Friday, February 15, 2019

Pulwama: India must redeem

Pulwama attack, snuffing out 40 lives of paramilitary personnel, marks two decades of Pakistan's unequivocal and consistent state policy to bleed India with thousand cuts. India in contrast has been equivocal and willing to fall for guiles of her western neighbor, largely under the influence of Pakistan apologists, who command disproportionate influence over national narrative. And, thus, India sees episodic furore followed by long spell of collective amnesia.

ON Thursday afternoon, India was reminded that the country has a ticking time bomb right at the top of her political map, Jammu and Kashmir. That a local militant in the ranks of Jaish e Mohammed (JeM) slipped away from the watch of hawk's eyes of intelligence sleuths only to blow away a crammed bus carrying the CRPF (Central Reserve Police Force) personnel is a deafening slap on the policy of status quoism.

India is mourning brutal killing of 40 of her brave sons in the line of duty. Hundreds of them have laid down their lives bravely in the recent times. The nation is breathing air of revenge. People are on the street. Politicians will flock to the people. And, consequently, political spectrum concurs to back government for any action against the terror attack.

India has withdrawn the most favoured nation (MFN) status to Pakistan. Certainly not the most favoured nation, Pakistan got the status in 1996 for the World Trade Organisation (WTO) obligation. It was never reciprocated, because Pakistan unlike India has clarity of purpose on her relations with the eastern neighbor. That what war couldn't achieve must be gained from Jihadists pushed into India from across the border is cast in the stone for the masters of the theocratic nation.    

PRIME Minister Narendra Modi wasn't stricken by New Delhi political bug when he checked in the seven, race course road abode of the most powerful person of the country. But he didn't remain immune for long. Soon, he began day-dreaming to emulate his icon and former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and yearned to finish his unfinished business -- to make friends with Pakistan and trade peace for Kashmir valley. 

Recurring Pakistani betrayals didn't affect Vajpayee to cease his yearning for peace with the rogue neighbor. The poet in him made Vajpayee draw the Insaniyat contour for his Kashmir outreach. Both proved mirage. People rejected his dovish outlook. New Delhi's peacenik tribe shoved Vajpayee on to the path of staus quoism. 

Vajpayee hadn't politically groomed Modi. The honours would remain with the BJP patriarch L K Advani. Yet, Modi's decisive mandate left Jammu and Kashmir untouched. The foolhardy experiment to share power with PDP (People's Democratic Front) in J&K proved an avoidable political disaster. Neither development nor the iron muscle flexed might in the northern state. Modi only watched from far distance the unabated alienation of the youth in the valley fast accepting pathological Jihadi indoctrination with great help from the social media. The BJP strategist Ram Madhav arguably blunted the Modi mandate for any decisive impact on J&K.

Worse, Modi allowed his business friends like Sajjan Jindal to further loosen screws on Pakistan after the surgical strike in the wake of 2016 Uri terror attack. The opening of Kartarpur Sahib corridor is another example of the willingness of New Delhi to fall for the guiles of Islamabad and her friends across the border. If the pressure cooker steam had boiled uninterruptedly since 2016 Pakistan would have been squirming for breath. 

Two years would have been enough time to steam-roast Pakistan -- strategically, militarily, and diplomatically. But the course was allowed to become an event, which is now celebrated in a film.

No punitive action would be enough for Pakistan. The world will not shed a drop of tear if Pakistan is struck off the map. The existence of this nation is a crime against humanity. Afghanistan is bleeding for over a decade due to Pakistan. 

Let Pakistan pay for her crimes. Let India perform another surgery on Pakistan.