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CHAOS IN SOUTH ASIA - On the Brink.
Last posted:
2006-Dec-13
South Asia continues to be buffeted by political turmoil fuelled by separatist or religious insurgencies, which are severely weakening government control across the region
Moves by China and the US to gain influence in the region are regarded as potentially explosive
South Asia's military, political, economic and social problems defy easy solution and could descend into escalating conflict, reports Rahul Bedi
Nearly six decades after colonial rule ended across South Asia in the late 1940s, the region's seven states remain in restive ferment.
Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka continue to be wracked by political volatility, insurgencies or separatist and radical religious movements of varying intensity that make the sub-continent amongst the world's more volatile areas.
Collectively, these countries also face daunting environmental and social challenges, exacerbated by increasing economic disparities as growth rates rise, negatively affecting their deteriorating security situation. Security officials claim that severe poverty in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan has made it easier for radical groups to 'hire' people to hurl grenades for as little as INR1,000 (USD22).
A steady collapse of governance - either through a lack of democracy, dysfunctional democracy or both - and the resultant loss of control by individual governments over large swathes of their territory has hindered uniform progress and heightened regional insecurity.
The Maldives, a collection of some 1,200 mostly uninhabited islands in the Indian Ocean southwest of India, face environmental apocalypse: they are acutely vulnerable to a rise in sea levels related to global warming. None of the islands are more than 1.8 m above sea level and it is feared that, as ocean waters rise, the Maldives will simply disappear.
Further afield in Afghanistan, the bitter seesaw conflict and the re-emergence of the Taliban militia are adversely affecting neighboring states, particularly Pakistan and, to a lesser extent, India.
Analysts predict that the not entirely implausible prospect of an onslaught on Kabul by a re-grouped Taliban in 2007 could bring significant chaos to the area. While current indications do not point to domestic pressure forcing the near-term withdrawal of either the US or the multinational International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), this cannot entirely be ruled out as new political configurations and personalities assume office in the US at the start of 2007.
Significantly, Bert Koenders, vice-president of NATO's Parliamentary Assembly Political Committee, recently warned that its mission in Afghanistan could end in failure unless member states honor commitments they have already made to ensure its success. Koenders said in November that the mission in Afghanistan is at a "critical stage" and the alliance "must succeed".
"There has been a steady weakening of governmental control across South Asia, with vast areas simply falling off their map of governance," said Dr Ajay Sahni of the Institute of Conflict Management in New Delhi. This vacuum of authority - except for small, opulent enclaves where the elite live in gated communities - has largely been filled by radical and disruptive forces inimical to progress, Sahni added.
South Asia's precarious turbulence has been further aggravated by the development of atomic weapons by military rivals India and Pakistan following tit-for-tat nuclear tests in the late 1990s. The tumultuous relationship of these two countries in a large part determines the regional security environment.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars and an 11-week-long border engagement since independence in 1947. Currently, they are negotiating over contentious territorial, cross-border Islamic terrorism, nuclear, military, diplomatic and economic issues. A fourth round of bilateral talks is scheduled to begin in Islamabad in early 2007.
Adding to this cauldron of enduring crises is the "potentially explosive" entry into the area by China and the US, two competing world economic and military powers, which some analysts claim have virtually rendered the region their "strategic playground".
China, US seek influence
Analysts say Beijing and Washington are impacting the region's complex security architecture by fashioning strategic 'hub-and-spoke' ties with individual countries. For the time being, however, the two countries appear to be hedging their long-term investments against the possibility of a deterioration of ties and are awaiting the outcome of more immediate concerns in West Asia and Afghanistan.
Military planners in New Delhi said China and the US are "quietly expanding" their areas of strategic influence, particularly in the crucial Indian Ocean Region (IOR), which straddles the world's busiest waterways, by seeking to control choke points and trade routes essential to transporting the region's multiplying energy requirements. More than one billion tons of petroleum products annually traverse the Indian Ocean to meet Asia's proliferating energy needs.
"Anticipating the eventual stand-off between them, the US and China are engaged in building up proxies and allies in South Asia through a complex web of diplomatic and political alliances backed by economic and military hardware sops," a three-star Indian military officer who declined to be named.
Defense assistance programs, joint military exercises and training, intelligence sharing and reciprocal exchange of senior service personnel are also 'sweetening' these burgeoning alliances, he added.
Additionally complicating the regional security dynamic, however, is the one-off US-India nuclear agreement concluded in early December that allows Washington to pursue civilian nuclear commerce and related activity with New Delhi without India having to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
China and its close ally Pakistan are edgy over the accord, dubbed the US-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Co-operation Act, under which India has agreed to separate its military and civilian nuclear reactors, placing 14 of its 22 atomic installations under international safeguards.
New Delhi has cited fear of China (with whom India has an outstanding territorial dispute that led to war in 1962) as the trigger for conducting its five underground nuclear tests in 1998 as well as for a deterrent based on a triad of land-, air- and sea-based strategic weapons.
Furthering this 'strategic pro-activity', China and the US - along with the EU, Japan and South Korea - actively lobbied for and recently secured 'observer' status with the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC), which also admitted Afghanistan as its eighth member state at the Dhaka summit in November 2005.
Founded in 1985, SAARC is the world's largest economic and political organization, representing nearly two billion people. However, the ability of the organization to play a constructive role in harnessing the benefits of a unified regional economy, like other similar blocs around the world, and in fully integrating South Asia, has been held hostage for decades by the political and military rivalry between India and Pakistan.
Frequently postponed summits stand testament to the tension between the two states, which has often been high over the issue of the disputed northern Jammu and Kashmir province - divided between the two but claimed by both - and the interrelated matter of cross-border terrorism that Pakistan denies sponsoring.
Though other SAARC members have relatively less antagonistic relations with India, some fear that, the more integrated South Asia becomes, the more a 'bullying' New Delhi will dominate the region. Consequently, in many eyes, SAARC has become a mere 'talking shop' that meets annually in the respective capitals.
Meanwhile, other than cementing strategic, military and nuclear ties with India, the US has also courted Pakistan as a close ally in its fight against terrorism following the September 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.
In 2004 the US declared Pakistan a 'major non-NATO' ally and since 2001-02 has provided it with an arms package worth around USD5 billion that includes 36 F-16 fighters, P-3C Orion maritime reconnaissance aircraft and a range of precision ordnance.
US defense companies are also preparing to sell India hardware worth upwards of USD20 billion: 197 helicopters, eight maritime reconnaissance aircraft, possibly 126 multirole combat aircraft, military transport aircraft and 16 maritime helicopters. US companies such as General Electric and Westinghouse are also lining up to sell civilian nuclear power plants for large amounts.
The US also has burgeoning security links with Sri Lanka and is reasonably active in turbulent Nepal, where a Maoist-led revolution recently abolished the kingdom's centuries-old monarchy, and in Bangladesh, which faces turbulent elections in early 2007 as it grapples with Islamic fundamentalism.
In October the US called off maneuvers involving the US Marine Corps and the Sri Lankan Navy that were to be centered on amphibious landings and counter-insurgency operations and were regarded as being principally aimed at 'containing' growing Chinese hegemony in the region. The deferred exercises involving the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit were to have been held around Hambantota in southern Sri Lanka, where the Chinese plan to build oil and harbor facilities and to repair the railway, all of which were ravaged by the December 2004 tsunami.
Earlier, under Operation 'Balanced Style', the US Navy's Sea Air Land (SEAL) commandos trained Sri Lankan Army and Navy personnel in security techniques. Indian security officials stated that a "preoccupied" US, fearful of losing strategic ground to China in South Asia, was working "closely" with New Delhi in attempting to resolve crises afflicting Nepal and Sri Lanka.
China, on the other hand, has evolved a 'string of pearls' strategy in the IOR by clinching secret regional defense and strategic agreements to secure its mounting energy requirements - projected by 2025 to become the world's second largest after the US - in addition to enhancing its military profile from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea. Little is known about such agreements but, in one example, China is understood to have signed an agreement giving its ships berthing facilities in the Maldives.
Tightening its maritime security interests around India - which it increasingly views as a competitor and the US's 'Trojan horse' in the region - China is financially and technologically investing in developing Gwadar port on Pakistan's western Makran coast.
The US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, which effectively brought US forces to China's doorstep, triggered the speedy development of Gwadar port, with Beijing's help. Wary of the strong and mounting US military presence in the Central Asian region and the Persian Gulf - an area that provides over 60 per cent of China's energy requirements - and not possessing any significant blue-water naval capability, Beijing opted to build an alternate safe supply route for its oil and gas needs at Gwadar.
Pakistan, for its part, is committed to the project as it seeks strategic depth further southwest from its major naval base at Karachi, which remains vulnerable to the larger Indian Navy (IN). During the third India-Pakistan war in 1971, Karachi endured a debilitating IN blockade. Military planners in New Delhi are of the view that, once fully operational, Gwadar port could come to endanger vital Indian and US shipping routes in the Persian Gulf.
Take it or leave it
India has adopted what many considered a bullying approach to its neighbors, assuming a take-it-or-leave-it attitude because of its size and economic presence but, over time, such an approach has been counter-productive, leading India's neighbors to look to China and even Pakistan for military help.
China's four largest arms buyers remain Pakistan, Bangladesh and, to a lesser extent, Nepal and Sri Lanka (Colombo is currently in talks on buying defense equipment worth USD60 million). "Beijing's active diplomacy places it at the center of most South Asian security issues," a Western diplomat said.
In November, India and China pledged to end their long-standing border dispute and to double bilateral trade to USD40 billion by 2010. India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Chinese President Hu Jintao, holding the first summit in a decade, said settling their frontiers were a key priority as economic links deepened between the world's two most populous countries.
The neighbors have been engaged for nearly 25 years in what is possibly the longest-ever border negotiation between two countries, but are nowhere close to clinching any agreement. New Delhi accuses Beijing of occupying 38,000 km2 of India's territory while Beijing, in turn, claims 90,000 km2.
Adding to the region's instability are India's seemingly insurmountable security issues with Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. It also has unresolved minor territorial disputes with all its neighbours except Bhutan and the Maldives.
New Delhi is displeased with growing Maoist power, influence and control in Nepal's provisional government and with Bangladesh for allegedly allowing Muslim terrorists to use it as a base for anti-India operations. Dhaka denies all such allegations.
In war-ravaged Sri Lanka, which is on the verge of relapsing into civil strife, India remains a mere spectator, despite Colombo's pleas for military and diplomatic assistance. New Delhi is hostage to the domestic political concerns of over 60 million Tamils in southern India and scarred by the ignominious withdrawal of its expeditionary force from Sri Lanka in 1989 after it failed to disarm Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) guerrillas; as a result, India has been unable to sign a bilateral defense agreement with Colombo for nearly three years.
The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, with a population of 2.4 million facing internal security problems from ethnic Nepalese, and the Maldives, where President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Asia's longest-serving leader, stands accused by human rights groups of running an autocratic state, are the only two regional states with which India has cordial relations.
China, meanwhile, has silently developed security links with the Maldives and has launched an aggressive military and diplomatic thrust, backed by a developmental and commercial drive, in Myanmar, which India is presently trying to counter through large arms transfers, economic engagement and infrastructure projects.
Beijing is helping Myanmar to modernize a clutch of its naval bases by building radar, refit and refueling facilities capable eventually of supporting Chinese submarine operations in the Andaman Sea and the IOR. Official sources have confirmed that China has even established a signals intelligence facility on the Cocos Islands, 30 n miles from India's Andaman island archipelago, reportedly to monitor Indian missile test firings from the eastern Orissa coast: an activity that has proliferated since its 1998 nuclear tests.
Pakistan has also supplied Myanmar with several shiploads of ordnance and military hardware over the past decade. Pakistan, one of a handful of countries to support Yangon's military junta after it seized power in 1988, also trains Myanmar's soldiers to operate Chinese tanks, fighter aircraft and artillery.
In addition, recent Chinese infrastructure projects such as the Beijing-Lhasa railway and the proposed road network into Nepal are seen by India as a threat to its regional primacy.
In response, India has activated road-building programs in some of its northeastern states bordering China and announced schemes to upgrade infrastructure in this largely neglected but strategically critical Himalayan region.
"Peace in South Asia will be elusive until external inputs to conflict-generation from the US, China and other outside players cease," retired brigadier Arun Sahgal of the United Service Institute stated these have the potential of destabilizing the region's developing economies by inducing a competitive security environment, which these countries can ill afford, he warned.
The prevailing internal chaos across South Asia determines the region's security imperatives and, according to leading defense analyst Brahma Chellaney of Delhi's Centre for Policy Research, is largely dictated by India's "messy relations" with its neighbors and the porous borders it shares with them.
India is fighting at least 14 terrorist and separatist movements of varying rigor and intensity, many with cross-border support and ramifications, in addition to Kashmir's widely publicized 17-year-old insurgency.
Over the decades, these lesser known 'wars' have claimed thousands of lives, destroyed properties and rendered millions homeless. They have also stifled development in tribal regions and have needed the deployment of security forces, including the army, to combat them at great cost.
This, in turn, has led to the self-perpetuating cycle of widespread human rights abuses and the imposition of draconian laws, further exacerbating social tensions and driving innocent victims to bolster militant cadres.
India's internal chaos
Security officials privately admit that the writ of the Indian state does not run across large parts of the northeastern states of Nagaland and Manipur, which border Myanmar, where dozens of armed separatist groups operate parallel administrations to which even the provincial governments defer. The ubiquitous 'underground' controls numerous 'liberated zones', to which the police and the paramilitary forces rarely venture, unsure of being able to retain control for long.
The rebels levy monthly taxes from locals, including civil servants, politicians and even the police, and indulge in extortion and kidnapping, issuing receipts for all collections. These run into millions of rupees, which are duly audited and balance sheets published in local newspapers.
Worse conditions prevail across large portions of 160 of India's 602 administrative districts in 14 of India's 28 states, where Maoist rebels are on the ascendant. Earlier in 2006, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh admitted that militant Maoists had seized control of the "instruments of state administration" and their 'People's War' was India's "biggest" internal security challenge.
In neighboring Pakistan, the authorities exercise limited control over the western Baluchistan province, parts of neighboring Sindh state and portions of North West Frontier Province (NWFP). However, they have little or no control over the seven largely lawless and semi-autonomous federally administered tribal territories (FATAs) on the Afghan border.
Earlier in 2006, a beleaguered Pakistan Army signed a controversial agreement with pro-Taliban militants in North Waziristan after losing hundreds of personnel in trying to quell them, but has failed to contain the guerrilla groups. Taliban fighters regroup in the FATA belt before crossing the Durand Line, the unformulated demarcation between Pakistan and Afghanistan, to attack the US and ISAF forces in a bid to regain control.
According to the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG), Pakistan has experienced three decades of corruption, drugs, military rule, rising Islamist extremism and a general decline in education and health standards. The country is ruled by the military - some 1,200 serving and retired officers run a web of banks, transport, road building, communication facilities and construction businesses worth billions of dollars - and much-needed social, economic and political reforms have faltered.
"Religious extremists play an increasingly important role in providing education and other services to the poor, resulting in the radicalization of areas of the country," the ICG states. The 2007 elections, it adds, will be crucial in deciding whether Pakistan continues on this path or whether moderate forces assert themselves.
Meanwhile, around a third of Sri Lanka to the north and east of the island republic is physically controlled by LTTE rebels, waging war for a separate homeland since 1983, in which over 65,000 people have died. LTTE cadres monitor entry to these regions through heavily manned check-posts. Inside the enclaves, the LTTE manage the local administration, running schools, collecting taxes, dispensing justice and even operating a bank. The Sri Lankan government continues to partially finance the LTTE regions, but has no say in their administration.
Sri Lanka's near-constant state of war, which has erupted in all but name following the 2002 ceasefire and has claimed over 900 lives since December 2005, has rendered the island republic South Asia's most militarized region.
According to the Mumbai-based Strategic Foresight Group (SFG), Sri Lanka, often described as "paradise on earth" and "pearl of the Indian Ocean", has 8,000 military personnel for every million citizens, the highest ratio in the region. In its analysis, 'Conflict in Sri Lanka', the SFG declares that Pakistan, ruled by military administrations for a large portion of its 59 years of independence, has only half that number: 4,000 military personnel per one million of population. The statistics for other South Asian countries are: Nepal 2,700; India 1,300; and Bangladesh 1,000.
In military spending as a percentage of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Sri Lanka spends more than all its neighbors: 4.1 per cent. Pakistan allocates 3.5 per cent of its GDP to defense, India and Nepal 2.5 per cent and Bangladesh 1.5 per cent.
Meanwhile, taking declining state control and the attendant changing demographic patterns across large areas, security officials and analysts do not entirely rule out the possibility of South Asia's geographical boundaries being redrawn.
Professor S D Muni, formerly of the School of International Relations at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, said this "alteration" in population patterns will dramatically manifest itself over the next two to three decades, bringing with it enhanced turmoil and problems of ethnicity. "Borders remain an open question," he cautioned.
Security experts said Baluchistan province is one such vulnerable area, where the native Baluchis are fast becoming a minority as a result of the continuing influx of Pashtun refugees from war-torn Afghanistan. Analysts say resentment among locals is also fuelled by the Pakistani government's deliberate policy of settling outsiders from the dominant Punjabi community in the sparsely populated but vast and resource-rich desert province in order to 'dilute' Baluchi numbers.
In turn, analysts believe the Baluchi unrest could 'kick-start' the long-running but presently dormant separatist movement launched by the Muttahida Qaumi Mahaz (MQM or United National Front) in neighboring Sindh province.
The MQM was formed nearly three decades ago by Urdu-speaking migrants from northern and eastern India who moved to Pakistan at independence. Currently aligned with Pakistan's ruling party, the urbanized MQM has no strong religious ideology, but is committed to gaining additional power for Sindh's Mohajirs or migrants.
Line in the sand
Triggering potential Baluch and Sindhi separatist movements could be the long-running Pakhutistan movement for a Pathan-dominated region straddling the NWFP and southern Afghanistan. The widely disregarded Durand Line, drawn arbitrarily in 1893 by Colonel Durand and casually agreed to by Afghanistan's ruler Amir Abdur Rehman, has, over the years, kept alive the Pushtunistan issue.
This 'line in the sand' satisfied the colonial craving to define the boundaries of the British Empire, making the tribal areas the buffer between the settled British territories (NWFP and Punjab) and Afghanistan, should Russia move on Kabul. However, the tenuous border failed to divide the Pathans or stifle their desire for independence, which, despite frequent intra-tribal feuds, has survived to the present. Belonging to over 80 tribes, the Pathans are a semi-nomadic people with over 15 million living in Pakistan, including the tribal areas, and around 11 million in Afghanistan. Though Pathan tribes and sub-clans are forever in conflict, they invariably unite when faced with a larger threat, like that posed presently by Pakistani and Western forces.
Apart from Baluchistan, the FATAs, NWFP and Sindh, Pakistan is only left with Punjab, its largest and most prosperous province, in a region where geographical boundaries have often been redrawn via conquests and political agitation, almost always with disastrous consequences.
"A nuclear Pakistan is the region's wild card, whose future is tied to the rest of the world," Chellaney asserted. The sub-continent's division into predominantly Hindu India and Islamic Pakistan by the colonial government in 1947 led to the largest migration in history and sectarian rioting in which over a million people died.
The resolution of India's dispute over Kashmir and its borders with China retain the possibility of territorial changes, despite New Delhi vehemently opposing any such prospect.
The issue, however, is further complicated by Pakistan having transferred a large portion of the disputed Kashmir principality to China in 1963. Its settlement, for now, defies resolution as the territory is strategically crucial to Beijing, which is highly unlikely to hand it back to India, leading eventually to a re-drawing of maps.
India's northeast is another vulnerable region, where Federal Home Ministry officials claim that over 300,000 Bangladeshis, mostly Muslims fleeing unemployment, poverty and political instability, stream in across the porous frontier, upsetting the area's demographic balance. Dhaka denies there is an outflow that exacerbates tension between the neighbors.
According to official estimates, there are over 20 million illegal Bangladeshi migrants across India, confined mostly to the border states of Assam, Bengal and Tripura, where, over the past four decades, they have changed the demographic profile, leading to economic, social and sectarian tensions with the majority Hindu community. In Tripura the local tribal population that was in majority in 1952 is today a minority community, swamped by Muslim Bangladeshis. Federal Home Ministry officials estimate that Assam will become a Muslim-majority state by 2032 at the prevailing growth rate of illegal migration.
A former Assam state governor, retired Lieutenant General S K Sinha, declared in a report to the federal government some years ago that, if allowed to continue, Bangladeshi migration might even lead to the "severing" of the northeast from India and give rise to Islamic fundamentalism. The illegal migrants were aided by Indian political parties, who nurtured them as 'vote banks', ensuring their domicile by providing them with identity cards and citizenship documents.
India's maritime boundaries with Pakistan and Bangladesh are also unresolved. The dispute with Pakistan centers on the oil-rich Sir Creek area along India's western Kutch region. Pakistan favors a demarcation line closer to the eastern shore, which, when extended into the sea, would give it a greater chunk of the continental shelf abounding in hydrocarbons. A joint survey of Sir Creek is being conducted and security officials are optimistic that it may soon be resolved.
Meanwhile, India and Bangladesh both lay claim to New Moore/South Talpatty Island and the oil-rich delta of the Ganges and Brahmaputra.
In the early 1980s, this dispute led to a stand-off between three Bangladeshi gunboats and an Indian survey ship in the area. It ended with New Delhi dispatching a frigate to the island to scare off the Bangladeshi Navy in a move that further increased regional resentments against India.
India's Foreign Minister, Pranab Mukherjee, told parliament on 6 December that India has no control or access to 111 enclaves in Bangladesh, spread across 17,158 acres, which it lays claim to, while Bangladesh lays claim to 51 enclaves in India, covering 7,110 acres. Both have agreed in principle to exchange these enclaves, but declining relations have hampered any settlement.
© 2006 JIG
the article remains largely true even today
Last posted:
2006-Dec-13
South Asia continues to be buffeted by political turmoil fuelled by separatist or religious insurgencies, which are severely weakening government control across the region
Moves by China and the US to gain influence in the region are regarded as potentially explosive
South Asia's military, political, economic and social problems defy easy solution and could descend into escalating conflict, reports Rahul Bedi
Nearly six decades after colonial rule ended across South Asia in the late 1940s, the region's seven states remain in restive ferment.
Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka continue to be wracked by political volatility, insurgencies or separatist and radical religious movements of varying intensity that make the sub-continent amongst the world's more volatile areas.
Collectively, these countries also face daunting environmental and social challenges, exacerbated by increasing economic disparities as growth rates rise, negatively affecting their deteriorating security situation. Security officials claim that severe poverty in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan has made it easier for radical groups to 'hire' people to hurl grenades for as little as INR1,000 (USD22).
A steady collapse of governance - either through a lack of democracy, dysfunctional democracy or both - and the resultant loss of control by individual governments over large swathes of their territory has hindered uniform progress and heightened regional insecurity.
The Maldives, a collection of some 1,200 mostly uninhabited islands in the Indian Ocean southwest of India, face environmental apocalypse: they are acutely vulnerable to a rise in sea levels related to global warming. None of the islands are more than 1.8 m above sea level and it is feared that, as ocean waters rise, the Maldives will simply disappear.
Further afield in Afghanistan, the bitter seesaw conflict and the re-emergence of the Taliban militia are adversely affecting neighboring states, particularly Pakistan and, to a lesser extent, India.
Analysts predict that the not entirely implausible prospect of an onslaught on Kabul by a re-grouped Taliban in 2007 could bring significant chaos to the area. While current indications do not point to domestic pressure forcing the near-term withdrawal of either the US or the multinational International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), this cannot entirely be ruled out as new political configurations and personalities assume office in the US at the start of 2007.
Significantly, Bert Koenders, vice-president of NATO's Parliamentary Assembly Political Committee, recently warned that its mission in Afghanistan could end in failure unless member states honor commitments they have already made to ensure its success. Koenders said in November that the mission in Afghanistan is at a "critical stage" and the alliance "must succeed".
"There has been a steady weakening of governmental control across South Asia, with vast areas simply falling off their map of governance," said Dr Ajay Sahni of the Institute of Conflict Management in New Delhi. This vacuum of authority - except for small, opulent enclaves where the elite live in gated communities - has largely been filled by radical and disruptive forces inimical to progress, Sahni added.
South Asia's precarious turbulence has been further aggravated by the development of atomic weapons by military rivals India and Pakistan following tit-for-tat nuclear tests in the late 1990s. The tumultuous relationship of these two countries in a large part determines the regional security environment.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars and an 11-week-long border engagement since independence in 1947. Currently, they are negotiating over contentious territorial, cross-border Islamic terrorism, nuclear, military, diplomatic and economic issues. A fourth round of bilateral talks is scheduled to begin in Islamabad in early 2007.
Adding to this cauldron of enduring crises is the "potentially explosive" entry into the area by China and the US, two competing world economic and military powers, which some analysts claim have virtually rendered the region their "strategic playground".
China, US seek influence
Analysts say Beijing and Washington are impacting the region's complex security architecture by fashioning strategic 'hub-and-spoke' ties with individual countries. For the time being, however, the two countries appear to be hedging their long-term investments against the possibility of a deterioration of ties and are awaiting the outcome of more immediate concerns in West Asia and Afghanistan.
Military planners in New Delhi said China and the US are "quietly expanding" their areas of strategic influence, particularly in the crucial Indian Ocean Region (IOR), which straddles the world's busiest waterways, by seeking to control choke points and trade routes essential to transporting the region's multiplying energy requirements. More than one billion tons of petroleum products annually traverse the Indian Ocean to meet Asia's proliferating energy needs.
"Anticipating the eventual stand-off between them, the US and China are engaged in building up proxies and allies in South Asia through a complex web of diplomatic and political alliances backed by economic and military hardware sops," a three-star Indian military officer who declined to be named.
Defense assistance programs, joint military exercises and training, intelligence sharing and reciprocal exchange of senior service personnel are also 'sweetening' these burgeoning alliances, he added.
Additionally complicating the regional security dynamic, however, is the one-off US-India nuclear agreement concluded in early December that allows Washington to pursue civilian nuclear commerce and related activity with New Delhi without India having to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
China and its close ally Pakistan are edgy over the accord, dubbed the US-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Co-operation Act, under which India has agreed to separate its military and civilian nuclear reactors, placing 14 of its 22 atomic installations under international safeguards.
New Delhi has cited fear of China (with whom India has an outstanding territorial dispute that led to war in 1962) as the trigger for conducting its five underground nuclear tests in 1998 as well as for a deterrent based on a triad of land-, air- and sea-based strategic weapons.
Furthering this 'strategic pro-activity', China and the US - along with the EU, Japan and South Korea - actively lobbied for and recently secured 'observer' status with the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC), which also admitted Afghanistan as its eighth member state at the Dhaka summit in November 2005.
Founded in 1985, SAARC is the world's largest economic and political organization, representing nearly two billion people. However, the ability of the organization to play a constructive role in harnessing the benefits of a unified regional economy, like other similar blocs around the world, and in fully integrating South Asia, has been held hostage for decades by the political and military rivalry between India and Pakistan.
Frequently postponed summits stand testament to the tension between the two states, which has often been high over the issue of the disputed northern Jammu and Kashmir province - divided between the two but claimed by both - and the interrelated matter of cross-border terrorism that Pakistan denies sponsoring.
Though other SAARC members have relatively less antagonistic relations with India, some fear that, the more integrated South Asia becomes, the more a 'bullying' New Delhi will dominate the region. Consequently, in many eyes, SAARC has become a mere 'talking shop' that meets annually in the respective capitals.
Meanwhile, other than cementing strategic, military and nuclear ties with India, the US has also courted Pakistan as a close ally in its fight against terrorism following the September 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.
In 2004 the US declared Pakistan a 'major non-NATO' ally and since 2001-02 has provided it with an arms package worth around USD5 billion that includes 36 F-16 fighters, P-3C Orion maritime reconnaissance aircraft and a range of precision ordnance.
US defense companies are also preparing to sell India hardware worth upwards of USD20 billion: 197 helicopters, eight maritime reconnaissance aircraft, possibly 126 multirole combat aircraft, military transport aircraft and 16 maritime helicopters. US companies such as General Electric and Westinghouse are also lining up to sell civilian nuclear power plants for large amounts.
The US also has burgeoning security links with Sri Lanka and is reasonably active in turbulent Nepal, where a Maoist-led revolution recently abolished the kingdom's centuries-old monarchy, and in Bangladesh, which faces turbulent elections in early 2007 as it grapples with Islamic fundamentalism.
In October the US called off maneuvers involving the US Marine Corps and the Sri Lankan Navy that were to be centered on amphibious landings and counter-insurgency operations and were regarded as being principally aimed at 'containing' growing Chinese hegemony in the region. The deferred exercises involving the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit were to have been held around Hambantota in southern Sri Lanka, where the Chinese plan to build oil and harbor facilities and to repair the railway, all of which were ravaged by the December 2004 tsunami.
Earlier, under Operation 'Balanced Style', the US Navy's Sea Air Land (SEAL) commandos trained Sri Lankan Army and Navy personnel in security techniques. Indian security officials stated that a "preoccupied" US, fearful of losing strategic ground to China in South Asia, was working "closely" with New Delhi in attempting to resolve crises afflicting Nepal and Sri Lanka.
China, on the other hand, has evolved a 'string of pearls' strategy in the IOR by clinching secret regional defense and strategic agreements to secure its mounting energy requirements - projected by 2025 to become the world's second largest after the US - in addition to enhancing its military profile from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea. Little is known about such agreements but, in one example, China is understood to have signed an agreement giving its ships berthing facilities in the Maldives.
Tightening its maritime security interests around India - which it increasingly views as a competitor and the US's 'Trojan horse' in the region - China is financially and technologically investing in developing Gwadar port on Pakistan's western Makran coast.
The US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, which effectively brought US forces to China's doorstep, triggered the speedy development of Gwadar port, with Beijing's help. Wary of the strong and mounting US military presence in the Central Asian region and the Persian Gulf - an area that provides over 60 per cent of China's energy requirements - and not possessing any significant blue-water naval capability, Beijing opted to build an alternate safe supply route for its oil and gas needs at Gwadar.
Pakistan, for its part, is committed to the project as it seeks strategic depth further southwest from its major naval base at Karachi, which remains vulnerable to the larger Indian Navy (IN). During the third India-Pakistan war in 1971, Karachi endured a debilitating IN blockade. Military planners in New Delhi are of the view that, once fully operational, Gwadar port could come to endanger vital Indian and US shipping routes in the Persian Gulf.
Take it or leave it
India has adopted what many considered a bullying approach to its neighbors, assuming a take-it-or-leave-it attitude because of its size and economic presence but, over time, such an approach has been counter-productive, leading India's neighbors to look to China and even Pakistan for military help.
China's four largest arms buyers remain Pakistan, Bangladesh and, to a lesser extent, Nepal and Sri Lanka (Colombo is currently in talks on buying defense equipment worth USD60 million). "Beijing's active diplomacy places it at the center of most South Asian security issues," a Western diplomat said.
In November, India and China pledged to end their long-standing border dispute and to double bilateral trade to USD40 billion by 2010. India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Chinese President Hu Jintao, holding the first summit in a decade, said settling their frontiers were a key priority as economic links deepened between the world's two most populous countries.
The neighbors have been engaged for nearly 25 years in what is possibly the longest-ever border negotiation between two countries, but are nowhere close to clinching any agreement. New Delhi accuses Beijing of occupying 38,000 km2 of India's territory while Beijing, in turn, claims 90,000 km2.
Adding to the region's instability are India's seemingly insurmountable security issues with Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. It also has unresolved minor territorial disputes with all its neighbours except Bhutan and the Maldives.
New Delhi is displeased with growing Maoist power, influence and control in Nepal's provisional government and with Bangladesh for allegedly allowing Muslim terrorists to use it as a base for anti-India operations. Dhaka denies all such allegations.
In war-ravaged Sri Lanka, which is on the verge of relapsing into civil strife, India remains a mere spectator, despite Colombo's pleas for military and diplomatic assistance. New Delhi is hostage to the domestic political concerns of over 60 million Tamils in southern India and scarred by the ignominious withdrawal of its expeditionary force from Sri Lanka in 1989 after it failed to disarm Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) guerrillas; as a result, India has been unable to sign a bilateral defense agreement with Colombo for nearly three years.
The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, with a population of 2.4 million facing internal security problems from ethnic Nepalese, and the Maldives, where President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Asia's longest-serving leader, stands accused by human rights groups of running an autocratic state, are the only two regional states with which India has cordial relations.
China, meanwhile, has silently developed security links with the Maldives and has launched an aggressive military and diplomatic thrust, backed by a developmental and commercial drive, in Myanmar, which India is presently trying to counter through large arms transfers, economic engagement and infrastructure projects.
Beijing is helping Myanmar to modernize a clutch of its naval bases by building radar, refit and refueling facilities capable eventually of supporting Chinese submarine operations in the Andaman Sea and the IOR. Official sources have confirmed that China has even established a signals intelligence facility on the Cocos Islands, 30 n miles from India's Andaman island archipelago, reportedly to monitor Indian missile test firings from the eastern Orissa coast: an activity that has proliferated since its 1998 nuclear tests.
Pakistan has also supplied Myanmar with several shiploads of ordnance and military hardware over the past decade. Pakistan, one of a handful of countries to support Yangon's military junta after it seized power in 1988, also trains Myanmar's soldiers to operate Chinese tanks, fighter aircraft and artillery.
In addition, recent Chinese infrastructure projects such as the Beijing-Lhasa railway and the proposed road network into Nepal are seen by India as a threat to its regional primacy.
In response, India has activated road-building programs in some of its northeastern states bordering China and announced schemes to upgrade infrastructure in this largely neglected but strategically critical Himalayan region.
"Peace in South Asia will be elusive until external inputs to conflict-generation from the US, China and other outside players cease," retired brigadier Arun Sahgal of the United Service Institute stated these have the potential of destabilizing the region's developing economies by inducing a competitive security environment, which these countries can ill afford, he warned.
The prevailing internal chaos across South Asia determines the region's security imperatives and, according to leading defense analyst Brahma Chellaney of Delhi's Centre for Policy Research, is largely dictated by India's "messy relations" with its neighbors and the porous borders it shares with them.
India is fighting at least 14 terrorist and separatist movements of varying rigor and intensity, many with cross-border support and ramifications, in addition to Kashmir's widely publicized 17-year-old insurgency.
Over the decades, these lesser known 'wars' have claimed thousands of lives, destroyed properties and rendered millions homeless. They have also stifled development in tribal regions and have needed the deployment of security forces, including the army, to combat them at great cost.
This, in turn, has led to the self-perpetuating cycle of widespread human rights abuses and the imposition of draconian laws, further exacerbating social tensions and driving innocent victims to bolster militant cadres.
India's internal chaos
Security officials privately admit that the writ of the Indian state does not run across large parts of the northeastern states of Nagaland and Manipur, which border Myanmar, where dozens of armed separatist groups operate parallel administrations to which even the provincial governments defer. The ubiquitous 'underground' controls numerous 'liberated zones', to which the police and the paramilitary forces rarely venture, unsure of being able to retain control for long.
The rebels levy monthly taxes from locals, including civil servants, politicians and even the police, and indulge in extortion and kidnapping, issuing receipts for all collections. These run into millions of rupees, which are duly audited and balance sheets published in local newspapers.
Worse conditions prevail across large portions of 160 of India's 602 administrative districts in 14 of India's 28 states, where Maoist rebels are on the ascendant. Earlier in 2006, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh admitted that militant Maoists had seized control of the "instruments of state administration" and their 'People's War' was India's "biggest" internal security challenge.
In neighboring Pakistan, the authorities exercise limited control over the western Baluchistan province, parts of neighboring Sindh state and portions of North West Frontier Province (NWFP). However, they have little or no control over the seven largely lawless and semi-autonomous federally administered tribal territories (FATAs) on the Afghan border.
Earlier in 2006, a beleaguered Pakistan Army signed a controversial agreement with pro-Taliban militants in North Waziristan after losing hundreds of personnel in trying to quell them, but has failed to contain the guerrilla groups. Taliban fighters regroup in the FATA belt before crossing the Durand Line, the unformulated demarcation between Pakistan and Afghanistan, to attack the US and ISAF forces in a bid to regain control.
According to the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG), Pakistan has experienced three decades of corruption, drugs, military rule, rising Islamist extremism and a general decline in education and health standards. The country is ruled by the military - some 1,200 serving and retired officers run a web of banks, transport, road building, communication facilities and construction businesses worth billions of dollars - and much-needed social, economic and political reforms have faltered.
"Religious extremists play an increasingly important role in providing education and other services to the poor, resulting in the radicalization of areas of the country," the ICG states. The 2007 elections, it adds, will be crucial in deciding whether Pakistan continues on this path or whether moderate forces assert themselves.
Meanwhile, around a third of Sri Lanka to the north and east of the island republic is physically controlled by LTTE rebels, waging war for a separate homeland since 1983, in which over 65,000 people have died. LTTE cadres monitor entry to these regions through heavily manned check-posts. Inside the enclaves, the LTTE manage the local administration, running schools, collecting taxes, dispensing justice and even operating a bank. The Sri Lankan government continues to partially finance the LTTE regions, but has no say in their administration.
Sri Lanka's near-constant state of war, which has erupted in all but name following the 2002 ceasefire and has claimed over 900 lives since December 2005, has rendered the island republic South Asia's most militarized region.
According to the Mumbai-based Strategic Foresight Group (SFG), Sri Lanka, often described as "paradise on earth" and "pearl of the Indian Ocean", has 8,000 military personnel for every million citizens, the highest ratio in the region. In its analysis, 'Conflict in Sri Lanka', the SFG declares that Pakistan, ruled by military administrations for a large portion of its 59 years of independence, has only half that number: 4,000 military personnel per one million of population. The statistics for other South Asian countries are: Nepal 2,700; India 1,300; and Bangladesh 1,000.
In military spending as a percentage of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Sri Lanka spends more than all its neighbors: 4.1 per cent. Pakistan allocates 3.5 per cent of its GDP to defense, India and Nepal 2.5 per cent and Bangladesh 1.5 per cent.
Meanwhile, taking declining state control and the attendant changing demographic patterns across large areas, security officials and analysts do not entirely rule out the possibility of South Asia's geographical boundaries being redrawn.
Professor S D Muni, formerly of the School of International Relations at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, said this "alteration" in population patterns will dramatically manifest itself over the next two to three decades, bringing with it enhanced turmoil and problems of ethnicity. "Borders remain an open question," he cautioned.
Security experts said Baluchistan province is one such vulnerable area, where the native Baluchis are fast becoming a minority as a result of the continuing influx of Pashtun refugees from war-torn Afghanistan. Analysts say resentment among locals is also fuelled by the Pakistani government's deliberate policy of settling outsiders from the dominant Punjabi community in the sparsely populated but vast and resource-rich desert province in order to 'dilute' Baluchi numbers.
In turn, analysts believe the Baluchi unrest could 'kick-start' the long-running but presently dormant separatist movement launched by the Muttahida Qaumi Mahaz (MQM or United National Front) in neighboring Sindh province.
The MQM was formed nearly three decades ago by Urdu-speaking migrants from northern and eastern India who moved to Pakistan at independence. Currently aligned with Pakistan's ruling party, the urbanized MQM has no strong religious ideology, but is committed to gaining additional power for Sindh's Mohajirs or migrants.
Line in the sand
Triggering potential Baluch and Sindhi separatist movements could be the long-running Pakhutistan movement for a Pathan-dominated region straddling the NWFP and southern Afghanistan. The widely disregarded Durand Line, drawn arbitrarily in 1893 by Colonel Durand and casually agreed to by Afghanistan's ruler Amir Abdur Rehman, has, over the years, kept alive the Pushtunistan issue.
This 'line in the sand' satisfied the colonial craving to define the boundaries of the British Empire, making the tribal areas the buffer between the settled British territories (NWFP and Punjab) and Afghanistan, should Russia move on Kabul. However, the tenuous border failed to divide the Pathans or stifle their desire for independence, which, despite frequent intra-tribal feuds, has survived to the present. Belonging to over 80 tribes, the Pathans are a semi-nomadic people with over 15 million living in Pakistan, including the tribal areas, and around 11 million in Afghanistan. Though Pathan tribes and sub-clans are forever in conflict, they invariably unite when faced with a larger threat, like that posed presently by Pakistani and Western forces.
Apart from Baluchistan, the FATAs, NWFP and Sindh, Pakistan is only left with Punjab, its largest and most prosperous province, in a region where geographical boundaries have often been redrawn via conquests and political agitation, almost always with disastrous consequences.
"A nuclear Pakistan is the region's wild card, whose future is tied to the rest of the world," Chellaney asserted. The sub-continent's division into predominantly Hindu India and Islamic Pakistan by the colonial government in 1947 led to the largest migration in history and sectarian rioting in which over a million people died.
The resolution of India's dispute over Kashmir and its borders with China retain the possibility of territorial changes, despite New Delhi vehemently opposing any such prospect.
The issue, however, is further complicated by Pakistan having transferred a large portion of the disputed Kashmir principality to China in 1963. Its settlement, for now, defies resolution as the territory is strategically crucial to Beijing, which is highly unlikely to hand it back to India, leading eventually to a re-drawing of maps.
India's northeast is another vulnerable region, where Federal Home Ministry officials claim that over 300,000 Bangladeshis, mostly Muslims fleeing unemployment, poverty and political instability, stream in across the porous frontier, upsetting the area's demographic balance. Dhaka denies there is an outflow that exacerbates tension between the neighbors.
According to official estimates, there are over 20 million illegal Bangladeshi migrants across India, confined mostly to the border states of Assam, Bengal and Tripura, where, over the past four decades, they have changed the demographic profile, leading to economic, social and sectarian tensions with the majority Hindu community. In Tripura the local tribal population that was in majority in 1952 is today a minority community, swamped by Muslim Bangladeshis. Federal Home Ministry officials estimate that Assam will become a Muslim-majority state by 2032 at the prevailing growth rate of illegal migration.
A former Assam state governor, retired Lieutenant General S K Sinha, declared in a report to the federal government some years ago that, if allowed to continue, Bangladeshi migration might even lead to the "severing" of the northeast from India and give rise to Islamic fundamentalism. The illegal migrants were aided by Indian political parties, who nurtured them as 'vote banks', ensuring their domicile by providing them with identity cards and citizenship documents.
India's maritime boundaries with Pakistan and Bangladesh are also unresolved. The dispute with Pakistan centers on the oil-rich Sir Creek area along India's western Kutch region. Pakistan favors a demarcation line closer to the eastern shore, which, when extended into the sea, would give it a greater chunk of the continental shelf abounding in hydrocarbons. A joint survey of Sir Creek is being conducted and security officials are optimistic that it may soon be resolved.
Meanwhile, India and Bangladesh both lay claim to New Moore/South Talpatty Island and the oil-rich delta of the Ganges and Brahmaputra.
In the early 1980s, this dispute led to a stand-off between three Bangladeshi gunboats and an Indian survey ship in the area. It ended with New Delhi dispatching a frigate to the island to scare off the Bangladeshi Navy in a move that further increased regional resentments against India.
India's Foreign Minister, Pranab Mukherjee, told parliament on 6 December that India has no control or access to 111 enclaves in Bangladesh, spread across 17,158 acres, which it lays claim to, while Bangladesh lays claim to 51 enclaves in India, covering 7,110 acres. Both have agreed in principle to exchange these enclaves, but declining relations have hampered any settlement.
© 2006 JIG
the article remains largely true even today