre-empting the risk of generalized conflict.
India has chosen targets to minimize civilian casualties. This is most sensible. Sending Pakistanis visiting India for medical care packing was not particularly helpful. Talk of India using up all available water for itself in the West-flowing rivers is positively harmful.
Sectarian politics in India, targeting Muslims, feeds into the narrative that legitimizes the Pak state and its armed forces. Those who preach hatred towards Muslims in India effectively act as China’s agents who work to keep India grappling with Pakistan in the little league.
Both overt policy towards Pakistan and internal policy on inter-community relations must undermine the legitimacy of the Pak state/army. India must focus its energies on building its economic muscle and strategic capabilities, keeping China in mind, rather than Pakistan.