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Kricket, Kargil, Kandahar
C(K)RICKET, KARGIL and Kandahar are three paradigmatic pointers
to our proclivity to passivity. Indian cricket has a
distinguished calendar handed down from the days of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh (in whose memory tourneys are still conducted) and
characterised by incontestable strength, indomitable courage and
a passionate determination to do the country proud. Success or
defeat is part of a game, be it sport, or politics. But what is
of growing concern is that we fail to probe the causes of defeat
and take apposite corrective steps to cure the malady. We just
think of palliatives for instant relief, instead of looking for
long- term solutions. We make heroes of men (sports) overnight,
without looking into their qualities, such as a high level of
competence fired by a competitive spirit, and pull them down the
next day with impunity and without qualms on specious arguments
of fallibility and failings.
By short-circuiting a team's defeat, eulogising the dynamic
effort of an individual player or two (rendered infructuous all
the same), no room is left for a genuine examination of the
team's deficiencies, offering less or little scope for any
discernible improvement. Coordinated endeavour by the team as a
whole, guided by a sense of commitment to hit the target is
nowhere in evidence. We do not set a target ourselves, but let
our opponents do it for us, and in the bargain, we have showed
ourselves to be poor chasers, and more often than not the end
comes even before we have seriously begun. The glorious, if
unpredictable uncertainties of the game are matched only by the
incurable inertia of the apex body to induct a sense of cohesion
into the players to produce optimum results.
To manage is to direct one's efforts to accomplish a given task.
Crisis management comprises, according to Prof.P.V.Indiresan (The
Hindu, Jan. 10), three functional qualities - efficiency,
fidelity and promptness. Efficiency he says, may be defined as
achieving the maximum output from a given input, i.e., the lowest
input for the largest output. Fidelity is a measure of how good
the output is, rather than how large it is. Though seemingly
contradictory, the two are complementary to each other, the one
stressing on quantity and the other on quality without
compromising either for the other. Promptness is the avoidance of
delay. Judged by these factors, it is fairly clear where we had
been niggardly, where we had mistaken means for the end and where
we had been dead slow to act. We are neither guided by science,
nor goaded by instinct. It is time we moved about with the
changing trends all around and adopted the requisite strategy
with the ball and the bat with improved fielding with a high
sense of anticipation.
The Kargil episode sharply exposed our vulnerability on the
border despite our brave rhetoric of defence preparedness. The
presence of the ISI in several parts of the country is an
acknowledged fact, but hardly any determined and serious step had
been taken, much less contemplated to deal with it. It was not
even so much the failure of intelligence that caught the nation
napping, while Pakistani troops were being moved into our
territory from across the LoC, providing cover to the advancing
militants and mercenaries, as the failure of intelligent
perception of a possible penetration of Pak-inspired
fundamentalists, under the glow of Lahore odyssey. The lessons of
1962, 1965 and 1971 were lost on our administrators. It is
curious how it did not dawn on them that history has a knack of
repeating itself more often than it is seen to do. Like the
Bourbons of old we have learnt nothing from the past and
forgotten nothing, when it is worthwhile to forget non-working
hypotheses and purposeless propositions.
The huge price we had paid for our slothfulness and sluggishness
in terms of manpower and material resources should generate in
the Government a vision of probable susceptibilities in the
future and plan adequate action to safeguard our territorial
integrity. It is not sound judgment to underestimate an enemy's
strength and overestimate our own . The Tashkent Spirit and the
Simla accord have not softened Pakistan's attitude to India,
although, we on our part had been gleefully going about
commending the Lahore Declaration to Islamabad, unaware, if not
unmindful, of what was going on behind and through the LoC at
Kargil and other points all the while.
Lack of initiative
The one lesson that India should learn from the highjacking of IC
814 from Kathmandu is ``that responses to any situation, however
grim it might look, should not be jerky. It is unfortunate that
the winner in the latest psychological warfare turned out to be
the wrong party. The brutal killing of Rupin Katyal made it
dreadfully clear that the hijackers were calling the shots all
the time.'' (TheHindu Editorial, January 12)
Precious time was lost and a golden opportunity was missed when
the flight landed at Amritsar and stopped over there for about 40
minutes. Quick commando action would have retrieved the situation
for the benefit of the passengers and the crew, and made it
impossible for the hijackers to escape.
Success in such situations lies in clear anticipation of the
adversary's next step and in thwarting it by clear manipulation
of a few steps ahead. In every sphere of activity we go with
ideas fixed and fail to see what the opponent has up his sleeve.
The Kandahar episode marks a stark failure on more fronts than
one - administration, diplomatic and political. That three of the
five hijackers are in Pakistan having been accorded heroe's
welcome, adds insult to injury. The argument advanced by the
Government that the situation was explosive and that what
happened actually was decided upon in the best interests
(personal safety included) of the passengers and the crew cannot
be the whole truth. Somewhere some lacuna should have crept in to
delay some aggressive action against the intruders, which has to
be investigated to prevent such assaults in air in the future.
Pakistan's relationship with India has always been focussed on
Kashmir and small wonder there is no deviation from its declared
stand through successive governments in that country from the
days of Gen. Yahya Khan, who thought fit to undermine the civil
administration by assigning to the Army a more than definite role
in its governance. The present Chief Executive, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, by pursuing the same stratagem adopted by his two
predecessors, Gen. Ayub Khan and Gen. Zia-ul-Haq, has made
Kashmir the centre-piece of any dialogue with India, even on
other issues such as trade and friendly cooperation in other
spheres. In his exclusive interview to (TheHindu), he made his
Kashmir-centred agenda unmistakably clear and stated that
``Kashmir is the real dispute'' and that the others were only
aberrations, or minor differences. Thereby, he gave a short-
shrift to the Simla accord and the Lahore Declaration, trying to
rewrite history. The parrot-like cry for self-determination goes
against the established doctrine of territorial integrity of
countries and runs contra to the principles on which the United
Nations was founded.
Para 6 of the U.N. Resolution No. 1514 of 1960 was emphatic on
two points. It read: ``Any attempt aimed at partial or total
disruption of the national unity and territorial integrity of a
country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the
Charter of the United Nations.'' Para 8 added: ``Every State
shall refrain from any action aimed at partial or total
disruption of the national unity and territorial integrity of any
other State or territory.'' As a posterior averment supersedes
any anterior proposition in case law, this resolution of the U.N.
ipso facto negates any previous opinions which might have been
expressed by the world body on this question in different
circumstances. This without doubt connotes that the so-called
right of self-determination cannot be exercised for the purpose
of recession.
The U.N. General Assembly, on December 15, 1974, adopted without
vote (which means, on a consensus) an eight-Article definition of
aggression. Art. 1: Aggression is the use of armed force against
the sovereignty, territorial integrity, or political independence
of another State in any other manner inconsistent with the
Charter of the United Nations. Art. 3 (g): The sending by, or, on
behalf of a State, of armed bands, groups of irregulars or
mercenaries, which carry out acts of armed force against another
State, of much gravity as will amount to acts stated above, or
substantial involvement therein.
That was what happened in 1947 in Kashmir - aggression engineered
andabetted by Pakistan. It will be of interest to note in this
connection that the Plebiscite front formed in 1954 was disbanded
in 1975, following Mirza Afzal Beg's presidential address at its
annual meet in 1974, wherein he had stated that there were other
ways than plebiscite to resolve the Kashmir tangle.
Abraham Lincoln, Honest Abe as he was affectionately called by
his fellow countrymen, who was President of America from 1861-65,
held secession as ``the essence of anarchy''. U Thant, former
Secretary-General of the U.N., said in 1970: ``As an
international organisation the U.N. had never accepted and does
not accept and I do not believe that it will ever accept the
principle of recession of a part of its member-State.''
Be that as it may, it is imperative that the Government of India
steps down from its high pedestal, realising the proud reality,
pursue efforts for the restoration of peace between the two
neighbours, instead of harping on certain perceived formulations
and pre-conceived notions. But in his interview with TheHindu,
the Chief Executive has kept the door half open for fruitful
bilateral negotiations, which the latter should take on hand. It
should not be difficult even to reach some tentative agreement on
Kashmir which had been intractable for over half a century. It
should not be beyond human ingenuity to devise a scheme by which
both the countries come down to brasstacks and evolve a lasting
solution, short of recession.
The enormity of the avoidable loss sustained by both countries by
adopting antagonistic and confrontationist attitude must be seen
as the starting point of discussions to restore normalcy and good
neighbourliness for the greater glory of the lands of the Ganges
and the Indus. Let the two nations bequeath to their posterity
what they had inherited from their forbears sans addition or
subtraction.
T. P. RAJAGOPALAN
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