Jammu Kashmir Conflict: A Potential Variable
Jammu Kashmir Conflict: A Potential Variable to
Clash of Civilizations in Himalayas
Nayyar N
Khan
Armed conflicts both on micro and macro level have
always played a significant role in shaping the political
trends in South Asia when visualized through the prism of
modern day evolving tendencies. The entire region has been
shadowed by the alarming apprehension of security concerns,
cross-border conflicts and poor connectivity. The fragile
situation of the one of the thickly populated region in the
world has made it one of the least integrated in the world
besides having certain common bonds across the international
borders. India and Pakistan being two nuclear rivals and key
states of the region have always been on forefronts since
their creation in 1947. Religion has always been a dominant
factor in classifying the geo-political trends while
analyzing the Indo-Pak relations. Although India maintained
her secular traditions as promised by her founding fathers
but in practice religion was one of the fueling elements
that impacted the Indian politics. 2014 victory of Bhartiya
Janta Party (BJP) headed by Prime Minister Modi have altered
the designs and corridors of South Asian politics in general
and that of India in particular. While Pakistani
politicians, on the other hand have consistently failed to
identify the common “Political Nomenclature” as a
characteristic symbol of their country. Instead of looking
for the common bonds among masses to strengthen the
democratic character politicians have always preferred to
take refuge under the imported umbrella of identification
and sadly ignored the true sentiments of the struggling
masses. With the new Indian identity after BJP’s victory
the dimensions of regional conflicts also shifted from
political to more deeply implanted in religious ones. The
conflict over Jammu Kashmir has its historical roots in
human rights and right of freedom and development. Over the
years and decades both India and Pakistan have turned the
Kashmir conflict into a religious one and have deliberately
ignored the important variables to find the lasting solution
of the conflict.
While, on the other hand, the emergence
of China as a regional and global leader and her stature as
an influential economic giant has further complicated the
regional conflicts in South Asia because of the growing
Chinese political influence accompanied by the goods and
services of Beijing in the region. At one hand China has
influenced the region of Gilgit-Baltistan, a part of
disputed state of Jammu Kashmir bordering Xinjiang, while on
the other continuous diplomatic muscles are used while
determining the border issues with India. Rising
fundamentalism within the Chinese territories and counter
strategies to tackle and handle the deteriorating situation
has widen the range of conflict from territorial to an
ideological and regional one ranging from China to Central
Asia and on the other side of the border into
Pakistan.
NATO and U.S. led invasion of Afghanistan to
combat and curb extremism had put a halt on the other
regional conflicts in the region. Organized extremist
movement in the tribal areas of Pakistan have provided
shelter to the Islamic militants of the region that would
probably ignite the situation after the U.S. withdrawal from
Afghanistan.
After the U.S. led invasion of Afghanistan
to combat the growing phenomenon of terrorism China is
committed to an ever-increasing presence in Pakistan and
Pakistani administered Kashmir (Gilgit Baltistan). Since the
past few years, Chinese strategy vis-à-vis Gilgit Baltistan
appears to be ranging toward gaining unspoken control of the
region — both economically and politico-diplomatically. By
snowballing investments and subsidizing various "development
projects" in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of PoK, the
activities involving several thousand Chinese personnel
belonging to the construction giants (apparently) of China
seem to point towards an interventionist Chinese
geo-strategic agenda in the region. After the Chinese
President’s recent official visit to Pakistan and trade
agreements including a Pak-China Trade Corridor passing
through Gilgit has exposed the futuristic designs by
ignoring the internationally disputed nature of the
territory. Chinese physical presence and developmental
projects in the disputed regions of Jammu Kashmir under
Pakistani occupation further complicates the Kashmir dispute
by adding the conflicting variables and making the
triangular nature an imbalance one. Considering Chinese
involvement at one hand and Af-Pak fragile situation on
other hand with Hindu nationalist party BJP in power in
India projects the frightening situation in the region if
International community does not take the strategic
importance of Jammu Kashmir into priority list of immediate
considerations. Four neighboring countries of Jammu Kashmir
namely India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and China contribute 40%
of the world population and three are nuclear powers out of
seven in the entire world. The passage and corridor that
opens to Central Asia passes through the mountains of Jammu
Kashmir where Chinese are eying for a trade-route thus
combining it with the strategic and security importance in
the decades to come. Core nations and ruling elites will be
the beneficiaries of the growing tendencies in the region
but an adverse effect on the peripheries and poor masses
will deepen with these growing ties in the region. Out of
peripheries Jammu Kashmir is strategically located at the
mid of all these expanding designs and might prove to be the
epicenter of ignition.
Having been a victim of the
bi-lateral tensions and clashes between religiously divided
India and Pakistan for the last almost seven decades and now
the geo-strategic involvement of China in the region,
Kashmiri people are being deprived of their fundamental
human, democratic, economic, cultural, social and political
rights with every passing day. Kashmir issue is more deeply
embedded into human rights regime, right of the people to
live in peace and harmony than the “political-economy”
of its geographical location and thus needs to be addressed
in a more humane way transcending the egoist politics. If
only the political-economy is taken into consideration by
the trio of China, India and Pakistan then most likely a
clash of interests between Communism, Hinduism and Islamic
fundamentalism will deepen the crisis in Himalayas. These
growing tensions between the trios will solidify the
Huntington’s theory of “Clash of Civilizations”.
According to Samuel Huntington’s classification of
Civilizations three out of eight are surrounding the
geography of Himalayas and directly connected to Kashmir
dispute. These are Confucian, Hindu and Islamic
Civilizations. The political economy of geo-strategic
importance of Jammu Kashmir would prove one of the major
fault lines for these three civilizations to clash in
future, and again Kashmir dispute would be derailed from its
original spirit And yet again the victims of this
geo-political strife would be primarily the poor masses of
Jammu Kashmir along with a catastrophic effect on the
economic conditions of the poor masses of entire region
majority of whom is already living below the poverty line in
India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Therefore, Western
nations, being the vocal advocate of international human
rights need to practically step in to resolve the Kashmir
conflict according to the democratic wishes of Kashmiri
people living in a heavily militarized fragile region.
Almost every second person of the total human population on
Earth is residing on the borders of Jammu Kashmir, thus the
conflict intensity is threatening directly to the very
survival of half of the world population. At this crucial
juncture of history it is also a litmus test for the
leadership of Jammu Kashmir (on both sides of LOC) whether
their political wisdom have graduated or they still live in
a fantasy world dreaming about the unachievable and
impractical solutions. The political wisdom of Kashmiri
leadership in particular and other affiliated parties in
general could detour a possible clash of civilizations in
the region taking into account the catastrophic aftermaths
in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and rest of the Middle East
where clash of civilizations have sent the regions into
stone age. Amid the increasing volatile situation, a
pluralistic approach ensuring the protection of a separate,
secular national identity of Jammu Kashmir, respect of
international human rights and democratic practices can only
guarantee the lasting peace in the entire region.
(Writer is a U.S. based political analyst, human rights
activist and a freelance journalist of Kashmiri origin. His
area of expertise is International Peace and Conflict
Resolution. He can be reached
@globalpeace2002@hotmail.com)