WRAPP
Asia clearly presents America with unique challenges like no other
region in the world. One-half of all the world's population can be
found in Asia, and India and China alone make up one-third of the
world's population. Asia has some of the world's most powerful
economies. At the same time, the most serious direct threats to
America's national security from terrorism and weapons
proliferation emanate from Asia. The nexus between terrorism in the
Middle East, South Asia, and Southeast Asia along with weapons
proliferation between Iran, Libya, North Korea and Pakistan present
serious challenges to our national security and that of our
allies.
U.S. officials remain concerned about active missile proliferation
efforts involving China and North Korea as well as Pakistan,
leading India to declare itself a nuclear power. Thus, America is
faced with a possible scenario of North Korea, Pakistan, India,
continuing to expand their respective nuclear arsenals in the
upcoming years.
However, encouraging signs are on the horizon. Thanks to the strong
leadership and decisive action of President George W. Bush, savage
regimes of Iraq and Afghanistan that harbored and supported
terrorist groups are no more. These victories in the War on Terror
are having huge ripple effects throughout the world, and most
notably in Asia. Just last year I traveled to North Korea with a
congressional delegation that preceded the resumption of
disarmament talks. At the time, my Democratic colleague Congressman
Solomon Ortiz noted that the communist state's sudden willingness
to talk meant they had either "seen the light or felt the heat."
Additionally, Iran and Libya have opened their countries to
international nuclear weapons inspectors. The Bush Administration
is actively working on building a coalition with China, Korea, and
Japan to curb North Korea's nuclear weapons program. And now India
and Pakistan, two nuclear-armed countries sharing a common border,
have begun serious talks to establish permanent peace. While
threats to our national security abound, signs of hope are on the
horizon, with peace between India and Pakistan the most encouraging
recent development.
Introduction to India
India is not only the largest democracy in
Asia, it is the largest democracy in the world. This is a fact that
Indians take great pride in because they are well aware of the lack
of democracies throughout the world, especially throughout Asia and
the Muslim world. India is multi-religious and multi-cultural, with
many different languages spoken throughout the country. In April,
during India's upcoming national elections, more than 600 million
people are expected to vote, a continuing symbol of India's
democracy.
India has made great strides since independence in virtually every
area of economic and social development. The national literacy rate
in India at the time of independence in 1947 was only 14%; today it
is 65%. Approximately 55% of the Indian population lived below the
poverty line at the time of independence; today that number is less
than 33%. India provides refuge for more than 100,000 Tibetans,
66,000 Sri Lankans, 15,000 Bhutanese, 100,000 Afghans, and tens of
thousands of Bangladeshis, who have suffered from political and
religious persecution.
America's diversity, secularism, and democracy, have been admired
by the people of India, and have served as guideposts for India
since India's independence. For example, India followed America's
lead when it opened up its Air Force to women in 1991, and more
women are now entering the Indian Armed Forces. In America, two
women sit on the United States Supreme Court, and in India, one of
the justices on India's Supreme Court is a Muslim woman. The
judiciary in India has also set aside reservations for judges from
minority communities. In America, National Security Advisor Dr.
Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell are
African-Americans. In India, India's Minister of Defense, George
Fernandes, is Christian, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, the
equivalent of the American Vice-President, is Muslim, and a number
of Muslims, Sikhs, and women make up Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee's Cabinet.
According to the National Intelligence Agency, by 2015:
India will be the unrivaled regional power with a large military -
including naval and nuclear capabilities - and a dynamic and
growing economy. Numerous factors provide India a competitive
advantage in the global economy. It has the largest
English-speaking population in the developing world; its education
system produces millions of scientific and technical personnel.
India has a growing business-minded middle class eager to
strengthen ties to the outside world, and the large Indian
expatriate population provides strong links to key markets around
the world. . . .
Currently, bilateral trade between the U.S. and India stands at $24
billion a year, and the Indian economy is estimated to attain 8.1%
growth for the past fiscal year. President Bush and Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee have established a close, working
relationship. Both leaders have signed an agreement to establish a
strategic partnership, both nations have regularly participated in
joint military exercises, and President Bush removed sanctions on
India.
President Bush himself noted about this new strategic
partnership:
In November 2001, Prime Minister Vajpayee and I committed our
countries to a strategic partnership. Since then, our two countries
have strengthened bilateral cooperation significantly in several
areas. Today we announce the next steps in implementing our shared
vision. . . . The expanded cooperation launched today is an
important milestone in transforming the relationship between the
United States and India. That relationship is based increasingly on
common values and common interests. We are working together to
promote global peace and prosperity. We are partners in the war on
terrorism and we are partners in controlling the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction and the means to deliver them. The
vision of U.S.-India strategic partnership that Prime Minister
Vajpayee and I share is now becoming a reality.
India & the Fight Against Terrorism
India has long suffered from terrorism sponsored by Pakistan-backed
terrorist organizations. For example, in December 1999, Indian
Airlines Flight 814 was hijacked from Nepal and taken to
Afghanistan. There, terrorists demanded $200 million in cash and
the release of 36 terrorists from Indian prisons. During the
hijacking, one Indian passenger returning home from his honeymoon
was stabbed to death, and U.S. officials monitored the situation
closely because a U.S. citizen was on board the plane. Ultimately,
after eight days of negotiations, three terrorists in Indian
prisons were released in exchange for the safe release of the
remaining 155 passengers. None of the hijackers were caught, and
all escaped through Afghanistan and into Pakistan. It was this
terrorist attack that brought India and America closer together on
the need for coordinating counterterrorism efforts. In January
2000, shortly after the hijacking ended, the Joint Working Group on
Counterterrorism was formed, and the F.B.I. opened its first field
office in New Delhi.
The hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814 had a connection to the
September 11, 2001 attacks in America. One of the freed terrorists
that was released from prison by Indian authorities, Ahmed Omar
Saeed Sheikh, was allegedly in Pakistan a few weeks before the
September 11 attacks, and had earlier transferred $100,000 to
Mohamed Atta, the ringleader of the hijackers in America. This same
terrorist was convicted and sentenced to death for the kidnapping
and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in
Pakistan. This is an example of how terrorism has affected India
and America simultaneously.
October 1, 2001, the Pakistan-based militant group
Jaish-e-Mohammed, claimed responsibility for the suicide attack on
the Kashmir State Legislature, which killed 38 people and
critically injured dozens more. On December 13, 2001, 5 Pakistani
nationals committed a suicide attack on India's Parliament,
resulting in a 90-minute gun battle between the militants and New
Delhi police, which ended in 14 deaths. Many Indians and officials
in the Indian government viewed these suicide attacks on the Indian
Parliament as an attack on India's democracy.
Kashmir
A recent census in the state showed that of
Kashmir's 10 million people, approximately 60% were Sunni Muslims,
35% were Hindu, and the rest were Sikhs, Buddhists, Shia Muslims,
and Christians. Jammu is predominately Hindu, Ladakh mostly
Buddhist and Shia Muslim, and the Kashmir Valley mainly Sunni
Muslim.
In 1989, after the Soviets retreated from Afghanistan, Islamist
militants sought a new area to wage their jihad, and thus the
Kashmir conflict came into full force. Thousands of civilians and
Indian security officials have died during this insurgency.
However, recently, the number of casualties among Indian security
forces and civilians in Kashmir has declined, according to
government statistics compiled by The Associated Press. In 2002
there were 967 civilian casualties compared with 808 in 2003 and
521 casualties among security forces in 2002 compared with 381 in
2003.
Although Pakistan denies any involvement and claims the uprising is
solely indigenous, many Indian government officials point to
training camps in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, indoctrination in
religious schools known as madrasses, and continued fundraising by
extremist groups in Pakistan as obstacles to peace in
Kashmir.
Terrorists in Kashmir target Hindus, pro-India politicians, and
Kashmiri Muslims who do not support their separatist cause.
Militants also target local elections to disrupt the renewed
democratic process in Kashmir. The umbrella organization in Kashmir
known as the All-Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) is an alliance
of 23 separatist groups that claims to represent the wishes of the
Kashmiri people. The first meeting between an Indian Premier and
Kashmiri separatists took place when five members of the
All-Parties Hurriyat Conference met with Indian Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee in late January 2004. The separatists also met with
Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani, and both sides agreed to
meet again in March.
It is important to recognize the financial aspect of the jihad in
Kashmir, which is essentially run like a business organization,
similar to al Qaeda's operations, at least in terms of the
financing of terrorist activities and the recruitment of young men
to join the jihad.
First, South Asian Islamists are copying Middle Eastern terror
tactics by raising money for the families of suicide bombers. This
explains the increase of suicide attacks in Israel and Kashmir
beginning in the summer of 2001. This fundraising is particularly
attractive for young men who generally come from large families,
who are typically unemployed, and are attracted to the Islamist
ideology of becoming a "shahid" or martyr.
Ensuring their families are taken care of provides part of the
motivation for suicide bombers to carry out spectacular suicide
missions.
Second, large financial incentives are offered to foreign fighters,
which plays a crucial role in providing a continual flow of
militants into Kashmir and other parts of the world where there are
conflicts between Muslims and non-Muslims.
Third, higher-ranking officers get handsome salaries and bonuses as
part of the financial incentives offered to officers and fighters.
These changes in the Kashmir insurgency parallel separatist
movements in other parts of the world, and must be taken into
account to accurately portray the human rights situation in
Kashmir. Recently, some extremist organizations in Pakistan accused
of terrorist activity in Kashmir and designated by the U.S. as
foreign terrorist organizations, have changed names and lowered
their profile, but have continued operating. Of recent concern, is
the Washington Times article reporting that Islamist radicals may
be training at camps inside Pakistan and Pakistan-controlled
Kashmir as part of an al Qaeda conspiracy to send terrorists to
America to form sleeper cells.
Pakistan
Pakistan is at a crucial point in its history.
Pakistan is one of the largest countries in the world, and the
second largest Muslim nation after Indonesia. Pakistan has the
opportunity to serve as a role model for other Muslim countries.
Thus, Pakistan is at a crossroads. Down one path, are madrassas
teaching the Wahabbi faith, extremists and terrorist organizations
fighting police forces, the army, and the government, and a
declining economy. Down the other path, is a return to democracy, a
vibrant economy, a rejection of religious fundamentalism, new
schools, and secure control of Pakistan's nuclear weapons.
Recently, the very same extremists that were encouraged in Kashmir
have been blamed behind the two assassination attempts against
Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf. Recently, Dr. Abdul
Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan's atomic weapons program, was
pardoned by President Musharraf, for illicit sales of nuclear
technology to North Korea, Libya, and Iran. Dr. Khan also made
unsuccessful attempts to sell nuclear secrets to Saddam Hussein in
1992. On a positive note, the U.S. and Pakistan continue mutual
cooperation to capture al Qaeda fugitives along the Pakistan-Afghan
border.
Resolving the Kashmir Conflict
The U.S. should not get drawn into the historical
arguments over whether Kashmir should have been part of India or
Pakistan at the time of partition. Instead, U.S. officials must
work at promoting a bilateral agreement between India and Pakistan,
which takes into account the wishes of the Kashmiri people, as well
as the desires of both countries. Neither country wants to appear
as if it ceded ground to the other. Thus, both nations need a
face-saving peace plan where the governments of each country can
equally take credit for resolving the Kashmir dispute. Without such
a plan, both countries will continue with the ongoing stalemate
indefinitely. The U.S. has encouraged India and Pakistan to
maintain the momentum of the first round of talks and continue
their dialogue. I believe the reasonable solution to the Kashmir
dispute is to make the line of control separating the two Kashmir
sections the border between India and Pakistan. Muslims from both
portions of Kashmir should have the freedom to choose on which side
of the Kashmir border they want to settle.
There should be an open border policy to reunite families and to
increase trade in the region. Many of the hostilities that exist in
Kashmir will cease to exist once people-to-people ties are
established. This has already happened because just recently, a new
road link between the capital cities of Indian-controlled Kashmir
(Srinigar) and Pakistan-controlled Kashmir (Muzaffarabad) was
reopened. India and Pakistan have resumed air, bus and rail links.
India is now sending its Cricket team to Pakistan for the first
time in 14 years. The people in both countries feel optimistic
about peace. This is so mutually beneficial for both
countries.
Conclusion
I am very optimistic about the potential for peace between India
and Pakistan. Both governments have displayed maturity in
approaching the peace process. Both countries are nuclear powers
and share a common border, a unique situation in the world
today.
The Composite Dialogue seeks to resolve numerous bilateral issues
between the countries, including Kashmir. People to people ties
have increased, which will undo years of hostility, although this
will take time. Perhaps there is no other place in the world where
people share common cultural bonds, than between Pakistan and
India. I am looking forward to my visit to India, and in my
capacity as Co-Chairman of the Congressional Caucus on India and
Indian Americans, I will do what I can to help facilitate peace and
mutually beneficial cooperation between the people of India and
Pakistan.