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    OpinionsUri attack: India must give war with Pakistan a chance

    Uri attack: India must give war with Pakistan a chance

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    Uri attack: India must give war with Pakistan a chance

    Vir Sanghvi

    The army's special forces have the ability to enter Pakistan and attack terrorist headquarters.

    There is a stultifying sameness to the Indian response after each terror attack launched by Pakistani elements. Guests go berserk in TV studios and, now, so do the anchors. War hysteria is created and the government is urged to strike back.

    Even as all this goes on, a very different mood prevails in the drawing rooms of India's metropolitan cities. Well-educated individuals stare at their TV screens with mounting horror and worry that India is considering some kind of military response. Soon the worry gives way to scoffing: “Why don't these anchors go to the front themselves?” Or, “It is easy to talk of war from air-conditioned TV studios.” And so on.

    I am as appalled by the xenophobia and the hysteria as the next man. But the time has come to ask if well-educated Indians have got it right. They can scoff all they want. But even as they sneer, the Pakistanis are laughing and patting each other triumphantly on the back.

    The anti-war argument goes something like this: We cannot retaliate militarily because war is an expensive that will set our back. Soldiers will lose their lives. Pakistan will retaliate and, as it is a nuclear power, it could drop atom bombs on India. Foreign powers would intervene to prevent the conflict from escalating. And our military adventure would amount to nothing even if we are lucky enough not to get nuked.

    There are many flaws with this argument. The first is the suggestion that only jingoist buffoons suggest war in the aftermath of repeated terror strikes. The truth is that most strong nations always retaliate militarily. After 9/11, the US launched a full-fledged invasion of Afghanistan and unseated the Taliban regime, which had hosted al Qaeda. Several years later, it tracked down Osama Bin Laden and killed him.

    The French responded to the attacks of the last few months by sending war planes to bomb ISIS targets in the Middle East. And the Americans are not done yet. Over the last couple of years, there have been innumerable drone strikes over Pakistani territory that have killed hundreds of suspected terrorists.

    Nobody has called Barack Obama or Francois Hollande mad, jingoistic warmongers. They were leaders seeking to protect their own people.

    The second flaw with the anti-war argument is to imagine that any war will turn nuclear. Both sides had nuclear weapons during the conflict. And yet, nobody even considered using them. We know that if Pakistan nukes us we will retaliate. They might well fire another nuclear missile. We would respond. And so on.

    A nuclear war is in nobody's interest – and the Pakistanis realise this as much as us.

    In fact, they probably realise it better than we do. When they plan terror attacks on India, whether in Bombay, Pathankot or Uri, they do not worry that India will respond with nuclear weapons. Only we seem to have that fear. And why are we so scared? Well, because we believe that Pakistani generals are mad and might use nukes despite the threat of total destruction on both side. In fact, there is no evidence that the generals are mad or unbalanced. They have shrewdly and consistently outsmarted India by keeping a low-intensity conflict going while we struggle to respond. These are not the actions of lunatics.

    So, what can India do?

    The diplomatic response, which is supposed to lead to Pakistan's global isolation, has been tried so often over the last two decades that it has become a joke. Pakistan is never isolated. The Chinese will always stand by the Pakistanis. The Americans need Pakistan for their Afghan policy. And the Russians have just organised joint troop exercises with the Pakistanis.

    If diplomacy isn't going to work, then there are only two solutions. The first, leaked by the government two days ago, is to abrogate the Indus Waters Treaty. This will never work. We can't abrogate treaties without serious consequences for India. Besides, we don't even have the mechanism required to stop the water from going to Pakistan. Islamabad knows that this threat is hot air and does not take it seriously.

    That leaves us with only the military option – the one favoured by France, America, the UK and other western countries.

    It is not necessary to mount a full-fledged invasion. The army's special forces have the ability to enter Pakistan and attack terrorist headquarters. Our intelligence agencies have covert wings that are more than capable of taking out the likes of Hafeez Saeed or Masood Azhar. We have a little-known drone programme that affords us the opportunity to follow the lead of the Americans in blowing up terror bases and terrorists.

    So, why don't we use them?

    Talk to military personnel and they will tell us that they have never had the political go-ahead to use the special forces properly. Though today's R&AW is a shadow of its former self, its covert capabilities remain intact; it's just that nobody deploys them.

    Finally, it boils down to an essential crisis of character. Educated Indians are just too frightened by the idea of war. We are embarrassed by naked patriotism. And we think that diplomacy still holds answers even though it has failed time and again.

    Indira Gandhi had no time for peaceniks and cowardly intellectuals. She knew how to take decisive action. I am hoping that Narendra Modi will follow her example. But he needs to do so quickly because the window of opportunity for retaliation will soon close.

    Northlines
    Northlines
    The Northlines is an independent source on the Web for news, facts and figures relating to Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh and its neighbourhood.

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