Author: PTI
Publication: The Pioneer
Date: March 8, 2009
URL: http://www.dailypioneer.com/161339/More-Kargils-if-Kashmir-remains-unresolved-Musharraf.html
Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf,
considered the architect of the 1999 Kargil war, has warned that there could
be more such conflicts if the "key dispute" and "sore point"
Kashmir remains unresolved for long.
The retired Army General, who ruled Pakistan
for nine years till last August after seizing power in a bloodless coup, acknowledged
that there are a "lots of 'mujahideen' in Pakistani society" and
"freelance jehadis" who have "emotional involvement" with
the cause of Kashmiris.
Playing a peacenik as he faced a barrage of
uncomfortable questions from a combative audience at the India Today conclave
last night, he said the leaderships of the two countries need to take "bold"
and "affirmative" decisions to address the core dispute of Kashmir.
He said India and Pakistan have caused "immense"
damage to each other over the past six decades and they needed to "overcome
the burden of history" and move towards peaceful relations by adopting
realistic approach to addressing disputes.
During the marathon three-hour long interaction,
he appeared agitated at times by the questions which touched issues like why
terrorism continues to emanate from Pakistan, why Kargil happened, why Dawood
Ibrahim is not being handed over and whether India can trust Pakistani army
and ISI.
Noting that he was expecting "hostile"
questions at the event considering the new chill in Indo-Pak relations, he
deflected and ducked the tough ones, including the one about reason behind
the Kargil aggression if he had wanted peace.
"It is a sensitive issue, I will not
comment on it," said the then Army Chief, who was behind the Kargil aggression,
when Samajwadi Party leader Amar Singh asked as to why Pakistan indulged in
such an act if he was for peace.
Singh was reminding Musharraf that the Kargil
aggression by Pakistan occurred soon after the then Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee undertook a peace bus ride to Lahore.
"Yeh usi cheez (Kashmir issue) ki kadi
hai aur chalti jayegi (It is part of the same chain and will continue). If
the problem (of Kashmir) continues, there will be more Kargils," Musharraf
said.
He said he had already explained his position
on Kargil issue in his book -- 'In the Line of Fire'.
"Kashmir remains a key dispute and sore
point," he maintained.
He recalled that when he was at the helm of
affairs in Pakistan he had proposed four-point formula to resolve the issue
and it had helped.
Suggesting that Kashmir problem was the main
reason for terrorism in India, he said Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad
came into being "because of sympathies" in Pakistan for the people
of Kashmir.
"There is emotional involvement of people
of Pakistan for Kashmir. There is public sympathy. This has given rise to
dozens of freelance jihadi outfits," he said.
"We have to realistically understand
the root causes and address issues accordingly, otherwise we will fail. It
(terrorism) will carry on and on," Musharraf said, adding "If we
behave like ostriches, it will not help."
Asked if terrorist camps existed in Pakistan,
he deflected the question by alleging that India was fomenting terrorism in
his country through its embassy in Kabul.
"We should not indulge in blame-game...
Don't make it one-side affair... We should accept realities. If you try to
do damage to us, we will retaliate," he added.
He claimed that Pakistan army and ISI had
no role in fomenting terrorism in India as they wanted peace and that these
agencies were not correctly understood in this country.
"RAW does exactly what ISI does. ISI
does exactly what RAW does. Let us tell RAW and ISI to stop confrontation,"
he said.
Talking about creation of Bangladesh from
Pakistan, he asked "have you though how Bangladesh was separated? Who
armed Mukti Bahini? Pakistan was divided. Who did it, you know."
Insisting that Pakistan has accepted it as
its "destiny", he said "let us bury the past. Let bygone be
bygone... The past has been dirty, past has been bad, let's forget it."
Musharraf sought to blame India for the "hostile"
relations between the two countries by suggesting that it was trying to "coerce"
his country.
"When we say don't coerce us, are we
asking something utopian? We are a small country. You are a large country.
You should be humble," the former Pakistani army ruler said.
He said India and Pakistan were both victims
of terrorism and extremism and should join hands in defeating these scourges
jointly as well as individually.
At the same time, he claimed that Muslims
in India were being alienated leading to terrorism from home-grown terrorists
and asked India to put its "house in order".
However, Jamaat-e-Ulema-i-Hind leader Maulana
Mehmood Madani shot back saying Muslims in India had no problems and he need
not bother about them as they know how to take care of themselves.
Miffed at the retort by the Muslim leader,
Musharraf said sarcastically that if their condition was really well, he wished
them well.
The former Army General, while insisting repeatedly
that he was speaking frankly, admitted that he had failed to convince the
audience that Pakistan, particularly its army and ISI, favoured peace with
India.