PERFIDY IN PATHANKOT
By
SUSHANT SAREEN
Grand
diplomatic gestures can certainly play a big role in breaking logjams between
countries, provided you are dealing with a normal country. Since Pakistan
doesn’t quite fit the bill of a normal country by any stretch of imagination,
the extremely unconventional and bold gambit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to
‘drop in’ on his Pakistani counterpart in Lahore was always fraught with risk.
And as the Pakistani perfidy unfolded in Pathankot, it became clear that what
was always being feared – a stab in the back – had come to pass. Of course,
that Pathankot happened within a week of the PM’s stopover in Lahore is quite breath-taking
in terms of the audacity of betrayal. But this too is true to Pakistani pattern
– remember how within weeks, the clouds of hope and optimism that arose after
the Lahore Bus diplomacy of Prime Minister Vajpayee came crashing down on the
cliffs of Kargil?
Frankly,
even though a big terror attack was always on the cards after the flurry of
meeting between Indian and Pakistani leaders – Paris, Bangkok, Islamabad,
Lahore – that it would happen so soon did come as a bit of a surprise. The
timing is important because if this attack took a few weeks, even months, to
prepare, it means that even as the smiles and handshakes were taking place, the
Pakistanis were sharpening their knives to stick in India’s back – Kargil 2.0?
Alternatively, if the visit of Mr Modi was the provocation, then the fact that
the Pakistani terrorists and their handlers have the capability to launch such
a major attack within a week of the visit should set alarm bells ringing, nay shrieking,
in the Indian security establishment.
Perhaps, the
‘spoilers’ were seriously spooked by the somewhat surreal bonhomie that was on
display and thought that the longer they took to sabotage the engagement
process, the more difficult it will become. Strangely enough, even though
everyone is talking about the ‘spoilers’, no one in any position of authority
has so far taken the trouble to identify who these guys are. All sorts of
alibis are being offered – ‘rogue elements’, ‘enemies of humanity’, and what
not. Again, nothing new here. After 26/11, the UPA persisted with the fiction
of ‘non-state actors’ and ‘elements within the Pakistani state’ being
responsible for that act of mass murder, just so that some space was left for
re-engaging the Pakistanis. This despite the fact that it was quite clear that
that attack wasn’t possible without the active involvement of the Pakistani
military establishment.
Clearly, like
Mumbai in 2008, Pathankot in 2016 is inconceivable without the connivance,
complicity and even cooperation of the Pakistani military establishment. The
nature of attack, as well as the target – Air Force base – leaves little doubt about
the involvement of the dirty tricks department of the Pakistani state. It is,
of course, entirely possible that details of the plot were not shared with some
people in the top echelons of the Pakistani establishment. If so, it still
doesn’t mean that this was a rogue operation. Information about such operations
is shared only on a need-to-know basis. More importantly, officials and leaders
are often kept out of the loop so that they can appear genuine in their denials
when they meet their interlocutors from other countries. In any case, we only
fool ourselves by drawing a distinction between ‘state’ and ‘non-state’ actors,
civilian and military establishments, ‘rogues’ and ‘regulars’. They are all one
and the same and play good-cop-bad-cop as the situation demands.
Even though
India keeps talking about what it will do in the event of ‘another 26/11’, it
is highly unlikely that the Pakistanis will repeat 26/11 or the Parliament
attack. But Pakistan will continue to carry out high impact attacks to keep
testing and probing India’s resolve and preparedness, as also the threshold of
tolerance. In the case of Pathankot, the attack could also be a test to check
India’s sincerity and commitment in re-engaging Pakistan. An even more
sinister, serious, and scary angle to not just the Pathankot, but also the
Gurdaspur attack a few months earlier, is that both these attacks were a
qualitative jump in what they could have resulted in. In Gurdaspur, if the
bombs on the railway track had blown up a train there would have been mass
casualties, and if in Pathankot, a few aircraft or choppers had been damaged or
destroyed, it would have literally pushed the two countries to the brink of
war. So is Pakistan deliberately trying to provoke war?
The Modi
government confronts a Hobson’s choice: walking out of the talks will appear a
churlish, even knee-jerk, reaction and is unlikely to get much traction
internationally, and will hardly be a punishment for Pakistan; but going ahead
with the talks comes with its own complications, not just political but also
security. The Pakistanis might well come to the conclusion that its business as
usual and henceforth talks and terror will go together. Therefore, not doing
anything is also not an option. The challenge for the Modi government will be
to use the talks as a test of Pakistan’s sincerity and hold its feet to fire on
the issue of terrorism. Hollow commitments and pro forma condemnatory statements
won’t be enough; visible action must be seen to be happening. And if Pakistan
doesn’t deliver, as is more likely, then to use it’s perfidy as a tool to not
just disengage but also change India’s tired old template of talks followed by
no talks with a more robust, hard-hitting, unrelenting, uncompromising policy
to inflict punishment on Pakistan and its proxies.