The Free Press Journal

Break the Grand feudal Pakistani alliance

- The author was formerly Professor of Economics at IIM Bangalore Bharat Jhunjhunwa­la

The roots of export of terror from Pakistan lie in the Grand feudal alliance that the leaders of that country have cobbled up. Nehru had implemente­d land reforms in India that broke the backbone of rural feudal lords. He also put private businesses on the leash by declaring that commanding heights of the economy will be held by the public sector. Indira Gandhi carried that movement forward with the nationalis­ation of banks and the coal industry. That broke the strangleho­ld of the capitalist­s on the country. Such was not done in Pakistan.

Feudal landlords ruled the countrysid­e and trade and industry were controlled by a small coterie of business houses. The political parties pandered to these ruling families. They needed an issue that would divert the attention of the people from the inequities perpetrate­d by this alliance. The issue of Kashmir came in handy for this purpose. The people, instead of opposing the alliance for its anti-people policies, turned around and supported it for its stand on Kashmir. The Pakistan army extended support to this alliance. They found they could get large amounts of arms and money as long as the Kashmir issue was kept burning. The ruling parties and the army propped up jihadi groups to push the Kashmir issue on centrestag­e. Kashmir and jihadis, therefore, are integral part of the strategy to divert the people’s attention from the economic inequality that is pervasive in Pakistan.

The emergence of Al-Qaeda and Taliban enabled America to join this alliance as its fourth member. America had its own agenda against Taliban in Afghanista­n and a resurgent India, whom America has never trusted. In order to make the government of Pakistan take up the war against Taliban and in order to create a counterwei­ght to resurgent India, it was necessary for the Americans to support this alliance. In return for support from America, the alliance agreed to move against the Taliban, at least on the surface, and keep up pressure against India. Thus America turned the Pakistani government against its own people. This is the root of all pervasive anti-American sentiment in Pakistan. The Americans furthermor­e pushed the Pakistani government­s to open up the Pakistan economy for American companies. Thus, one more member was co-opted in the grand alliance—the American multinatio­nal. My assessment is that the people of Pakistan are not happy with the Americans. They are more inclined to forge a friendship with China. Thus, the ruling alliance walks on a tightrope between America and China. They seek financial and military support from both America and China to keep the other at bay.

Generally speaking, economic reforms mean that businesses will compete with each other and bring prices down. Not so in Pakistan. Here economic reforms mean that a cartel of MNCs and local businessme­n would be free to charge exorbitant prices and fleece people. As a result, Pakistani society split into two mutually hostile parts. The naked and jobless common man stood on one side. On the other side stood a grand alliance of feudal landlords, business houses, multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, and the Pakistan army with the American government standing ready in attendance to help if and when required. Pakistan government and Army have roped in the jihadis to bolster their bargaining power against the Americans, and, at the same time, deflecting the attention of the common man from poverty and other problems. Their purpose is secured by ‘optimal’ terror—big enough to be invoked as a trump card before the Americans and small enough that it does not push India to take a definitive action.

The perception of China as a friend among the Pakistani people causes a schism between them and India. In their view, India is their enemy since India is a friend of their enemy America. Again, in their view, India is their enemy since India is an enemy of their friend China. The antiIndia sentiment in Pakistan is being fuelled by the support of the alliance to the jihadis. It is being strengthen­ed by the perception of India being a friend of America and an enemy of China.

Government of India wants to put pressure upon the Pakistan government to take action against the jihadis. This policy will not deliver. The jihadis have a vital role in the survival of the alliance. They deflect the attention of the people from the anti-people doings of the alliance. The anti-people agenda being followed by the alliance will get exposed if the jihadis go low. We are asking the alliance to dig its own grave by putting a leash on the jihadis. It is a waste of our energies if we try to turn the alliance against the jihadis. Instead of trying to create a schism between the alliance and the jihadis; we must try to create a schism between the people on one side and the alliance and the jihadis on the other. The solution will come from weakening the alliance itself just as we did with Sheikh Mujib in Bangladesh.

We should provide big financial support to internatio­nal donors and route the funds to people’s civil liberties organisati­ons of Pakistan to raise the issue of economic inequality against the ruling alliance and foster internal dissention. Global donors regularly give funds to foster internal dissention against government­s that do not toe their line. We should do the same. We should try to establish a pro-common man government in Pakistan which will create a soft society and remove the need for the government to rely on the jihadis to deflect the attention of the people from poverty. In one go, we shall liberate the Pakistani people from the tyranny of the grand alliance and also secure friendly government across our borders.

Second, we must reexamine our pro-American anti-China stance. Here we can take a lesson from China. That country has often taken an antiAmeric­an stance, such as in respect to North Korea, yet obtained advanced commercial technologi­es from American multinatio­nals. It has also developed advanced military hardware despite lack of cooperatio­n from America. We must do the same. We must extend our hand of friendship to China. We can create a pro-Indian sentiment among Pakistani people if we become friends with China and enemies with America. We have to make a hard choice whether we want to lose the support of Pakistani people by being seen as supporters of their enemy America and enemy of their friend China; or we will befriend the Pakistani people by distancing ourselves from America and embracing friendship with China.

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