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India Heading For International Crisis - Gautam Sen: New Post On Bharata Bharati REMOVED NOW

The document summarizes an article discussing potential security challenges for India following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan. It states that the Taliban will likely regain control of Afghanistan, undermining India's interests. This could lead Pakistan to increase support for terrorist groups targeting India. It also discusses the potential for instability in the region and how adversaries like China may see a weakened India as an opportunity to act aggressively.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
67 views8 pages

India Heading For International Crisis - Gautam Sen: New Post On Bharata Bharati REMOVED NOW

The document summarizes an article discussing potential security challenges for India following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan. It states that the Taliban will likely regain control of Afghanistan, undermining India's interests. This could lead Pakistan to increase support for terrorist groups targeting India. It also discusses the potential for instability in the region and how adversaries like China may see a weakened India as an opportunity to act aggressively.

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New post on Bharata Bharati REMOVED NOW

India heading for international crisis Gautam Sen


by IS

"Of course the US may discover a modicum of common sense instead of US think-tank gobbledygook and make a deal with the bankrupt Pakistanis, poised to best it in Afghanistan. This would be a rational policy, since Pakistan alone can ensure a quarantine of terror against the West from the country, a probable political way out I have anticipated since 2005." - Dr. Gautam Sen

The end of the disastrous Western intervention in Afghanistan poses potentially sombre military and political dangers for India. Indias seemingly isolated Afghan problem could well become the precursor to a severe security challenge that would dwarf the military setback it suffered in the Himalayas in 1962. The effective rout of NATO will surely presage the resumption of ISI-Taliban control of Afghanistan. The US has never learnt that relentless bombardment of civilian populations does not secure military and political victory on the ground. However, some perverse racial gratification seems to be gained by the US from pummelling presumed barbarians, since it

resorts to it repeatedly. Hamid Karzai and his hapless retinue will end up in Lutyens Delhi, with the nonentity ruminating ruefully with retired middling diplomats and the tea-sipping chatterati at Delhis India International Centre. Indubitably, the magnitude and mindless cost of US military power is only matched by its capacity for delusion and hubris. As far as the future of Afghanistan is concerned, projected US policy will apparently attempt to maintain Hamid Karzai, or some other similar bankrupt successor in power. This diffident goal, after all the witless grandiosity of the past decade, is to be achieved by continuing to deploy air power and undertake drone decapitations. In fact, this clever wheeze, like all the other failed ones, is also guaranteed to end in tears. But it has the huge allure of a typically post-modernist short-cut and the reassuringly familiar cultural trappings of a computer game instead of vexatious reality. In addition, the US military might seek to sustain its preferred regime by placing enough troops on the ground to train local forces and engage with the Taliban and Pakistani proxies in critical encounters. This too will prove futile if a pliant Afghan regime ceases to exercise real control on the ground. Such a prospect is almost guaranteed as Afghan national forces melt away into a drug-fuelled evening mist. Any incumbent US administration will quickly retreat from commitments as the American public wearies of an endless drain on taxes that assures little tangible gain.

Of course the US may discover a modicum of common sense instead of US think-tank gobbledygook and make a deal with the bankrupt Pakistanis, poised to best it in Afghanistan. This would be a rational policy, since Pakistan alone can ensure a quarantine of terror against the West from the country, a probable political way out I have anticipated since 2005. This also happens to be the best-case scenario for India. Why India sought to involve itself in the lost cause of Afghanistan in the first place, when its implacable enemy held its prerogatives there as vital, is a mystery. Undermining the vital perceived interests of a rival is equivalent to seeking its elimination altogether, which provoked the retaliatory Mumbai assault of 26/11 by Pakistan. Indias policy had not been thought through except to forlornly anticipate gaining brownie points from the US for latching on to its fraying coat tails. Indias Afghan adventure was clearly foolhardy as the impending curtailment of Indias presence there will soon underline.

It is possible that regaining control over Afghanistan may satisfy Pakistans marauding ghazis and refocus their attention on an extraordinary catalogue of domestic socio-economic, political and allied problems at home. It would nevertheless lead to an inevitable significant upsurge in Pakistani state-sponsored terror. Hopefully, it would be mainly limited to Kashmir with only an occasional sortie to commit mass murder in the rest of India. Indian politicians could live with such an outcome. Indeed it offers some political advantage to the medley of political parties who try to galvanize Muslim votes. These terror attacks alarm Muslim voters because of possible retaliation for them and allow Indias visionless political parties to engage in competitive pledges to enhance security for them at elections. But the comprehensive expulsion of India from Afghanistan, a near certainty if Pakistan is back in the saddle, may signal the beginning of more serious woes for India.

Pakistan does not, contrary to the lucre-besotted Jagmohan Dalmiya and the BCCI now making vital diplomatic decisions, seek peace with India. It may decide a periodic breather from intense confrontation is unavoidable, but its goal is to cut India down to size by harming it. The fact that this ardent aspiration has been difficult of achievement is neither here nor there. Pakistans very existential raison detre has always been war with Hindustan, as numerous memoirs by its civilian and military leaders affirm. Pakistani society and economy are organised for war with India. Indian commentators may believe romance, broadcast on NDTV, will conqueror all, but this is a chimera refuted by periodic body counts across India. Indias highly strung celebrity anchors would have been in for a rude shock had the Pakistanis taken Delhi in 1965, which could have happened reminisced one senior general, who fought in the war, had it not been for General J. N.

Chaudhuris far-reaching, post-1962 military reforms. These saved India though Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had assured Ayub Khan that India could be humbled in short order after its 1962 debacle. The heroine daughter, doted on by the world and Indian media publicly promised, in her turn, to continue the fathers quest, unleashing a fresh wave of terror against India.

Afghanistan is likely to become a cauldron of fire once the Taliban regain power. The ancient rivalry between Shia Iran and the usual Saudi dollar diplomacy, to prompt its sectarian Pakistani counterparts to do their dirty work, will renew the bloody Afghan civil war and restore the reign of vicious warlords. The Taliban imprint might then reach into Central Asia and Chinas disaffected Uighurs, with a bevy of Jihadis vying to create their own Caliphate. They may well find sanctuary in Afghanistans inaccessible redoubts, armed and fuelled by enraged sentiments for martyrdom. It will hardly be in form for Pakistan and its own ghazi rulers to ignore these ready weapons at hand to unleash horror against India. The Afghan and Pakistan Taliban have become a potent and significantly autonomous regional force whom the military would be well-advised to mobilise and re-direct to continue their thousand-year war against India. An unlimited supply of unemployed teenage martyrs has become available in the Punjab, rendered irate by Saudifunded seminaries and cynical Pakistan elites fabricating serial allegations of rape and torture by Hindu India. These are dutifully reported and legitimated by Indian and British journalists. The venal calibre of the Pakistani officer corps is on record in the murderous blow-by-blow directions given to the teenage killers in Mumbai during 26/11. Worse still, Chinese ambitions to create a rail link to Iran through Pakistan, and occupied Indian territories, will contribute another dimension of instability.

The most critical factor in the equation in any decision to target India will be Chinas perception of the serious economic setback unfolding in it, with the burgeoning fiscal crisis because of massive corruption and the populist misspending of the

UPA. The existence of an unprecedentedly weak national coalition and parochial regional allies will make it appear opportune to strike a dramatic blow against India. Chinese military officials have been openly discussing the right moment for teaching India a lesson. The possibility of serious economic crisis in China itself will only encourage foreign adventure, especially one that is construed as a solution to its Tibetan impasse. Chinese officials infer that without alleged Indian facilitation Tibetan discontent would evaporate. They also seem to believe that a military blow against India will force a policy re-think, ending the Dalai Lamas sojourn in India and the expulsion of its political cadre. Major diplomatic implications for attacking India should concern China, but its belligerent indifference to international opinion has already been demonstrated.

A weak Indian central government, already suffering spectacular policy paralysis and regional satraps with no interest in long-term issues, make India an inviting target for observant adversaries. In addition, financial crisis has denuded budgetary resources and worsened the fierce political competition to plunder the national purse. It will eventually provoke populist agitation once resources to bribe all and sundry are no longer available. More worryingly, recent events surrounding the Indian armed forces make one wonder how deep the discernible rot has penetrated since some senior officers appear to be emulating the ambition and greed of Indias venal political class and the rest of the country. Are Indias fighting men being led by senior officers who have begun to share the self-serving instincts of its corrupt administrative class and a political dispensation beyond redemption? The UPA and Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, presiding over this astonishing debacle will surely be remembered contemptuously as the worse thing that happened to India after independence. Their epitaph will be the absurd resolve to surrender Indian retail to foreign investors, whose international conduct bears more than a passing resemblance to marauding by the East India Company. Dr. Gautam Sen taught international political economy to graduate students for two decades at the London School of Economics & Political Science. He has published widely on the political economy of development, international trade issues, defence economics and India in scholarly

journals and newspapers.

IS | July 22, 2012 at 7:09 AM | Tags: afghan war, afghanistan, china, india, indian foreign policy,international politics, ISI, pakistan, state-sponsored terrorism, taliban, terrorism, USA | Categories:china, civil war, geopolitics, imperialism, imperialism, india, indian politics, ISI, islam, jihad, neo-colonialism, pakistan, politics, religion, taliban, terr orism, us politics | URL: http://wp.me/pEi6D-9MD Comment See all comments

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BEWARE OF LOVE JIHAD,KERALAS CHRISTIAN COUNCIL WARNS ITS FLOCK


by hinduawaken The Christian community in Kerala [ Images ] has expressed its concern about 'love jihad' which, according to the Global Council of Indian Christians, has 'victimised' 2,868 women so far. The latest case of 'love jihad' concerns a Christian woman from Kochi, who left her husband and married the driver of a school bus. She was later arrested for allegedly supplying SIM cards to Lashkar-e-Tayiba operative Thadiyantavide Nazir, who is currently in prison. Dr Sajan K George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians, says that the woman -- Deepa Cheriyan -- converted to Islam and took up the name Shahina. Deepa, whose husband was posted in Middle East, started having an affair with Naushad, who was working as a driver. When she came to India she came with two SIM cards and allegedly provided them to Nasir. Deepa Cheriyan alias Shahina was arrested in Kochi on Wednesday by a police team led by

Assistant Commissioner of Police Sunil Jacob. Dr George believes that Deepa, like many others, is a victim of 'love jihad'. WikiLeaks has published a report by United States diplomats that stated, 'Both Hindu and Christian groups have expressed fear and outrage at the plot, while Muslim groups have felt the need to defend their co-religionists against the conspiracy theorists'. The report said, 'The Commission for Social Harmony and Vigilance of the Kerala Catholic Bishops Council had reported that there had been 2,868 female victims of love jihad in Kerala between 2006 and 2009. The panel had made several recommendations to parents through its newsletter, including a recommendation to monitor children's cell-phones and computers, so that they can be better prepared to fight the phenomenon and resist charming young Muslim men involved in the scheme'. The Kerala high court had also taken note of the matter and asked the police to investigate the cases of two college-going girls, who were allegedly forced to convert to Islam after marrying Muslim men. Some police officials, political leaders and prominent members of both Hindu and Christian communities continue to suspect that 'forced conversions', backed by foreign funds, was rampant in the state. The cable, as disclosed by WikiLeaks, said that Sajan George was convinced that 'there was a concerted effort in south India by some Muslim men to get Christian women to fall in love with them in order to convert them'. According to the police in Kerala, in most cases of 'love jihad', the victims are merely used as pawns in criminal activities. Many of the victims have no idea what they are getting into and often get into lured by the young men. But the police also point out that only some -- not all -- of the nearly 2,000 recorded cases of conversion are a result of 'love jihad'.

Vicky Nanjappa
SOURCE:http://www.rediff.com/news/report/beware-of-love-jihad-keralas-christian-council-warns-

its-flock/20120720.htmBeware

hinduawaken | July 22, 2012 at 3:34 am | Categories: Uncategorized | URL: http://wp.me/pluk1-1Bw

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