AMERICAN AND INDIAN INTERESTS IN BALUCHISTAN
BY QAID-E-INQUILAB SYED ALI
GEELANI
Pakistan’s
populist Supreme Court is seized with the issue of insurgency
in Baluchistan Every word of observations that the honorable judges
utter during the proceedings turns into music for anti-Pakistan media. It is
the very same media which has launched campaign against Pakistan in general and
its security forces in particular. The basis for the sinister campaign is
perceived brutalities of the security forces in Baluchistan.
Baluchistan,
Pakistan’s largest province, is no ordinary piece of land; its geographical
location and its untapped mineral reserves make it a target of special interest
among players of regional politics including the US, India, former Soviet
Union, UAE and even Afghanistan. All these countries have one converging
interest in Baluchistan the province should become an independent
state in their geo-strategic interests. Located very close to the oil lanes of
the Persian Gulf and having a common border with Iran and
Afghanistan, Baluchistan is strategically very important. Commanding
almost the entire coast of the country – 470 miles of the Arabian Sea, and
boasting of a deep sea port recently completed with Chinese assistance at
Gwadar, Baluchistan comprises 43 per cent of Pakistan’s total area
but is home to just over five per cent of the population, 50 per cent of which
are ethnic Pakhtuns. Baluchistan has always been ruled autocratically
by sardars (tribal chiefs) who have kept their people backward, illiterate and
deprived.
These sardars have been extorting billions each year from big
corporations, federal government and equal billions in the name of development
funds. They remain up in arms against the government to keep the funds flowing.
Their other sources of funding are money from regional players channeled as
donations. Mainly three sardars of Bugti, Marri and Mengal tribes have been in
revolt against the federation from time to time. These sardars used to inflame
nationalist sentiments and demand for greater provincial autonomy and control
over the province’s natural resources developed into a demand for independence.
The armed insurgent group, Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) has been active in
acts of terrorism to keep the province destabilized for various long-term and
short-term objectives which serve the interests of sole civil power and the
states under its influence.
According to Institute for Study of Violent
Groups, BLA was formed in 1999 and has 500 active members. Like many guerrilla
and terrorist groups, the BLA has a structure comprised of both paramilitary
and cellular components. The majority of the organization is composed of
various units assigned to different training camps under various leaders, but
some are assigned to urban cells and are responsible for the planting of
explosives and reconnoitering targets. Some of the cells are adhoc and once a
BLA member has completed a mission, he may return to his paramilitary unit.
There is no shortage of weapons in Balochistan available to the militants; many
are regularly supplied from across Pakistan-Afghanistan border courtesy a host
of “consulates” established for this very purpose. Other weapons are left over
from previous conflicts in Afghanistan. Common weapons in the region include
Russian Kalashnikovs, RPGs (rocket propelled grenades), and various types of
land mines.
Pakistan has always asserted that an “outside hand” is playing a
role in the Bloch insurgency, though conclusive determinations are
difficult to come by. One of the most widely cited examples of outside aid
occurred in 1973 when Pakistan authorities entered the Iraqi embassy in
Islamabad and uncovered a small arsenal of weapons, including 300 sub
machine guns and 48,000 rounds of ammunition. Akbar Bugti extended a helping
hand in dismissal of ANP government and was made governor as a reward. He is
the one who supervised the worst military operation against the insurgents. The
government claimed that the arms were destined for Baluchistan; these
accusations were never proven.
The BLA is
not believed to have an organized recruitment effort in place; rather, the
group is capitalizing on popular sentiment in the province and giving Balochs
with nationalist tendencies a way to fight back at the government. The chief
means of attracting poor, uneducated Bloch youths are the dozens of
training camps believed to be in operation in the province. The group’s
targeting and tactics are designed to reduce the economic incentive for the
central government’s presence in the province. Accordingly, sites where natural
resources are harvested by the government are the most common target; these
include natural gas pipelines and oil fields. Soldiers and civilians working in
government capacities in Quetta are also prominent targets, in addition to
journalists. The BLA has shown equal proficiency with both bombings and armed
assault, though it appears that members prefer the use of RPGs as opposed to
planted explosives, some of which appear to have been planted by younger
members with little or no insurgency experience.
The insurgents and their
sponsors may have disintegration of Pakistan and establishment of an
independent state of Baluchistan as their long-term objective but
their short-term objectives are very clear; closing down of deep-sea port of
Gwadar and failing Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project. India and UAE have
direct stakes in the first objective whereas the US does not want to allow the
pipeline project to go ahead. Gwadar port has both strategic and commercial
implications for UAE and India. Chinese involvement in building the port, aimed
at generating economic activity in Baluchistan and facilitating the
Chinese to import oil and raw materials from the Middle East and Africa and
export goods through a land corridor extending from Gwadar to China’s Sinkiang
province, became the sore of many eyes. An oil refinery in Gwadar and
recovering huge mineral deposits in the province to serve as the precursor of
another enormous economic opportunity – a trade corridor for Central Asia, particularly
for its oil and gas.
Dissident
sardars rose up in arms in an effort to destroy the project and its profound
impact on Baluchistan's economy for fear of losing their hold on the
people. In a sustained campaign, aided and abetted by outside interests opposed
to Gwadar port, fears were expressed that this was an effort to colonize
Balochistan. In this backdrop, a low intensity insurgency festered
in Baluchistan for a few decades now.
India began meddling in
Afghanistan in the mid-1970s in the post-Bangladesh era. By fostering an
insurgency, India tried the same model in Baluchistan – exploiting
the disaffection between the state and the dissident sardars. The aim was to
deny Pakistan the energy resources, bleed it economically, and fragment it ultimately.
The Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA) – the most active insurgent
group today, made its debut in 1973. Arms from the former Soviet Union found
their way into the province and many insurgents were clandestinely trained and
educated there. Down the road India became concerned at the development of
Gwadar port which, besides making the Baloch people economically independent,
was to be of strategic importance to the Pakistan Navy. India did not like the
Chinese presence at Gwadar as this was to interfere with its desire of
controlling the Indian Ocean region with its upcoming blue water navy. Leaders
of Baloch insurgencies have publicly listed India among their sponsors.
Brahamdagh Bugti, a BLA leader, said that he accepted assistance from India and
Afghanistan to defend the Baloch nationalist cause.
Bloch Media Network
quotes Wahid Baloch, President of Bloch Society of North America, as
saying, “We love our Indian friends and want them to help and rescue us from
tyranny and oppression. In fact, India is the only country which has shown
concern over the Bloch plight. We want India to
take Baluchistan's issue to every international forum, the same way
Pakistan has done to raise the so-called Kashmir issue. We want India
to openly support our just cause and provide us with all moral, financial,
military and diplomatic support.” Not to be left behind was the former RAW
agent B. Raman who wrote this to Sonia Gandhi: “struggle for an
independent Baluchistan is part of the unfinished agenda of the partition”.
With Afghanistan coming under US occupation, Mossad, MI6 and the CIA jumped
into the fray with an agenda of Greater Baluchistan, providing new
partners to India.
Small pockets of local resistance mushroomed into organized
foreign funded, armed groups, which were discretely supported by the three
dissident tribal chiefs. As a hub for joint operations, India established a
ring of 26 consulates along the Baluchistan border in Afghanistan and Iran that
began funding, training and arming the dissidents.
Interestingly, major
stakeholders of insurgency are not the common people of Baluchistan
The insurgent groups are led by the scions of the three rebel chiefs who are in
line to succeed their aging patriarchs. The movement offers no substitute to
the Sardari system. By creating instability through acts of terrorism they hope
to chase the Chinese away and create obstacles for the Iran-Pakistan gas
pipeline, which is opposed by Washington.
According to
the analysis of Baloch Media Network, the selection of targets and use of
modern weapons demonstrates quite clearly that the dissidents have been trained
by military experts. Insurgencies of this magnitude cannot last without very
large funds that the insurgents cannot raise on their own. According to an
estimate the financial outlay for BLA alone is 50-90 million rupees per month.
Reportedly, massive cash is flowing into their hands from Afghanistan through
American defense contractors, CIA foot soldiers and free lancers. The
Americans have developed an interest in Baluchistan for several
reasons. It is the only available route for transportation of oil and gas from
Central Asian and Caspian Sea region after alternate routes via Russia or China
were not found feasible. Then Baluchistan itself had an estimated 19
trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves and six trillion barrels of oil
reserves in addition to gold, copper and other minerals, making it attractive
for exploration. Like the Indians, the Americans also did not like the Chinese
breathing down their neck in Gwadar – so uncomfortably close to the oil lanes
of the Straits of Hormuz and the US bases in the Indian Ocean, although at no
point did Pakistan and China contemplate Gwadar to become a Chinese military
base. Baluchistan shares a long border with Iran along
Iranian Baluchistan, which is inhabited by a
large Bloch population.
Look at the
demand of Bloch sardars which was accepted for political expedience; remove
army cantonments and garrisons from Baluchistan The armed forces are
virtually absent from Baluchistan yet they are held accountable for
act of brutality unleashed by the terrorists. The BLA have all the
characteristics of a foreign funded terrorist organization. It has massacred
thousands of innocent civilians simply in order to spread fear and keep the
province destabilized to serve foreign interests. Its victims include Punjabi
settlers and even Bloch youth itself. Its tactics are the very same
employed by Mukti Bahini in East Pakistan insurgency. They kill, loot and
vandalize in the garb of security agencies’ personnel and successfully
manipulate the obliging media. Yet it has not been declared a terror outfit
because it is sponsored by CIA, MI5 and RAW besides intelligence agencies of
UAE and Afghanistan. The reasons are obvious.
Posted
by
Parmjit
Singh Sekhon (Dakha)
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