[Turkey] had lost her leadership of Islam and Islam might
now look to leadership to the Muslims of Russia. This would be a most
dangerous attraction. There was therefore much to be said for the
introduction of a new Muslim power supported by the science of Britain….
It seemed to some of us very necessary to place Islam between Russian
Communism and Hindustan.
- Sir Francis Tucker, General Officer-Commanding of the
British Indian Eastern Command.
A little over half a century on, driven by the forces
unleashed by the tragic events of September 11, 2001, Imperial Britain's
Pakistan project is being reinvented. It is hard to imagine a more
unlikely Caliph than Pakistan's President, but that is precisely what the
United States of America (USA) seems determined to anoint him.
Pakistan, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told General Pervez
Musharraf at their recent meeting in Islamabad, was "a model country for
the Muslim world". Among other things, she praised Pakistan's President
and Chief of Army Staff for his "bold vision for South Asia and
initiatives to promote peace and stability in the region". Speaking in New
Delhi, she emphasized the need to help Nepal "get back on a democratic
path" - but evidently felt no need to suggest something of the kind might
be desirable in Pakistan as well. If the United States felt any ire at
Musharraf's inflammatory proclamation on his official website that the
Kargil war "proved a lesson to the Indians", it was not mentioned, at
least in public.
All of which makes it necessary to ask the question: just what is the
USA's own vision of stability in South Asia - and how precisely does it
mean to go about achieving it?
Casual readers of media reportage on Rice's recent visit to India,
Pakistan and Afghanistan might be forgiven for thinking that the USA's
principle interests in the region are arms sales and Iran, in that order.
Much of the public discourse of Rice's visit focused on the prospect of
the possible sales of F-16 aircraft to Pakistan and the Patriot II
anti-ballistic missile defense system to India. The United States'
concerns about the construction of a gas pipeline from Iran to India,
passing through Pakistan, ranked second in terms of the space it occupied.
Little was said, unless it figured behind closed doors, about continued
terrorism directed at India, nuclear proliferation, the persistence of
jihadi infrastructure in Pakistan, and, yes, democracy.
F-16 aircraft and missile defense issues are, of course, important, and
have a vital bearing on the security environment in South Asia. Neither,
however, is a cause of instability; both are, rather, a consequence of a
long-running disputation between India and Pakistan. Historically, the
United States has seen such sales, or their denial, as a means of
addressing the security anxieties of the antagonists - principally, of
Pakistan. It is quite obvious that the strategy, if it can be called one,
has failed. The provision of weapons to Pakistan did not deter it from
initiating wars in 1965 and 1999; nor, notably, have its nuclear weapons
and missile capabilities meant an end to its fears about India's superior
conventional capabilities. A few F-16s or a missile defense system will
change little.
What, then, are we too make of Rice's pronouncements? Part of the problem
is the Washington, DC, policy establishment's mode of understanding South
Asia. Pakistan is cast within the frame of what is called 'The Muslim
World', and the United States' relations with that country seen as
integral to engagement with other countries where the bulk of the
population happens to be of Islamic persuasion. Much policy production in
the United States rests on the a priori assumption that an entity
called 'The Muslim World' in fact exists, and that the cooptation of
elements of this transnational entity is central to containing terrorism.
Among the key corollaries of this credo is the notion that Islamist
terrorism is the product of a confrontation between two immutable
adversaries, 'the West' and 'the Muslims'.
In this vision, Musharraf's 'enlightened moderation' is the key not just
to securing a purely tactical set of interests - in Afghanistan, for
example - but to a far larger ideological project. Perhaps as a
consequence, Musharraf has never been pressed to explain the content of
his 'enlightened moderation': the words themselves, evidently, are
adequate. In the vision of the United States' policy establishment, this
enlightened moderation stands opposed to the Islamist postures of al-Qaeda,
notwithstanding the considerable evidence that exists of cooperation and
accommodation between the two. In essence, the United States has thrown
its weight behind the fabrication of an ummah, or community of
believers, from a welter of peoples different, often adversarial,
histories, cultures and interests. It is a project that closely resembles
that of the Islamists, even if its projected outcome is, of course, very
different.
Where might India fit into this vision? Although Rice's area of scholarly
expertise is the former East Bloc, she had articulated at least the
outlines of a position on South Asia before her current assignment.
Writing in the journal Foreign Affairs in 2000, Rice suggested that
the United States ought to "pay closer attention to India's role in the
regional balance". "There is a strong tendency", she pointed out,
"conceptually to connect India with Pakistan and to think only of Kashmir
or the nuclear competition between the two states. But India is [also] an
element in China's calculation, and it should be in America's, too. India
is not a great power yet, but it has the potential to emerge as one."
Put simply, Rice and the policy establishment she represents see India as
a potential strategic counterweight to China. Many in India, notably
former Union Defence Minister George Fernandes, have characterized its
relationship with the United States in much the same terms. This position,
it needs to be noted, is not new. Until the United States began a cautious
détente with China in the 1970s, it underwrote Indian covert and
sub-conventional military activities targeting Tibet. Among other things,
the United States supplied aircraft and technological equipment to what
became the Aviation Research Centre of the Research and Analysis Wing, and
provided training and weapons to the ethnic-Tibetan irregular force called
Establishment 22, which fought with great distinction in the 1971 war.
It is hard to miss the limitations of an India-United States relationship
founded mainly on a common set of concerns about China, however. Speaking
prior to her arrival in New Delhi, Rice placed emphasis on "opportunities
- economic, in terms of security, in terms of energy cooperation - that we
can pursue with India." The United States' alarm at the prospect of an
Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline illustrates the problems that arise from the
fact that India must of necessity look west and north, and not just to its
east. On the face of it, the sharing of assets between the three countries
would be a factor for stability, something the United States has a common
interest in. Criticism of the pipeline project has mainly emanated from a
section of analysts in India, where some see enriching a hostile Islamabad
as an exercise in folly, and not in the United States. US reactions to the
proposed pipeline deal, however, show the ways in which concerns about
West Asia, in fact, shape policy towards South Asia, just as they did a
half-century ago - and the problems that inevitably arise.
Almost unnoticed, Rice's visit marks a step towards what critics in both
India and Pakistan have long demanded - the end of hyphenation, or the
removal of the implicit linkages of policy on one country and policy
towards the other. Yet, Pakistan is not just part of 'The Muslim World',
whatever this might be, nor India merely a piece of a non-Muslim Asia that
has China at its center. The destinies of both countries are intimately
linked. The future of their relationship depends on Pakistan's ability to
re-imagine itself as a secular, progressive and democratic state, not as a
carriage-bearer for an Islamist ideological enterprise. Should Pakistan be
encouraged to move in this direction, India would benefit - and so too
would the authoritarian states to its west. The administration of
President George Bush has repeatedly proclaimed its commitment to the
processes of democracy and yet seems curiously bereft of the conceptual
wherewithal to bring this about.