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"We Will Win Nuclear War"! Crisis Escalates Further!

December 31, 2001

NUCLEAR WAR IN THE SUB-CONTINENT COULD BE APPROACHING

Kashmir Crisis created with help of by Great Britain in 1947 is root cause

MID-EAST REALITIES - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 12/31/2001: As the year turns, not since fourty years ago, not since1962 and the "Cuban Missile Crisis", has the world faced the possibility of an iminent orgastic nuclear war between two major countries.

Back then within hours of confrontation on the high seas that both sides feared could quickly escalate to nuclear war, an American journalist connected with the CIA and the KGB station chief in Washington hastily met at the Yenching Restaurant on Connecticut Avenue a few miles from the White House and came up with the plan that defused the crisis at the last minute.

The Russians agreed to turn their ships around before encountering the American fleet that had put a "quarantine" around Cuba, and agreed to then withdraw their nuclear missiles from the island just 90 miles from American shores. Publicly the Americans then pledged not to invade Cuba, which they felt was acceptible, especially in view of the failed "Bay of Pigs" a few years before. Secretly, not to be revealed except to Soviet Armed Forces Chiefs by Premier Khrushchev who was the one appeared to be caving in, the U.S. also agreed to withdraw its nuclear-armed medium-range missiles from Turkey.

The two superpowers had come "eyeball-to-eyeball", and in fact the "quarantine" had been moved back by President JFK to give more time; and in the end both parties blinked. Indeed, JFK and his brother, Robert F. Kennedy, then Attorney General, restrained the American military considerably at that crucial time.

It is the crisis over Kashmir, which dates back to 1947 and British withdrawal from the area after decades of "divide and rule" strategies, which has provided the fuel for Indian-Pakistani antagonism over the years, and which now provides the sparks for today's looming nuclear crisis.

And if the sub-continent does explode in an orgy of confrontation, nuclear or not, it is quite possible the Israelis will seize the historical moment and use their own overwhelming military force to try to deal the Palestinians a crushing blow and attempt to destroy all opposition military forces in the area.

With American support both India and Israel are likely to prevail, but at potentially huge cost and at tremendous risk. And most of all with untold ramifications for the years ahead. Blowback from what could happen this year now about to begin could have great ramifications in future years for the entire world.

The wild card in this regional conflagration that has the potential to expand and engulf a larger area is China, traditional ally of Pakistan. Early reports are that China is beginning to move military forces to the Indian frontier and sending private rather than public warnings, contents unknown.

WE WILL WIN NUCLEAR WAR, SAYS INDIA

By Richard Beeston, Diplomatic Editor
and Zahid Hussain in Islamabad

[The Times, London, Monday 31 December 2001]: INDIA boasted yesterday that it would survive a first strike by a Pakistani atomic weapon, but that its neighbour would be wiped out in a swift nuclear counter-attack.

As troop reinforcements continued to pour into the frontier zone, and tens of thousands of people fled border villages, the spectre of all-out war between two nuclear powers prompted America and Britain to intervene directly.

President Bush spoke by telephone to India's Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee, and to President Musharraf of Pakistan, urging them to show restraint. He also discussed the crisis with Tony Blair. The Prime Minister, who issued his own appeal yesterday for both countries to back down, has agreed to launch a diplomatic peace mission when he visits the region early in the new year.

A serious intervention from the outside world could not come too soon. India is determined to avenge the attack by Islamic militants on the Delhi parliament that killed 14 people, including five assailants, on December 13.

Unless Pakistan arrests and hands over those responsible, India seems determined to act unilaterally.

Pakistan says that it has held at least 50 militants and frozen assets and last night Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, the head of the group blamed for the attack was arrested for "making inflammatory speeches to incite people to violate law and order". But India says that is not enough and wants the suspects handed over.

Both countries insisted that they wanted to avoid war. But on the ground they both ordered the biggest military build-up for 15 years in what looked like a prelude to the fourth Indo-Pakistani war since independence in 1947.

Mr Vajpayee won the backing of opposition parties yesterday to take whatever action was needed. On the other side of the border Adbul Sattar, Pakistan's Foreign Minister, said that his anxieties were "mounting, not only by the day but by the hour".

Part of Pakistan's concern is the increasingly bellicose message from Delhi, whose conventional and nuclear forces are roughly double those of Pakistan. In an interview published yesterday George Fernandes, the Indian Defence Minister, said that his military, from the top down, was eager to fight and that thousands of Indian reinforcements would be in place by the middle of this week.

Speaking after a visit to frontline positions in Kashmir, he told the Hindustan Times: "Everyone is raring to go. In fact, something that actually bothers them is that things might now reach a point where one says there is no war."

Of greater concern were his remarks about the possible use of nuclear weapons. He warned Pakistan not to consider the use of a first strike, which he said would be tantamout to national suicide. "We could take a strike, survive and then hit back," he said. "Pakistan would be finished. I do not really fear that the nuclear issue would figure in a conflict."

However, military experts point out that in the event of a conventional war, Indian forces would heavily outnumber the Pakistanis and could score swift victories. In that case Pakistan's weapon of last resort would be its atomic bomb.

Certainly General Musharraf suggested yesterday, after meeting most of the country's political leaders, that he would not walk away from a fight with his bigger neighbour.

"I stand here addressing the people of India . . . that Pakistan stands for peace. Pakistan wants to reduce tensions . . . Pakistan wants to de-escalate," he said. "However, Pakistan has taken all counter-measures. If any war is thrust on Pakistan, Pakistan's Armed Forces and the 140 million people of Pakistan are fully prepared to face all consequences with all their might."

The West is caught in the middle. It needs Islamabad's help to hunt down Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda leadership, many of whom may already be hiding in Pakistan. Pulling Pakistani troops away from the Afghan border to fight India could seriously hamper that effort.

At the same time, the West sympathises with India's battle against terrorism and militant Islamic groups in Kashmir which have in the past kidnapped and killed Western hostages.
Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/12/534.htm