"Disintegration of Pakistan - The Role of Former
"Disintegration of Pakistan - The Role of Former
"Disintegration of Pakistan - The Role of Former
Shaista Parveen2
Abstract
The Pak-USSR relations have a much checkered history. Since
independence there is an entanglement in relations of both the countries.
Unfortunately, Pakistan tilted from the very beginning towards the West and failed
to win the support of the neighboring countries. India, Afghanistan and China
were the main countries with whom initially relations were not cordial. The former
two countries never improved its relations with Pakistan however, with the
direction of USA; Pakistan played a part of facilitator between China and USA. It
was not acceptable to USSR, so it never hesitated to pressurize Pakistan for its
pro-western policies and joining of security pacts. No doubt that as a super power
USSR strengthened its relations with India and used it as a base against the pro-
western Pakistan. Joining the western security pacts and its increasing dependence
on China were the main causes for the resentment of USSR. Thats why it signed
mutual defense and security pact with India to fully equip her against Pakistan.
Pakistan also committed blunders in the formulation of its foreign policy and
avoid the principle of bilateralism. It could not maintain its non-alignment position
which caused serious threats to its security and the result was the dismemberment
of East Pakistan with the help of USSR by India, while no western super power
supported Pakistan in its war against Indian aggression.
Introduction
Pakistan Soviet Union relationship is marked more by the security
concerns of each of the two nations than any other factor. Since fifties, the friendly
relations between the two never got a chance to emerge. When the Cold War
shifted from Europe to Asia USA established her airfields in Asia in the shape of
treaty organizations such as SEATO and CENTO. Pakistan made the base camp
for American activities against the containment of Russia. 3
Pakistan needed a guarantor for her security and economic and technical
aid. Instead of USSR a war torn country, the Pakistani bureaucracy saw USA more
established and technically advanced to provide aid to Pakistan. It changed the
nature and direction of Pakistans external relations. The U-2 incident in May
1960 greatly annoyed USSR against Pakistan. To normalize the relations President
Ayub Khan visited USSR in 1965 and USSR Prime Minister Alexi Kosygin
visited Pakistan.
1
Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Peshawar.
2
Assistant Professor, Area Study Centre, Bacha Khan University, Charsadda.
3
Rouben Azizian and Peret Vasilieff, Russia and Pakistan: the Difficult path to Reproachment, Asian
Affairs: An American Review, 2003. p. 36.
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JRSP, Vol. 53, No. 1, January-June, 2016
4
Zafar Iqbal Yousafzai, Intricate Pak-US Relationship, Monthly J. World Times, Lahore: January
2015.
5
Ayaz Naseem, Pak-Soviet Relations 1947-1965 (Lahore: Progressive Publishers, 1989), pp. i-ii.
*For the Indian geographical location, population and area in 1971 see The Gazetteer of India, Vol. I
(New Delhi: 1975), p. 1. The Europa Year Book 1973 A World Survey (London: 1973), pp. 598-600.
As quoted in Dr. S.S. Bindra, (1981), Indo-Pak Relations Tashkent to Simla Agreement New Delhi:
Deep & Deep Publications, p. 17.
6
M. Ikram Rabbani, 4th edn. (1999), Pakistan Affairs Lahore: The Caravan Press, p. 394.
7
For disputes between India and Pakistan see Mehtab Akbar Rashidi, Indo-Pak Relations Karachi:
Pakistan Study Centre, University of Jamshoro, 1988), pp. 13-20. For initial differences and the issues
of colonial legacy see Dr. S.S. Bindra, Indo-Pak Relations Tashkent to Simla Agreement (New Delhi:
Deep & Deep Publications, 1981), pp. 84-102.
172
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
defense.8 This sense of insecurity compelled her to seek a safe and reliable
guarantor.
8
Ibid., pp. 20-23. For Operation Gibraltar and operation Grand Salam in Kashmir and Pakistani
infiltration in Kashmir; a critical position of the Pakistan army and the pressure on President Ayub and
his cabinet see Altaf Gauhar, Ayub Khan Pakistan First Military Ruler (Lahore: Sang-e-Meel
Publications, 1993), pp. 313-332, 335-362.
9
Naseem, pp. 33.
10
Geoffrey Wheeler, Soviet Publications on India and Pakistan. Asian Review, Vol. LIV, 197,
January 1958, p. 8. For the Russian comments on the partition of India see Ragunath Ram, Soviet
Policy Towards Pakistan (New Delhi: S. Chand & Co., 1983), pp. 15-16. For Stalin criticism of
Pakistan see Rashidi, pp. 47-48.
11
Rabbani, p. 395. Henceforth.
12
For cynical remarks of Stalin about the Two Nation Theory see Ram, p. 8. Ram also notes that
even some Western scholars took a similar view, for instance Hans. J. Morgenthau in The Impasse of
American Foreign Policy, states, Pakistan is not a nation and hardly a state. It has no justification in
history, ethnic origin, language, civilization or the consciousness of those who make, up its population.
They have no interest in common save one: fear of Hindu domination. It is to that fear and to nothing
else, that Pakistan owes its existence, and thus for its survival as an independent stateIt is hard to see
how anything except a miracle, or else a revival of religious fanaticism, will assure Pakistans future.
pp. 260-62. See Ram, pp. 66-67, e.n. 25.
13
Naseem, pp. 36-37.
*For the economy of Pakistan which were occupied by the rich families who rose to the decision-
making positions. For instance Habib Rahim Rahimtoola, al-Haj M.A.H. Isphani, A. Dawood, H. Ali
Mohammad, B.M. Idrees, A.Salam, A. Rushdi etc., for more details about these business communities
see K.B. Saeed, (1980), Politics in Pakistan: Nature and Director of Change New York: Praeger, pp.
25-26, f.n., 73.
14
Alan Campbell Jhonson, Mission with Mountbatten (Lahore: Sang-e-Meel Publications, n.d.), p. 114.
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JRSP, Vol. 53, No. 1, January-June, 2016
on 7th June 1949.15 However, due to a powerful **clique in the foreign office the
visit was sabotaged.16 The date was on the Soviet suggestion postponed from
August 20th to November 7th, 1949.17 It transformed the Russians earlier coolness
into indifference. Besides, the clamp down [popularly known as Rawalpindi
Conspiracy case]* against the Communist Party of Pakistan on 9th March 1951
was also a cause of detest for the USSR. It was projected and publicized widely so
as not only to cover the pro-American activities but also to suppress the opposition
specially the communists who were opposed to the Pak-American military
collaboration. However, recently, the former foreign minister Akram Zaki revealed
that actually USSR invited Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan on 14th August which
was declined as Independence Day of Pakistan. However, the USSR Government
was informed that the visit should be scheduled for ten days and the prime
minister also desired to visit the Muslim Central Asian states, it was the main point
on which the USSR Government did not show consent.18
On the other hand, the acceptance of American invitation by Liaquat Ali
Khan cast doubts on her non-alignment policy.19 Actually it was due to the tussle
of two pro-west and pro-socialist groups in the foreign office with their personal
interests.20 Pakistan disinterested with the establishment of friendly relations with
Soviet Union. On April 13th, 1948, Pakistani foreign minister Sir Zafarullah Khan
in New York proposed to the deputy foreign minister of USSR Andri Gromyko for
the exchange of ambassadors, after seventeen months, Pakistan named its first
ambassador to the USSR. On 21st November 1949, USSR announced M. Ivan
Nikolaevich Bakutin as ambassador to Pakistan.21 But it delayed till 15th March
1950, when the said ambassador at the Soviet embassy in London took charge as
the Soviet ambassador to Pakistan.22 A negative approach was that Sir Zafarullahs
remarks on delay in exchange of envoys with the Soviet Union on the flimsy
excuse of shortage of housing in Karachi.23 Another call for anxiety for the USSR
was the bureaucratic troika** assured USA for their vital role against communism,
15
Naseem, p. 44.
16
G.W. Choudhry, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the Major Powers: Politics of a Divided sub-
Continent (Karachi, n.d.), p. 13.
**Zafarullah, Ghulam Muhammad and Mr. Ikramullah Foreign Secretary. This clique was of the view
that Pakistan was in dire need of both economic and military assistance, neither of which could be
expected from the Soviet Union at that time. However, this clique neglected that due to industrial and
agrarian might Russia was mzore suited to the need of Pakistan than USA. The later events showed that
how despite the coolness of Pakistan, Russia advanced her technical support to Pakistan in the period of
strained relations with USSR.
*For details of this Conspiracy and the activities of the Communist Party in Pakistan see Ram, pp. 21-
22. Mohammad Ayub Khan, Friends Not Masters A Political Autobiography (Karachi: Oxford
University Press, 1967), pp. 37-38.
17
Ibid., pp. 13-14.
18
The Sunday Magazine, Aaj, (4 October, 2014), Peshawar, p. 5.
19
Mushtaq Ahmad, Foreign Policy of Pakistan Karachi, p. 63. See also S. Irtiza Hussain, Time for A
New Consensus (Lahore: Progressive Publishers, 1963), pp. 102-103. Letter to the Daily Dawn,
January 24, 1986, Karachi. Letter to the Daily the Muslim, January 24, 1986, Islamabad.
20
Naseem, pp. 17-18.
21
Hafeez-ur-Rehman Khan, Pakistans Relations with the USSR, Pakistan Horizon, Vol. XIV, 4,
1961, p. 33. For Ayyub Khan views about the visit of Liaquat Ali Khan to Moscow, see Mohammad
Ayub Khan, Friends Not Masters A Political Autobiography, (Karachi: Oxford University Press,
1967), p. 168.
22
Ibid.
23
Naseem, p. 39.
174
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
the Quaid himself while receiving the credentials of the newly arrived American
ambassador Paul H. Alling, hinted at the Soviet activities in the northern parts of
Pakistan.24 Due to this turn down of Stalins invitation and acceptance of the US
invitation in the mid 1950s the Kremlin leaders recognized that the best way to
penalize Pakistan was to support her adversary, India.25 So, the anti-Communist
environment was there in the administration of Government of Pakistan.
24
R.S. Vankataramani, The American Role in Pakistan (Lahore: Vanguard, 1984), p. 44. It is said that
even before the partition Quaid-i-Azam was aspiring and thus working to get the US attention and aid
specially arms. The Indian writer documents that two months after the partition he requested the
Americans for financial assistance over a period of five years. The request related to US$ 170,000,000
for army, US $ 75,000,000 for the Air Force and US $ 60,000,000 for the navy. For more details in this
regard see Quaids quest for American Arms Ibid., p. 1-31.
**Ghulam Mohammad, Zafarullah and Firoz Khan Noon.
25
Chodhry, p. 18.
26
Mahboob A. Popatia, Pakistans Relations With The Soviet Union 1947-1979 (Karachi: Pakistan
Study Centre, 1988), pp. 23-25.
27
Khan, p. 116. For the reason of USA an observer in the Pact because of the strong opposition of
Egyptian President Jamal Naser, Ibid., see p. 154. To the Muslim world the Christian world impelled to
help the Muslim world against the threat of Communism. USA wanted to establish counterpoise to
Communism in the Middle East. Ibid., p. 154.
28
Gauhar, pp. 196. Henceforth.
*The Soviets wanted to give the national bourgeoisie of Third World countries, an understanding that
they did not want to force communism on them but wanted to move them towards progressive social
change. They under the new leadership countered the American policy of Broad basing the regimes
by whatever methods available and suitable to them. For instance in India they came up with aid either
for industrialization, which was not forthcoming in India domestically, or from the Western bloc. In
Afghanistan, they catered aid to the preference of the King and his council of ministers. On elite level
geo-political and strategic interests were used selectively as in the case of Soviet support to India and
Afghanistan on Kashmir and Pushtoonistan issues respectively once the United States brought the Cold
War into the containment ring through its global military alliance system in the mid-fifties. For the
change of the shift in the policy of the USSR under Nikita Khrushchev towards the Third World, see
Choudhry, p. 18. For Pak-Afghan relations and the Pakhtunistan issue see also Khan, pp. 174-76.
**SEATO initially called Manila Pact. There were eleven articles in this Pact. The countries signing
the Pact included USA, UK, France, Thailand, the Philippines, Australia, and New Zealand. It is
significant to note that Pakistan also signed in May 1954 Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement with
the United States.
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***In Baghdad Pact, the countries were U.K. Turkey, Iran, Pakistan and Iraq. But due to the revolution
in Iraq in 1958, she left this pact and later on, it was given the name of CENTO. It is interesting to note
that USA was not its member but closely associated with it from its inception. In that period, Pakistan
was associated with the United States through not one, but four mutual security arrangements. In this
sense, she was sometimes regarded as Americas most allied ally in Asia. She was the only Asian
country to join both SEATO and CENTO.
29
Gauhar, p. 112. Ayub visit to USA in April 1958 to secure military aid on a long-term basis .See
Ibid., p. 115.
30
Khan, p. 117.
31
Ibid., pp. 171-173..
32
Ibid.,p. 132.
33
Ibid., p. 156.
34
Rashidi, p. 49.
35
Ibid., p. 50. See also Popatia, pp. 84-85.
36
M. Raziullah Azmi, Pakistans Soviet Policy: One Step Froward: Two Steps Back, Asian Profile,
vol. 15, 2, April 1987, p. 169.
*The base at Badhber, near Peshawar, had been leased out to the US in 1959. For a detail of the U-2
Spy Mission and the analysis of this incident see The New Times, July 4, 1947. As quoted in S. M.
Burke, Pakistan's Foreign Policy An Historical Analysis (London: University Press, 1973), p. 195.
See also f.n. of page 196. pp. 97-98.
176
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
this treaty would not be renewed,37 and also confessed that in the U-2 incident, we
were clearly at fault.38
37
Gauhar, pp. 196-97. See Safdar Mahmood, Pakistan Divided, (Lahore: Ferozsons Ltd., n.d), p. 160.
*It is significant to note that the clashes between the Indians and Pakistanis on the ceasefire line in
Kashmir had greatly increased during 1964, and still more during the first half of 1965.
38
Khan, p. 171.
39
Ibid., p. 169.
40
For the fear of USSR against China and the Chinese apprehension about the Soviet might see Khan,
pp. 172-73. Gauhar, pp. 291-92.
41
Gauhar, p. 294. For the settlement of the Run of Kutch dispute with India and the Indian defeat in
event pressurized her Prime Minister Shastri for adventure to take revenge from Pakistan. See Rashidi,
pp. 20-21.
42
Rashidi, p. 21.
43
Rashidi, p. 22. For ceasefire acceptance and Ayub, Bhutto and Air Marshal Nur Khan hurry to accept
it see Gauhar, pp. 355-56.
44
Ibid., pp. 354-364. For the 11 articles text of the Tashkent Declaration see Naseem, pp. 236-39.
*The reason for the selection of Tashkent was that due to severe snowfall and cold weather in Moscow
and Kremlin it was thought fit to held a Summit Conference in a place where the weather would be
pleasant and the second reason was that the Central Asian State Uzbekistan had a historical political
and intellectual link and influence over India so it was considered as the best place for this Conference.
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On 1st January 1966, Ayub took off from Peshawar for Kabul en route to
Tashkent, and reached Tashkent on 3rd January. The inaugural session started on
4th January and on 5th January, he met with Shastri. On 6th January Ayub met with
Kosygin and received the Soviet made draft for the agreement between the two
countries. On 8th January, all contact between the two delegations had ceased. On
9th January, Kosygin once again met with Ayub, it was this meeting which decided
the fate of Tashkent Conference and the future course of events in Pakistan.
Kashmir was not included and Kosygin told Ayub that your foreign minister Mr.
Bhutto assured us before the Conference in Moscow that Kashmir will not be
made the decisive point in these negotiations. The nine-point declaration proposed
by Kosygin was signed at a formal ceremony on 10th January, there were no secret
protocols, appendices, or letters annexed to the Tashkent Declaration. 45 Kosygin
also gave Ayub an understanding that the Soviet Union would drop its posture of
the support to Afghanistan on Pakhtunistan issue. 46 It is also of much significance
that on 9th January Kosygin for the first time stated, The Soviet Union appreciates
that a dispute exists in Kashmirof course there is a dispute. 47 The Soviet
statesman, in order to bring the Indians down, suggested to his Indian counterpart
that the Soviet Union might not always be in a position to support India.48 USSR
wanted to lower the prestige of Communist China in the eyes of Pakistan;
therefore, she ultimately made it successful.49 USSR also wanted to declare herself
as a gospel of peace in Asia.50
45
Ibid., p. 379-88. For these Nine Points see also Mujtaba Razvi, The Frontiers of Pakistan A Study
of Frontier Problems in Pakistans Foreign Policy (Karachi: National Publishing House Ltd, 1971), pp.
283-85.
*For propaganda against Ayub by Bhutto about this secret protocol see Gauhar, 393-94 .
46
Ram, pp. 143-145. Choudhry, pp. 52-53.
47
Choudhry, p. 52.
48
Salman Taseer, Bhyutto: A Political Biography (Amherst: Syracuse, 1979), p. 66.
49
Bindra, pp. 62-63. For the reaction on the declaration of Tashkent of Indian Parliament and Pakistan
National Assembly, see Ibid., pp. 65-68. What Pakistan gained from this Declaration see Burke,
Pakistan Foreign Policy pp. 352-53.
50
Ibid., p. 107.
51
Syed Rifaat Hussain, Pak-Soviet Relations since 1947-1984: A dissenting Appraisal Strategic
Studies, Vol. X,3, Spring 1987, pp. 64-88.
52
Jonathan Steele, Limits of Soviet Power: the Kremlins foreign Policy from Brezhnev to Chernenko
(London: Penguin, 1985), p. 74.
53
Gauhar, p. 348. See also G.W. Choudhury, The Last Days of United Pakistan, (London: C. Hurst &
Co. 1972), p. 203-206.
178
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
54
Ibid., pp. 416-19. One of the main reason was that Ayub was deeply upset when the US stopped the
supply of arms to Pakistan during the 1965 war, and when the Americans declined to resume military
assistance in April 1967, he was left with no option but to look toward the Soviet Union for military aid
and to expand Pakistans relations with China. For Ayub visit to USSR see also Popatia, pp. 96-97.
55
Popatia, p. 98.
56
Choudhury, pp. 63-64.
179
JRSP, Vol. 53, No. 1, January-June, 2016
57
Ibid., p. 61.
58
Safdar, p. 159.
59
See Popatia, p. 84.
60
Gauhar, p. 294.
61
Popatia, pp. 89-90.
62
Ibid., p. 93.
63
Vijay Sen Budhraj, Moscow and the Birth of Bangladesh, Asian Survey, vol. 13, No. 5, May 1973.
p. 487. Also see Chodhury, pp. 63-68.
180
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
pay the heavy political price for the Russian arms, uncertain in quantity and poor
in quality. Pakistans rejection of the new Soviet proposals in Asia against China
put an end to the short-lived period of so-called friendly relations between
Moscow and Islamabad (1965-1970).64 In July 1969, the Soviet Ambassador
discussed the proposals for collective security in Asia with Yahya Khan as well as
the Pakistan Foreign Secretary. It cleared to Pakistan that the scheme was directed
against China.65 Russians felt disgusted with the refusal of Pakistan and after the
Indo-Soviet Treaty, the Soviet press and radio unleashed a propaganda campaign.
When hostilities broke out, Moscow held Pakistan responsible and threatened that
she could not remain indifferent as these developments affected her own security.
Other countries were warned to stay out of war, a warning that was obviously
directed against China.66
64
Rashidi, p. 51.
65
Popatia., p. 100. See Mehrunnisa Ali, Foreign Policy of Pakistan (Karachi: Oxford University Press,
1999), pp. 54. Mahmood, p. 162.
66
Mahmood, p. 163.
67
Ibid., p. 101.
68
Ibid., p. 113-14.
69
See Rounaq Jehan, Pakistan Failure in National Integration (New York: Columbia University Press,
1972), pp. 4-8.
181
JRSP, Vol. 53, No. 1, January-June, 2016
nation and deeply alienated East Pakistanis.70 There was a great economic
disparity and between 50 to 70 percent of the nations foreign exchange earnings,
but the Bengalis received only 25 to 30 percent of Pakistans total income. 71 All
the banks and insurance assets were controlled by West Pakistan.72 Even in the
1965 Pak-India War the Eastern Wing was left without any defense, and this sense
of insecurity greatly perturbed the Bengalis. During the general elections of
December 1970 Awami League (AL) got a clear cut majority in the National
Assembly with 98.4 percent of the elected seats allotted to East Pakistan, in West
Pakistan the PPP captured only 50 percent of the total seats allotted to this wing.
This victory of the AL threatened the power position of West Pakistan military and
economic elites and also the continuation of economic benefits derived from East
Pakistan, which later on led to a war in December 1971 between India and
Pakistan.73 During that period of crisis on 28 March 1971, counsel-General of the
Soviet Union at Karachi conveyed Prime Minister Kosygins oral message to
Yahya Khan expressing Soviet apprehensions. On March 31st both the houses of
Indian Parliament passed a resolution expressing wholehearted sympathy and
support for the people of East Bengal and calling on Pakistan to put a stop to the
systematic massacres it was perpetrating against them.74 On 2 April, President
Nikolai Podgorny sent a message to Yahya Khan stating that his country was
greatly alarmed to receive the reports that the political dialogue had been broken
off and the Military Administration had resorted to extreme measures and
used armed forces against the people of East Pakistan. When USSR was reminded
her harsh measures taken in Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Central Asian
Republics, it displeased USSR and the cordiality of the late 1960s was replaced by
coolness in the relations.75 The result was that on 22 November 1971 Indian forces
crossed the international frontier in the eastern sector and on 3 December armed
hostilities broke out on the western front as well.76
How much the Russians were interested in the fall of Dacca, it can be
realized from the fact that when in November 1971, the Indian forces crossed the
East Pakistan border, the USSR chose to remain silent. Its first public official
reaction to the fighting came twelve days later when fighting had escalated to the
West Pakistan borders.77
70
Ibid., pp. 12-14.
71
Ibid., pp. 68-89. For the Government of Pakistans Policy of discrimination towards the Eastern
Wing, see Bindra, pp. 121-26.
72
Ibid., pp. 91-108.
73
Bindra, p. 119.
74
Sir Morrice James, p. 180.
75
Popatia, pp. 109-111.
76
Ibid., p. 114.
77
Mehrunnisa Ali, Readings in Pakistan Foreign Policy 1971-1998 7th Edtn. (Karachi: Oxford
University Press, 2010), p. 26.
182
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
Soviet Union is not only a world superpower but also an Asian power. Second,
reducing and limiting Washingtons influence. Third, that of containing the
influence of China.78 By refusing to comply with the crude Russian pressures,
Pakistan had to pay a heavy price. Soviet Russias relations with India grew
stronger day by day. By signing the 20-year treaty of peace, friendship, and
cooperation in August 1971 with India, the Soviet Union gave almost a blank
cheque to New Delhi.79 It was signed on 9th August80 and there were twelve
articles of the treaty.81 USSR also wanted to wean away Pakistan from China and
US influence. USSR was much shocked when Pakistan refused to join its Asian
military pact. For this reason, she fully extended her support to India and the
Soviet military and diplomatic backing brought a full confidence for India to
drown the two nation theory in the Indian Ocean as Indian prime minister Indira
Gandhi made a false notion.
The Kissingers visit greatly perturbed USSR and India therefore, on 9 th
August 1971 Soviet Union and India signed a Treaty of Friendship and
Cooperation in New Delhi, which had been under consideration since Brezhnev
floated the idea of a collective security system in Asia but which India was
reluctant to conclude. Then Indira Gandhi visited Moscow on 27-29 September
1971 to coordinate Indian and the Soviet policies and to ensure further supply of
the Soviet arms. The joint statement issued at the end of the visit expressed the
concern of the two sides over the grave situation which has arisen on the
Hindustan subcontinent as a result of the recent events in East Pakistan. This visit
ensured deliveries of large quantities of arms to India. She also condemned the
trial of Mujib by Government of Pakistan.82 It is significant to note that under this
treaty USSR fully supported India. On 4th December, a Soviet spokesman
disclosed that Mr. Kosygin did not plan to mediate between India and Pakistan as
he did in 1965-6, since the Indo-Soviet Treaty precluded him from doing so.83
Under cover of that treaty, USSR threw caution to the winds about any
reaction of Pakistan and China and warned Indias unfriendly neighbors Pakistan
and China that they would in future have to reckon with the Indo-Soviet Treaty
with all its implications. The treaty was signed to meet the threat of war from
Pakistan and to find a solution of the East Pakistan crisis. It is further noted that
India wanted that at the time of war with Pakistan, she should be getting military
supplies from the USSR and her support in the UN. The USSR indeed supported
Indias stand in the United Nations after the declaration of war on 3 rd December
between India and Pakistan.84
78
Robert C. Horn, Soviet Indian Relations: Issues and Influence. (New York: Praeger, 1982), p. 65.
79
For the text of the agreement see Keesings Contemporary Archives, London, August 21-28, 1971, p.
24773.
80
Budhraj, op.cit.
81
Dr. S.S. Bindra, Indo-Pak Relations Tashkent to Simla Agreement. (New Delhi: Deep & Deep
Publications, 1981), p. 140. See also Sir Morrice James, Pakistan Chronicle, (London: Hurst &
Company, 1992), p. 182.
82
Popatia, pp. 112-13. For this visit and the pressing of Indira Gandhi on Kremlin to for the urgency,
See Bindra, p. 145.
83
Ali, p. 26. Henceforth.
84
Bindra, pp. 141-142. Henceforth.
183
JRSP, Vol. 53, No. 1, January-June, 2016
85
Ragunath Ram, p. 222.
86
Ibid., p. 112.
87
See Bindra, p. 183.
88
Popatia, p. 114.
89
Mahmood, pp. 162-63.
184
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
Soviet confrontation. Secondly, the USSRs old dream of establishing naval bases
in the Indian Ocean was likely to be realized. Thirdly, with the fall of East
Pakistan, the USSR expected to get firm footing in South-East Asia.90
USSR wanted to teach a lesson to Pakistan becoming the base for the
Western Imperialism and to realize the importance of Russia. We see that after
August 1971 relations between the USSR and Pakistan, which had considerably
cooled since April 1971, thenceforth deteriorated rapidly. The Russian government
suspended its economic aid to Pakistan and the Russian experts working on
various projects left the country. The Soviet import organization advised the
Afghan Bank-i-Milli not to permit any movement of Pakistani goods into
Afghanistan, which serves as the overland transit route for Pakistan-USSR trade.
Sea trade was also suspended and after November 1971, no Soviet ship came to
pick up cargo from Karachi.91
One can realize the grave involvement of USSR in East Pakistan crisis
from the answer of an Indian in which he replied that Pakistan had become an
undependable ally of any power which wants to pursue the policy of containing
Chinese influence in this part of the world. Kosygin supported the Bangladesh
movement despite its legal and theoretical snags because he must have thought
that hebacking a winning horse. The Bangladesh was also interlinked with the
Sino-Soviet rivalry in South and South-east Asia. It also had a bearing on the
strategic and global competition in the Third World between the two super-
powers.It can also be traced from the old Russian documents that the Soviet
government shared the old czarist interests in the Persian-Indian Ocean area. The
Kremlin leaders throughout 1969 and 1970 were assiduously working for some
economic, political and military grouping with the containment of China as its
object.92 What irritated USSR was that Pakistan expressed its inability to join its
security pact for south Asian region which was basically for the containment of
China. It brought to an end the brief interval of so-called friendly relations
between Moscow and Islamabad.
90
Ibid., p. 164. See also Ali, p. 24.
91
Ali, pp. 26-27.
92
As quoted in G.W. Choudhury, United Pakistan, pp. 204-208.
93
Ibid., pp. 24-25. See Bindra, p. 163.
185
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94
Popatia, pp. 115-16. Eleven members voted for the resolution. Britain and France abstained. The
USSR and Poland cast negative votes. The Soviet Ambassador to the UN Jacob Malik called US
resolution a one-sided and unacceptable draft. He said that its approach was to shift responsibility
from the right to wrong. He, without naming China, attacked her for the position, which she had taken.
With this, the Chinese Ambassador to the UN Huang Hua charged both USSR and the India saying that
because of encouragement given by social imperialists India had committed aggression on Pakistan.
For the complete, process of the General Assembly and the Security Council See Bindra, pp. 189-94.
95
Ali, p. 25.
96
Bindra, p. 181.
97
Safdar, p. 164.
186
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
would take to reach Dacca. The USSR was so deeply concerned about the slow
progress of the Indian forces in completing the operation that she sent her first
Deputy Foreign Minister to Delhi during the war. He was convinced that the
morale of Pakistani forces had been broken and that the surrender was only a
matter of three or four days. The Soviet Union was, therefore, rightly accused of
being the Real Director of the Bangladesh Force.98
During the war when the fall of Dhaka seemed imminent, a Russian
delegation headed by the First Deputy Foreign Minister Kuzntsov arrived in New
Delhi to work out the organization of the Bangladesh Government. Not only that
but when the news of the USA naval fleet aired and entered in the Indian Ocean on
14th December 1971, the Soviet Union adopted a strategy of introducing its own
naval presence in the Indian Ocean. For this purpose she gained access to the
Islands of Mauritius and Socotra in Southern Yemen, secured bunkering and other
naval facilities in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and established a supply
depot and training mission at Visakapatnam.99 On 14th December, D.P. Dhar
visited Kremlin and remained with Kosygin for two and half hours and discussed
the latest situation in East Pakistan. The Soviet Deputy Minister, Nikolai Firyubin
assured Dhar that: in these threatened hours, the Soviet Union, just as it has
always been will remain your sincere friend. 100 The USSR played its ignominious
role in this crisis. According to Chinese government The Soviet Government has
played a shameful role in this war of aggression launched by India against
Pakistan. The whole world has seen clearly that is was the backstage manager of
the Indian expansionists.101 It was due to this role of USSR that Mujib felt it
proper to pay his thanksgiving first visit as the premier outside the subcontinent to
USSR. 102 Sheikh Mujib requested his host to dispatch a salvage team to clear
mines and sunken vessels from the port of Chittagong and Cjalna and make them
navigable again.103
98
Ibid., p. 165.
99
Ali, p. 31.
100
See Bindra, p. 182.
101
Choudhury, United Pakistan, p. 216.
102
New York Times, March 6, 1972.
103
New Times, Moscow, No. 37, 1972 as referred in S.M. Burke, The Postwar Diplomacy of the Indo-
Pakistani War of 1971, Asian Survey, vol. 13, No. 11 (Nov. 1973), p. 1048. Also see USSR-Bangla
Desh joint communique published by TASS, 4 March 1972 as mentioned by Mehrunnisa Ali (ed.),
(2010) Reading in Pakistan Foreign Policy 19711998, (Karachi: Oxford University Press), p. 28.
104
Rashidi, p. 52.
187
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Conclusion
Pakistan in particular, has failed to evolve a stable policy towards the
Soviet Union based on its own merits, and taking account of Pakistans national
interests and geopolitical realities in the region. Rather, it has allowed its Soviet
policy to be decisively influenced by American policy vis-a-vis South Asia and the
USSR, and by the Soviet role in countries neighboring Pakistan. Moscow on the
other hand, has attached high priority to its relations with it, and eagerly
reciprocated any friendly overtures emanating from Pakistan.
On the other hand, the soviet approach to its relations with Pakistan, both
in historical and contemporary contexts seems to have been marked by a high
degree of pragmatism, which unfortunately has not been matched by Pakistan.
Their own national and security interests geared policies of both Pakistan and the
Soviet Union towards each other. Soviet Union xenophobic due to its historical
experiences and the containment policy of the United States and the Western bloc,
and Pakistan, eager to safeguard its freshly won independence and ambitions to
develop as fast as possible, did whatever they could to achieve their respective
aims and objectives.
However, Pakistans extreme pro-Western support annoyed most of the
Islamic countries beside China. USA was not much keen in the development of
cordial relations with Pakistan. On the other hand Pakistan forgot to afford the
hostilities of the big powers like USSR in the neighbor. The hostile attitude of
India joined with USSRs annoyance made it an extremely venomous combination
against Pakistan which it had to endure sooner or later. Instead of playing safe and
exploiting the USSRs interests in Pakistans own national interest it over
committed itself with the US led Western block and in this way put itself in an
extremely precarious condition within its own region. Pakistan did not adopt a
balanced foreign policy and tried to get the US support in extremely risky
conditions that ultimately resulted in irreparable loss.
Pakistan did not realize the gravity of the situation during the 1971 War
and again asked USA for help which she did not consider. On the other side,
USSR provided full support to India on every platform. Still Pakistan experiencing
the old wines in the new bottles but the result is the same.
105
Popatia, p. 124.
188
Disintegration of Pakistan The Role of Former Union of Soviet Socialist ..
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