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archive: The second front

The second front

Editorial
The Indian Express
May 28, 1999


    Title: The second front
    Author: Editorial
    Publication: The Indian Express
    Date: May 28, 1999
    
    The government is going to have to get its act together fast.  The
    loss of two Indian aircraft in the Kargil sector on day three is the
    kind of incident that might have been expected in the environment in
    which the Indian airforce is operating.  Even so, it represents an
    escalation of the conflict which the country has not been
    psychologically prepared for.  It poses fresh challenges on the
    military front raising questions about the quality of intelligence on
    hostile deployments in the Kargil sector and whether it is as good as
    it should be to minimise IAF risks.  Internationally there will
    inevitably be more calls for restraint and pressure on India to hold
    back.  Before the perception of incompetent handling of the Kargil
    situation grows any further, the government needs to show it can meet
    all the problems presented by Pakistani incursions with-out letting
    internal and external tensions run out of control.  Above all, it must
    prove that events are not getting ahead of its own planning.
    
    The challenge to Indian diplomacy is twofold, one to clear
    misperceptions abroad about Indian military action and two, to keep
    the lines of communication open at all levels with Pakistan.  On the
    international front it has been a slow start with a few key heads of
    foreign missions in New Delhi being briefed at their request by the
    Defence Minister in the absence of the Foreign Minister who was in
    Paris.  Vis-a-vis Pakistan, New Delhi has kept in touch at political
    and military levels and will need to maintain steady contact despite
    the provocations.  From the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's early
    and misguided call for a ceasefire it is evident there is a shortage
    of accurate information about the Kargil situation.  Other than a
    well-intentioned attempt to be even-handed, there is no logic in
    calling for a ceasefire in a scenario where Indian posts have been
    over-run by well-armed mercenaries aided by the Pakistani army.  One
    of the priorities therefore is comprehensive factual briefings for
    foreign governments on the line of control in Kashmir which came into
    effect by agreement between India and Pakistan after the Bangladesh
    war but has been breached by frequent Pakistani intrusions of which
    the latest is the best executed.  The world also needs to be reminded
    that Pakistan has switched support from one outfit operating on the
    Kashmir border to others after the first was declared a terrorist
    organisation by Washington.
    
    India has said its intention is to clear out the mercenaries and to
    keep military action confined to its side of the Kargil area.  This is
    sound.  However, Pakistani efforts to fudge the issue by claiming the
    IA,F is bombarding their side of the line, will test India's restraint
    and international credibility.  The government needs to prepare
    domestic and world opinion for the steps it may need to take to regain
    lost ground.  It is all too easy in the present tense situation to say
    the Lahore process was a farce.  The rhetoric was overblown and
    probably clouded judgment in some government quarters.  But the
    essential fact remains that it is in India's interest to try and talk
    sense into the Pakistani leadership even as India continues with the
    military action it has been compelled to take.
    



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