brihaspati wrote:There is no point in repeating the errors that USA made in supporting or using Jihadis to win short term objectives or eliminating common enemies. They gifted us Jihad at greater levels when they encouraged and resourced the Talebs and Mujaheeds against the Soviets.
If we encourage the Talebs, it will come back to haunt us. Don't ever do this!
brihaspati garu,
I make the assumption that you were reacting to the suggestions I made previously.
Talibanism is the ideological enemy of Dharma. It is as yet not an operational enemy of India. On the other hand, Pakistan is an operational enemy of India. Pakistaniyat is just such a confused mentality, that it is not worth considering as an ideological enemy.
The Taliban profess enmity towards India publicly, but as long as we do not engage in open hostilities, and India's strategic interests are not harmed by them, their public posture can be taken as simply a means to gain respectability in a population in Pakistan nurtured with hate towards India. Taliban's geographic distance to India also goes a long way in keeping potential conflict between Taliban and India in check.
India does not need to have any open relations with TTP, but if the Afghan Taliban do come to power in Afghanistan, it will be inimical to our strategic interests to not keep open channels to them.
The difference between Indians on the one hand and Americans or NATO, Russia, Pakistan, etc. on the other, is that we are not fomenting either Jihad there, or occupying their land or dictating their internal and foreign policies, or for that matter preaching them our ideologies.
brihaspati wrote:There are actually two fronts to be activated, to use the evolving geo-strategic situation on the AFPAK front. Deny completely while giving full support for a Baloch insurrection at a much higher intensity. Deny completely while launching cross border special forces operations to provoke and cause pain across the LOC in the Valley. Keep the PA busy at this two extreme geographical points, and let them pull PA units away from the Taleb frontier. It will only enhance the fall of Islamabad. Keep war hysteria alive in Pak. Then deny and an cool down. Unexpectedly start to provoke and raise temperatures - basically keep the Pak establishment continuously on the edge. They should be kept increasingly running around trying to put out fires at widely separated points within the territories currentlyy occupied by them.
The Pak establishment already has a mortal enemy knocking on its doors. All the enemy needs is some more time and power to knock down the door itself and send the Pak establishment packing.
Strong support for secessionist forces in Pakistan is good, be they Baluch, Pushtun, Sindhi, Gilgiti, Baltistani, MQM or some other group. It is also useful to keep them guessing on their eastern border, but Indian official rhetoric should stay calm and conciliatory.
brihaspati wrote:Ultimately, There is going to be a Jihadi-Pashtun-Pakjabi-Taleb-ISI confrontation with India. This is the opportunity to destroy them as populations and a viable future political-military force. There is no point in being squeamish about this. We have to spread the conflict in a way that can be used to draw in the maximum number of the population into conflict as combatants so that they cannot hide behind "civilian" mask and use the Geneva protocol opportunistically. It is necessary to do this in a way that will rule out any regeneration of military capacity within the next few generations.
Even if something like this is to be tried or comes to pass, it is imperative that we allow different factions within the Islamic coalition to first settle their differences in the only way known to Islam. The British effectively used the divide and conquer strategy to neutralize most of the Indian resistance to them. The same strategy can be used here, especially as we do not really need to do much, neither divide, as they already are divided and in search of the One Purity, nor do we need to conquer them, while they are at it.
An article linked earlier, I find encouraging and relevant to what I am saying.