By Dipankar Bhattacharya
December 15, 2008
-- The recent siege of Mumbai for nearly three days by a small band of well-trained
terrorists has almost universally come to be described as ``India’s 9/11’’. In
terms of sheer audacity of planning and execution, the places targeted and the scale
and range of people killed and injured, the Mumbai terror siege can surely be
bracketed with the original 9/11, and in terms of the duration of the skirmish
it can also claim to have left the original way behind.
The analogy between
New York 9/11
and Mumbai 26/11 must not however be confined to these operational details. What
is most important is to recognise the Mumbai attack was an extension of the same
terror trajectory that struck New York seven
years ago. What should we learn from this?
The terror that
visited the US in
September 2001 was not just executed in the US but it was
also born and brought up in Washington’s
foreign policy laboratory. The history of development of the Taliban and Mujahideen
variety of terror – the precursor of al Qaeda – under the aegis of Washington is too
well known to merit repetition. But instead of effecting a policy change to
terminate the trajectory of this terror, the US Bush administration could only
think of attacking Afghanistan in the
name of avenging 9/11. And soon enough it moved on to its next project – the invasion,
occupation and plunder of Iraq. The US has not
been able to bring Osama bin Laden to justice; all it could do was to capture
and kill Saddam Hussein and create a huge vacuum that is now filled up by more
terror and anarchy.
Some ``terror
experts’’ in India claim
that this ``firm’’ and ``no-nonsense’’ response has made the post-9/11 US a safer
place. The US people
evidently do not believe this story and hence we saw them deliver an emphatic
mandate against the entire Bush strategy in the recent presidential election.
The US may
well have escaped a repeat of 9/11 within its own territory, but at a price
that has made Americans the world over more insecure and vulnerable to terror
threats as once again confirmed by the Mumbai siege. And when more and more
parts of the world reel under terror, the US can hardly
expect to remain indefinitely insulated from its vice-like grip.
The US
strategy to counter terror is therefore nothing but a strategy of proliferation
of terror, and India can
never afford to adopt such a strategy. While the US can in the short run hope
to transfer its burden of terror on to other parts of the world until the
accounts are settled and all the transferred terror begins paying a return
visit to the US, India just does not have that kind of an option. India can
only invite more terror with such a strategy.
Instead of
realising that to fight terror India must first of all de-link its foreign
policy from the US strategic stranglehold, our US-crazy terror experts and
policy analysts have begun prescribing that if the US had followed up 9/11 with
Afghanistan and Iraq, India should follow up 26/11 with at least Pakistan and
Bangladesh.
Nothing could be a
surer recipe for disaster. Pakistan today
is more susceptible to terror than India. The Lal
Masjid siege, the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the attack on the Marriott
Hotel in Islamabad and the
blasts that are rocking and bleeding Pakistan at
regular intervals, all confirm this undeniable reality. India must
therefore seek Pakistan’s
cooperation in a shared battle against terrorism and not try and bully or corner
Pakistan, let
alone ask for a US-led invasion or occupation of Pakistan on the
lines of Afghanistan or Iraq.
Any attempt to
destabilise Pakistan could
only lead to an unprecedented escalation and proliferation of terror in South
Asia. The US, which
is desperately looking for an exit route from Iraq while
intensifying its presence and intervention in South
Asia, may find an Indo-Pakistan war, or at any rate a
permanent state of heightened Indo-Pakistan tension, an attractive proposition
for fishing in troubled waters. But India and Pakistan must by
all means avoid such a scenario. Instead of inviting the US to act
against Pakistan, India must keep
the US out and
directly engage Pakistan in a
shared bilateral fight against the common problem of terrorism.
[Dipankar
Bhattacharya is general secretary of
the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation.]
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