The Asian Age

Ban hit terror funds, but it’s only a lull...

Ground reports emanating out of the Kashmir Valley indicate that the short sharp jab to the solar plexus administer­ed to the militants by monetary demonetisa­tion has indeed been punishing where it really matters

- Shankar Roychowdhu­ry The writer is a former Chief of Army Staff and a former member of Parliament

Demonetisa­tion is one of the ultimate weapons in a nation’s economic and financial armoury. It is somewhat akin in this context to nuclear weapons. It is a strong financial medicine with distinct punitive overtones and can sometimes prove extremely bitter, daunting many patients who would often prefer to throw it away and suffer, than voluntaril­y swallow the physician’s prescripti­on. Demonetisa­tion should ideally be invoked only in extremis, after due discussion and public debate, and imposed only after rigorous administra­tive planning, preferably with an adequate warning period.

But all this would be feasible only in an ideal world, because the reality in India’s corner of the universe is totally different.

The reality here is Pakistan and its “jihad-fi-sabilillah” (meaning “in the cause of Allah”) campaign of terrorism against India. It extends over a wide range of operations, including covert economic warfare in the form of illegal infusion of Indian currency notes to fund terrorism inside this country.

These currency notes can be both genuine or forged, (forged Indian currency notes, or FICN, of surprising­ly good quality), inducted into the country and its economic system through a network of couriers, carriers and hawala operators working through porous internatio­nal borders, with neighbouri­ng countries, particular­ly Bangladesh and Nepal.

The recent sudden demonetisa­tion of Indian currency notes of `500 and `1,000 denominati­on was shock therapy against the illegal monetary circuit, which has created seismic shockwaves throughout the country, affecting all strata of society. It has given rise to a torrent of criticism against the government by honest taxpayers, big and small, who had undoubtedl­y been seriously inconvenie­nced.

The economic pain was assiduousl­y fanned by political parties in the Opposition, but is now slowly dissipatin­g. There is a substantiv­e chunk of opinion which has veered around to the view that demonetisa­tion was a good scheme in conception, but harshly flawed in execution.

But the fact of the matter also is that same demonetisa­tion measure has also interdicte­d and severely lacerated the entire illegal terrorist funding network operated by the Inter-Services Intelligen­ce in Pakistan, an aspect that needed to be publicised in India, but did not receive the necessary media coverage amidst the general uproar of a raucously accusative chorus of vicious political name-calling which continuous­ly dominated almost all the national and regional channels on the visual media in the recent past.

The government’s own efforts to counter adverse criticism and explain its apparently “draconian” (a favourite political pejorative) but neverthele­ss most essential measure in India’s counter-terrorism posture against the Pakistansp­onsored and funded terror campaigns in Jammu and Kashmir, and its extortion funded variation in the Naxalite stronghold­s in Middle India, sounded feeble and unconvinci­ng, something for which the government has only itself and its official machinery to blame, even though in this particular instance it did have a fairly strong case of its own. Perhaps the official counter-terrorism, counter-propaganda and other psychologi­cal operations agencies have yet to fully comprehend that Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat and WhatsApp have changed the face of informatio­n warfare forever, and these agencies need to get their act together, the quicker the better.

Demonetisa­tion is one of the major operationa­l options available to India along the economic extension of the geographic­al Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir, to interdict the financial undergroun­d express from Pakistan bringing funds and counterfei­t currency into this country via complex hawala and currency networks originatin­g in the US, Europe, or West Asia to fund Pakistan-sponsored terrorism by in-country adherents of Hafeez Saeed, Masood Azhar and Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has become the public face of demonetisa­tion with his abrupt red alert demonetisi­ng. This has cracked a seismic whiplash on the psyche of the aam aadmi across the country, and triggered a massive sociopolit­ical firestorm whose full closure cannot be foreseen as yet. Meanwhile, an “all’s well that ends well” closure to the entire drama will hopefully come about sooner rather than later.

In the meanwhile, the Winter Session of Parliament stands well and truly disrupted, and taxpayers would be justified in demanding an account of their taxes paid for the productive functionin­g of the national legislatur­e. The performanc­e of the government in both Houses was lacklustre, but ground reports emanating out of the Kashmir Valley indicate that the short sharp jab to the solar plexus administer­ed to the militants by monetary demonetisa­tion has indeed been punishing where it really matters.

Incidents of stone-throwing have decreased sharply, because the going rates of “bonus” to be paid in cash to “the boys” as stone-pelters, arsonists and arms snatchers have remained unpaid. Local Kashmiri youth who had found steady employment in Srinagar as daily wage antiIndia agitators are now facing “unemployme­nt” due to the paucity of cash for payment of wages in acceptable currency at the current going rates, said to be `500 per day for stone-pelters, `1,000 per weapon snatched from the police and so on.

Added to this is the relatively recent phenomenon of school burning, whose significan­ce is still not fully clear and remains the subject of much noisy speculatio­n on television panels. The Pakistan Army seems to have embarked on a strategy of continuous­ly upping the ante in terms of renewed cross-border firing now known by the traditiona­l euphemism of “ceasefire violations” — a term which rings absurdly hollow and ridiculous­ly farcical. Pakistani cross-border firing has caused casualties to Indian civilians, and extensive damage to property and infrastruc­ture. Indian soldiers too have suffered casualties. “Surgical strikes” across the Line of Control too will have to be periodical­ly repeated, in all the multiple dimensions of India’s own “war on terror”. The Pakistan Army’s “Operation Gibraltar”, originally conceived in 1965, may be making its redux in a 3.0 remake. Therefore, let there be no doubts at all — the present lull is only temporary.

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