India's Republic Day has given an opportunity to leaders of two of the biggest democracies to showcase themselves.
The media, and the public that views TV, reads newspapers and is connected to social media, are all agog by the display of camaraderie. Does this in any manner indicate change in Indo-US ties? How good is it really for India?
That does not seem to be of any immediate interest. We are all lapping up trivia. It began the moment an invitation was sent and accepted. To the run-up we were told how roads would be cordoned off, how the four-layered security would work (including 12 dog officers arriving ahead of the visit to sniff out danger).
Obama's office sent out the message that there should be no terror attacks during his trip or there "would be consequences". There was no statesman-like no terror at any time before or after. This sort of arrogant and insensitive statement set the tone for what is clearly modern-day slavery where bonhomie buys acquiescence.
Narendra Modi broke protocol and went to receive Barack Obama. Images of him with the President and the First Lady after they alighted have sent the BJP supporters in a frenzy. Had this been the President of Nepal or Fiji Island would they feel as elevated?
Personally, I do not like over-familiarity between political leaders in the public space. It is less about warmth and more a public relations exercise. Both are conveying a message to their international constituencies.
Their lunch menu became news. Planting a sapling became a huge moment. And tea became "chai pe charcha", which Modi had used during his election campaign. He is apparently still campaigning.
At the joint press conference, Modi referred to the US president as "Barack". He spoke about chemistry between them. One is surprised he did not quote from Linda Goodman's sun signs to establish just how compatible they are.
The BJP had opposed the Indo-US nuclear deal during Manmohan Singh's tenure. Today, Modi and Obama have taken this even further. Modi informed us that the US would be an ally in defence. He parroted the terror line. If the US is so confident about its defense, it would not bulldoze other countries.
The so-called largest democracies are really about both wanting to play Big Brother. Sometimes it is good. Mostly it is not and proves to be a nuisance to others.
As I write this, the droning sounds continue on TV. The breathless, "Oh my god!" tone of the anchors seems to convey they've never seen an American President with an Indian Prime Minister feeling so jolly good before. For them, I have a few images from Barack Obama's previous visit.
And Obama cancelled his proposed visit to the Taj Mahal to visit Saudi Arabia to condolence the death of the king. Joe Biden was already attending to that. Here, the Hindutva bhakts we already speaking about how the Taj was a temple once. Should they not, then, see it as a rejection to their claims, if not of this ancient heritage in preference for a dead Arab King?
Showing posts with label barack obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barack obama. Show all posts
25.1.15
3.7.14
NSA spied on BJP to spy on Congress?
What exactly does the NSA spying on the BJP amount to? Is the target the office of the political party, or its senior leaders, or media cells, or its workers on the ground? Or, was it using the enemy of the 'enemy'?
The latest disclosure by Edward Snowden has got the Indian government in a tizzy:
That the omnibus spying programme by the US National Security Agency enveloped 193 countries (including India) comes as no surprise, but what is striking is that the Obama administration in 2010 sought authorization from the shadowy Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court to conduct surveillance on BJP among six political outfits worldwide. Others listed in Edward Snowden's disclosure of the NSA operation are Amal of Lebanon, an outfit with alleged links to Hezbollah; the Bolivarian Continental Coordinator of Venezuela, with purported links to FARC; Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood; Egyptian National Salvation Front; and Pakistan People's Party.
The PPP and BJP seem like misfits in this group. The former, in fact, had a fairly charmed equation with the US authorities, and although Narendra Modi was denied a visa, there would be no reason for the Obama government to snoop on the party. Some have suggested that it was based on Rahul Gandhi’s 2009 conversation with the then US ambassador Timothy Roemer that Hindu terror was “the bigger threat (to India) may be the growth of radicalized Hindu groups, which create religious tensions and political confrontations with the Muslim community”. This is apparently in comparison with the LeT.
Why would the US toe his line? America has a lot to gain with its ‘war on terror’ that is exclusively jihad-driven because those regions ensure profiteering. Paranoia over Hindu terror would be a waste of time, for India does not offer any tangible benefits (the Americans have been busy patenting tulsi, and yoga and spiritualism are now a part of their culture).
The NSA acted in 2010. The BJP was not in power, nor was there a major riot immediately prior to it. Even if there was, it is not the business of any other country. If anything, the BJP could have been “of valid interest for US intelligence” to get information about the ruling Congress Party, the whispers, rumours, and details about scams that the government would probably want to hide, and the opposition parties keep notes of. As reported, the Congress had raised objections about the spying last year. This is not a matter of which party is targeted, but of the country. The BJP ought to have raised the issue then along with the Congress, just as the Congress should join forces now.
Surprisingly, the former foreign minister Salman Khurshid had taken a benign view:
“Some of the information they (the US) got out of their scrutiny, they were able to use it to prevent serious terrorist attacks in several countries.”
Did the US administration share such information with the Indian government? When has the US ever tried to prevent terrorist attacks anywhere? It only lands up later, adding to the mayhem.
The revelations state:
Only four countries were off-limits from the snooping: loyal allies Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
If terrorism is the main reason, then these countries are home to immigrants. Would the hosts not be at risk, if one goes by western stereotyping?
The US also got authorisation to spy on international non-government agencies – the United Nations, European Union, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Asian Development Bank – that it anyway twists to suit its political agenda. With key tactical information, it can cause a good deal of covert harm.
The Indian response has been tepid. There is greater concern about how this will pan out, as Modi and Obama are to meet at the end of September. It sounds wicked to say so, but perhaps they would like to share notes. After all, the Indian PM is known to spy on his partymen, and Snoopgate did not appear out of thin air. And while this may sound like a conspiracy theory, the timing of the leak is just right. It will give them time to indulge in some real diplomacy after the earlier embargo on Modi. This is an unusual ice-breaker, but given that Angela Merkel could condone the spying Modi will just grin and bear it.
Meanwhile, the official channels are bureaucratic with their “summon a top diplomat” and the sophomoric “India also sought an assurance from the US that it will not happen again”.
There is a lot that happens that might not be in the realm of WikiLeaks knowledge, and it is unlikely to stop. The only way to get on top of this is to have our own intel agencies so smart that they can snoop on the snoopers.
© Farzana Versey
3.8.13
Is the CIA on a leash regarding Benghazi?
One would probably do a double-take thinking of the Barack Obama administration intimidating the CIA operatives who were in Benghazi, when the consulate was attacked.
From this report — welcome, CNN, to the world of tough questions instead of the toeing-the-establishment-line — it seems there is a huge secret and all the agents who were there that night are subjected to polygraph tests, to ensure they do not leak out any information to the media.
You will watch this clip, but the threat is not small. They are worried about their families, they know they cannot get away.
And they are not even Edward Snowden, who had access to so much more.
---
In September, 2012, I had written this:
»Can you imagine Libyan pro-democracy group overtaking the headquarters of an extremist organisation, that too to protest against the killings at the American Consulate? This is what happened in Benghazi against the Ansar al-Sharia:
"Thousands of protesters took to the street earlier on Friday, declaring loudly that they represent the real sentiments of the Libyan people, not those who were behind the deadly attack 10 days ago, reports CNN. One man stated: 'I am sorry America. This is the real Libya'.”
At first I was baffled and elated by turns. It sounds nice. In many ways, it is. But, is this the real Libya? Can we forget that the anti-Gaddafi rebels were looting property and striking poses in his and his family’s homes, making a mockery of the democracy they were claiming as their own?
This is probably to gain international attention. The signs read: “The ambassador was Libya’s friend” and “Libya lost a friend.” Christopher Stevens was known to be a good person. However, the United States at one time was quite comfortable with Col. Gaddafi. They, too, were friends, although he was friendlier with others.«
---
Given what's happening with the CIA, one wonders whether it is not just a civil war in Libya after all.
From this report — welcome, CNN, to the world of tough questions instead of the toeing-the-establishment-line — it seems there is a huge secret and all the agents who were there that night are subjected to polygraph tests, to ensure they do not leak out any information to the media.
You will watch this clip, but the threat is not small. They are worried about their families, they know they cannot get away.
And they are not even Edward Snowden, who had access to so much more.
---
In September, 2012, I had written this:
»Can you imagine Libyan pro-democracy group overtaking the headquarters of an extremist organisation, that too to protest against the killings at the American Consulate? This is what happened in Benghazi against the Ansar al-Sharia:
"Thousands of protesters took to the street earlier on Friday, declaring loudly that they represent the real sentiments of the Libyan people, not those who were behind the deadly attack 10 days ago, reports CNN. One man stated: 'I am sorry America. This is the real Libya'.”
At first I was baffled and elated by turns. It sounds nice. In many ways, it is. But, is this the real Libya? Can we forget that the anti-Gaddafi rebels were looting property and striking poses in his and his family’s homes, making a mockery of the democracy they were claiming as their own?
This is probably to gain international attention. The signs read: “The ambassador was Libya’s friend” and “Libya lost a friend.” Christopher Stevens was known to be a good person. However, the United States at one time was quite comfortable with Col. Gaddafi. They, too, were friends, although he was friendlier with others.«
---
Given what's happening with the CIA, one wonders whether it is not just a civil war in Libya after all.
15.7.13
A Mirage called Malala
A Mirage called Malala: Another Daughter of the East?
by Farzana Versey, CounterPunch, July 15
Had Edward Snowden exposed the dirt of the Taliban, he would have been standing behind the lectern in New York at the UN hall on Friday, July 12.
by Farzana Versey, CounterPunch, July 15
Had Edward Snowden exposed the dirt of the Taliban, he would have been standing behind the lectern in New York at the UN hall on Friday, July 12.
The contrast, and irony, is stark.
- A young man is hounded by the government of his country for exposing its sly mechanism, of its covert war against the whole world, not to speak of its own citizens. He waits at an airport in Russia that had fought a war against Afghanistan, which was backed by the CIA.
- A teenager’s birthday was officially declared Malala Day by the United Nations. She addressed a well-heeled gathering in the United States that was one of the two countries to oppose the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child; the other was Somalia.
They wanted a cinematic moment. The gooseflesh
groupies, including the mainstream media and urban Pakistanis, were not
interested in going beyond the script of her address. They became the
protectors of a girl who they could not protect in their own country. The legal
imperative is not even considered to fight such cases. What bothers them is
their pretty position would be threatened and questioned.
Politician
or puppet?
If we are to treat her as just a courageous
16-year-old, then perhaps we ought to disregard her role as activist. She
cannot be hoisted as a symbol of resistance as a cocooned marionette.
In the very first sentence, Malala said it was an
honour to wear a shawl of Benazir Bhutto. This was a political statement. From
being a victim of the Taliban, she appears to be a “mind-controlled victim” of
the elite. Like Benazir, Malala’s power comes from being wronged. Nobody will
deny that they indeed were. However, the dynamics of power play are not about
the literal, and this the souvenir dealers do not wish to understand.
When she was being treated at the hospital in
Birmingham, President Asif Ali Zardari
visited her wearing a coat with a lapel that had her photograph on it; to
honour her, he pledged $10 million for girls’ education to UNESCO because
“sending girls to school was the best way to combat extremism”. While Malala’s
school in Mingora, in the Northern region of Swat, was renamed after her, the
President did not offer this money to a local organisation. To get legitimacy,
it would appear the issue has to have global appeal.
The Interior Minister at the time, Rehman Malik, was
quoted
as saying:
"Until terrorism is over, she will continue to have security until we feel she is OK. You never know the circumstances, what will happen. The Taliban might be zero tomorrow. Still [while] we think or successive government feels she needs security, it is of no issue, to be honest, because she has become the icon of Pakistan, she has stood against terrorists and Taliban and she has become an icon for the education of young girls.”
Why do many Pakistanis refuse to see this as a
convenient ploy by the leadership to put the onus on iconoclasm to deal with
the issues, knowing well that this would work only as a mirage? Where are the
political initiatives to tackle terrorism? Benazir Bhutto too supported the
Taliban regime in its initial years to ensure that her position was not
threatened. The progressive discourse overlooks the fact that she did not
expunge any law that was anti-women.
Ever since she was shot at by the Taliban, the
cheerleaders have expressed cursory concern for the “other Malalas”; the
sidelight is brought out only as a nervous tic. Malala too made a nodding
mention of her friends, now forgotten by everyone. They were also shot at, but
not as grievously. Where are they? Are they protected? Any school named after
them? No one seems to notice that despite her environment, she managed to
learn, to seek peace, and to take on the militants.
The omission of any inspiring contemporary figure in
her speech was startling. Yet, she managed to please the activists when she
spoke about “hundreds of human rights activists and social workers who are not
only speaking for their rights, but who are struggling to achieve their goal of
peace, education and equality”.
It would have been politically incorrect for her to add that her sponsors and their allies not only kill civilians in the regions they occupy, but also employ child soldiers. In an earlier piece, I had raised these points: Is this courage or just canny marketing by consumerist consciences? Do we even pause to think about the consequences of creating or supporting such vulnerable ‘revolutionaries’? …Just think of the kids the US forces fought in Iraq and then took them captive to Abu Ghraib. Think about them in the Maoist Army in Nepal, as human shields in India’s Naxal groups, of them in Israel, of stone-pelting Palestinians now holding guns. These are representatives of their countries, not fringe groups.
Students in Mingora (Pic: Pak Magazine) |
It would have been politically incorrect for her to add that her sponsors and their allies not only kill civilians in the regions they occupy, but also employ child soldiers. In an earlier piece, I had raised these points: Is this courage or just canny marketing by consumerist consciences? Do we even pause to think about the consequences of creating or supporting such vulnerable ‘revolutionaries’? …Just think of the kids the US forces fought in Iraq and then took them captive to Abu Ghraib. Think about them in the Maoist Army in Nepal, as human shields in India’s Naxal groups, of them in Israel, of stone-pelting Palestinians now holding guns. These are representatives of their countries, not fringe groups.
Malala even sent out a message of forgiveness for
the Taliban using time-tested figures:
“I want education for the sons and daughters of the Taliban and all the terrorists and extremists. I do not even hate the Talib who shot me. Even if there was a gun in my hand and he was standing in front of me, I would not shoot him. This is the compassion I have learned from Mohamed, the prophet of mercy, Jesus Christ and Lord Buddha. This is the legacy of change I have inherited from Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela and Mohammed Ali Jinnah. This is the philosophy of nonviolence that I have learned from Gandhi, Bacha Khan and Mother Teresa.”
This is what Barack Obama says. This is exactly what
the West, specifically the US, has done with its neat division of good Talib,
bad Talib. Besides, as America is due to exit from Afghanistan in 2014, it will
have to deal with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Whoever drafted Malala’s
speech was taking no chances, even carefully omitting Hinduism, aware that it
is a touchy issue in Pakistan where the infidel is associated with the
idol-worshipping faith more than any other.
Besides, what change did Jinnah bring about? His
major contribution was before the Partition and in helping to formulate the
idea of Pakistan. He did not live to watch it veer away from the avowed
secularism he hoped for. Malala recalling Mandela and Gandhi seems like a
staple politician-beauty pageant fortune cookie moment, but Bacha Khan? He did
not want to be with Pakistan and had specified that he should be buried in
Afghanistan, to retain the purity of his Pashtun dream. Violence of thought is
not something to be shrugged off.
Who
is educating whom?
Like the
caricature of the Taliban frightened of a girl with a book is simplistic,
the catchphrase at the UN that day –‘Education First’ – is restrictive,
especially when you consider the number of school dropouts in the West. But American
kids willingly emptied their kitties for a charity that turned out to not only
misuse the funds, but also mislead. Greg Mortenson, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, who wrote the
bestselling ‘Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace ... One
School at a Time’ set up the Central Asia Institute charity that funds schools
in the Balti region. President Obama made a handsome donation, and the
book compulsory reading for the forces in Af-Pak.
However, the
greater crime, as I wrote in the Counterpunch article Fabricated
Philanthropy was “one by default – of whitewashing the image of the US
administration, even if to a small degree. It has come to light that he was not
kidnapped by the Taliban. In one of the photographs of 1996, his so-called
kidnapper turns out to be Mansur Khan Mahsud, a research director of the FATA
Research Center.”
Those who
oppose religious factionalism that the Taliban propagates have been using religious
arguments against militancy. Certain clerics had issued a fatwa against those
who targeted the girls; the liberals did not know how to negotiate this
similarity. Pakistanis have lived with their Islamic laws, so they cannot
ignore the mullahs.
Such lounge
activists do not take on the Taliban or the government. They merely participate
in the usual candlelight vigils and sex up the debate with their
passive-aggressive act. Quite reminiscent of what Madonna did soon after Malala
became a talking point. At a concert in Los Angeles, the singer had said, “This
made me cry. The 14-year-old schoolgirl who wrote a blog about going to school.
The Taliban stopped her bus and shot her. Do you realize how sick that is?” As reported:
“Later in the show, Madonna performed a striptease, during which she turned her
back to the audience to reveal the name ‘Malala’ stenciled across it.”
When Malala mentioned the problem of child labour,
it did not strike her that she is now even more a victim of it, albeit in the
sanitised environs of an acceptable intellectual striptease.
© Farzana Versey
---
Do read Our Guns, Children's Shoulders
© Farzana Versey
---
Do read Our Guns, Children's Shoulders
Tags:
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17.4.13
Regurgitating Jihad: Boston Marathon
Is she dead?
Injured? Her limbs blown off? I will never know. I knew her only as a
pseudonym. She often spoke about training for the marathon. She was, from all
accounts, rather fit “for my age”. I did not know how old or young she was. I
only discovered the tremendous effort she put in for something that gave her so
much joy, such a sense of achievement.
Stray exchanges revealed
that she was a nurse of Pakistani origin. However, I felt her constant assertion of her
American nationality a bit overarching. There was a touch of insecurity, and I
know how it feels.
Take any attack
and the first word on everyone’s lips – and that probably constitutes most
non-Americans too – is jihadi. Miles away, my first thought was not one of
sympathy, but “Hope it is not a Muslim” on hearing about the Boston Marathon
bomb blasts. Paranoia is dehumanising us, instead of making us more sensitive.
I was shocked that President Barack Obama was berated for not calling it a “terrorist
attack”. The same people who demand the
use of the catchphrase refer to the many more trigger-happy young kids and
racists as gunmen and almost always there is an attempt to understand their
behaviour in terms of “mental instability”.
It is not a very
healthy attitude when only due to one’s origins we wait for the insiders to
voice our thoughts and heave a sigh of relief. I usually do not hold back, but
even when I openly give another perspective, I am always aware that I will be
judged not dispassionately for what I say, but for ‘who’ I am.
And so when I
read Glenn Greenwald write in The Guardian that a day after the April 15 Boston
attack, “42 people were killed and more than 250 injured by a series of car
bombs, the enduring result of the US invasion and destruction of that country”,
I thought more people would understand. Greenwald by virtue of not being a
Muslim is quite above any suspicion or agenda. There will most certainly be
people who might castigate him, but he will not be seen as someone who is paid
by terrorists.
Here are some
salient points from his piece and my reaction to them:
“The widespread compassion for yesterday's victims and the intense anger over the attacks was obviously authentic and thus good to witness. But it was really hard not to find oneself wishing that just a fraction of that compassion and anger be devoted to attacks that the US perpetrates rather than suffers. These are exactly the kinds of horrific, civilian-slaughtering attacks that the US has been bringing to countries in the Muslim world over and over and over again for the last decade, with very little attention paid. Somehow the deep compassion and anger felt in the US when it is attacked never translates to understanding the effects of our own aggression against others.”
I am not too
sure if empathy is the solution, as the tweet he reproduces reveals. How can it
when the immediate reaction is to hark back to 9/11, without even trying to comprehend
the difference in the reasons and manner in which the attacks were carried out?
It would be
expecting too much for the large majority of Americans to be concerned about
Yemen or Iraq just as Iraqis and Yemenis would not empathise with America; for
most of them, their contact is with US forces sent to protect them. It is not
incumbent upon the citizens to rationalise. This is the job of the government,
and political expediency demands creating a fear psychosis. None of the countries the US has intervened
in has benefited from its democratic ideals.
“The rush, one might say the eagerness, to conclude that the attackers were Muslim was palpable and unseemly, even without any real evidence. The New York Post quickly claimed that the prime suspect was a Saudi national (while also inaccurately reporting that 12 people had been confirmed dead)…Anti-Muslim bigots like Pam Geller predictably announced that this was ‘Jihad in America’.”
The victims of
this so-called jihad are largely Muslims. I do not know what sort of
religiosity would make them target their own places of worship, their own
people. This is proof that their ideology is to use the name of a faith, much
as others use the patriotic card to whip up xenophobic sentiments. It is,
indeed, the job of investigators to question people, but getting hold of a Saudi
national immediately and then making it public does convey that it wasn’t about
investigations; rather, it does seem more like a gotcha moment. Osama bin Laden
is dead. The Al Qaeda is not a unified group anymore. I do not need to
emphasise again that George Bush was quite friendly with the House of Saud and
Osama was himself a tactical weapon of the CIA during the Russian war in
Afghanistan.
“Recall that on the day of the 2011 Oslo massacre by a right-wing, Muslim-hating extremist, the New York Times spent virtually the entire day strongly suggesting in its headlines that an Islamic extremist group was responsible, a claim other major news outlets (including the BBC and Washington Post) then repeated as fact. The same thing happened with the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.…in US political discourse, "terrorism" has no real meaning other than: violence perpetrated by Muslims against the west. The reason there was such confusion and uncertainty about whether this was "terrorism" is because there is no clear and consistently applied definition of the term. At this point, it's little more than a term of emotionally manipulative propaganda.”
I have often wondered why this
does not qualify as a conspiracy against a community when so many conspiracy
theories prevail. The Atlantic Wire mentioned the Boston Police Department's final press
conference where Dan Bidondi,
a radio host for InfoWars,
asked:
“Why were the loud speakers telling people in the audience to be calm moments before the bombs went off? Is this another false flag staged attack to take our civil liberties and promote homeland security while sticking their hands down our pants on the streets?”
To further quote from the piece on what a "false flag" attack is:
“The term then expanded to mean any scenario under which a military attack was undertaken by a person or organization pretending to be something else. What the questioner was asking, then, was: Did the United States government orchestrate this attack, pretending to be a terrorist organization of some sort, in order to justify expanded security powers?”
I would
understand if the manipulative machinery projected the view about “devices
found”, “threat perception”, “intelligence reports”, or even conducted a mock
exercise. I very much doubt if the US government would endanger the lives of
its people to actually organise an attack. It will most likely want to create
fear among the citizens, and that should be enough to grant it the privilege to
use its security powers. It has used 9/11 as a propaganda ploy, and this has
worked because the United States was not accustomed to being attacked on this
scale.
Does a nation go
on the offensive against countries where the perpetrators could be without any
evidence? The runners are innocent and so are the villagers who live under
threat of drones. The point is no one should be stuck on empathy. We cannot
feel the pain. And, for all his genuinely balanced opinion, Greenwald too when
speaking about ethnic groups feeling alienated added, “even though leading
Muslim-American groups such as CAIR harshly condemned the attack (as they
always do) and urged support for the victims, including blood donations”.
This is the
problem. You have to state it loud and clear. Stand on the soapbox and declare
that your heart is clean and you care. It would be so much better, and convey
the true spirit of America, if these people were not boxed into a group, and
instead seen as US citizens like any other. Here, it sounds as though they are being
granted the magnanimity of being ‘like us’, and not ‘like them’.
© Farzana Versey
Tags:
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America,
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communities,
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jihad,
muslims,
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osama,
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politics,
saudi,
security,
stereotypes,
terrorism
8.11.12
Blurred Lines and American Votes
Barack Obama has
not won. He just defeated the traditionally bad guy, like burning the symbolic Old
Man year after year to herald a new beginning that would arrive anyway.
We had been saturated
with analyses in the run-up, and the ones after the elections are not much
different, except perhaps for the trivia and the jokes. For example, the one
about Ann Romney heaving a sigh of relief that now she wouldn’t have to live in
a smaller house.
Indeed, Mitt
Romney was too rich for his own good. He could have been Donald Trump. In fact,
he could have been so many things. Even
Sarah Palin, if one goes by his performance in the discussion on foreign
policy. Or, at least, how the debate was perceived.
In an incisive piece
in the form of a note to the Republicans asking them to cheer up because they’ve
just elected a moderate Republican, William Saletan wrote in Slate:
“Remember how Democrats ridiculed George W. Bush’s troop surge in Iraq? Obama copied it in Afghanistan. He escalated the drone program, killing off al-Qaida’s leaders. He sent SEAL Team 6 into Pakistan to get Osama Bin Laden. He teamed up with NATO to take down Muammar Qaddafi. He reneged on his pledge to close Guantanamo Bay. He put together a globally enforced regime of sanctions that is bringing Iran’s economy to its knees. That’s why Romney had nothing to say in last month’s foreign policy debate. No sensible Republican president would have done things differently.”
The good thing
about the American system is that it has two political parties. For those of us
who have to deal with so many conflicting choices, this appears focused. The
debates also tend to reveal a level of transparency. The ‘no more than two
terms’ rule is also great.
However, what
happens when the lines get blurred between the two major parties? Would people
not have other options – independents are, well, independent? Aren’t the
debates essentially reality TV, and a charade for the most part? Do people
really decide based on banter?
President Obama
has talked about finishing his work: “the best is yet to come”. While it is
true that no political leader can complete the work, it does also imply an
element of failure. It may be attributed to circumstantial factors,
stubbornness or an attitude of trying to please some or please too many. This
sort of optimism is a straw to hang on to when the winds are harsh.
Romney in his
concession speech said:
“The nation, as you know, is at a critical point. At a time like this, we can't risk partisan bickering and political posturing. Our leaders have to reach across the aisle to do the people's work. And we citizens also have to rise to the occasion. We look to our teachers and professors. We count on you not just to teach, but to inspire our children with a passion for learning and discovery.”
Think of the
months when the two leaders were flinging accusations at each other, of the
lies that were tabulated, and of the humongous amount of money spent to prop up
much-raking instead of anything concrete and you know that the people vote for
what they think is their belief. It is this belief that will bring them out to
celebrate, to stand up for what is good, to protest and to occupy, to get
beaten up. Because, casting their vote is only the start of the battle. Promises
do not ensure rights. For those, it is an ongoing fight.
© Farzana Versey
7.10.12
Sunday ka Funda
“Hence that general is
skilful in attack whose opponent does not know what to defend; and he is
skilful in defense whose opponent does not know what to attack.”
- Sun Tzu
“We do not place especial
value on the possession of a virtue until we notice its total absence in our
opponent.”
- Friedrich Nietzsche
3.4.12
Million Dollar Men: Asif Ali Zardari and Hafiz Saeed
The Ajmer Sharif Dargah in north India has become for politics what the Wagah border is for peace activists. It is just so much melting wax and withering flowers.
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari is to pay a visit to the shrine on what has been touted as a “personal” trip. Given his position, it is quite natural that Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would ask him to join him for lunch. Now, when these two countries meet for any meal, there is a slow fire burning and a pot boiling in the background. You can see what is cooking, but the people at the table do not seem to have a clue.
We are still at the stage where the sophomoric question is: who should make the first move? Many moves have been made, in wars, by insurgents, through signed pieces of paper, with hugs, blasts, dialogues. These seem to have fallen on the head without anyone making the first move. Instead, the friendly country far from the neighbourhood has decided to do something about it.
The United States of America has put Hafiz Saeed, the leader of Jama'at-ud-Da'wah that was declared a terrorist organisation by the United Nations in December 2008, up there as the big dish. A little problem here. You don’t get him. He is just an item on the menu. You have to hand him over to the great master chef, Barack Obama, and in return take away the $10 million bounty offered by the U.S. for any information on him. No one quite knows what Mr. Zardari plans to pray for at the dargah, but it certainly isn’t a huge amount of money this time. As for Dr. Singh, he is a clean man with clean thoughts and, anyway, he does not have Hafiz Saeed. He can demand that he be handed over, is the chorus. Pages and pages have been exchanged over the Mumbai attacks of November 2008.
We need to look at this a bit carefully. India and Pakistan do not perceive Saeed in the same manner, and the simple reason is that they cannot. They are two countries with different compulsions. Saeed has been the mastermind behind those blasts. Ajmal Kasab, the hit man and the last guy standing, became the fall guy. In terms of a criminal act with the evidence he would be culpable. How does one gauge the extent of input by a mastermind? Osama bin Laden did not go out and attack anyone, yet he was the hunted. If we go by this logic, then the U.S. President must take responsibility for the killings of all the civilians in unprovoked wars.
The reason for bringing this up is the crucial element of American convenience. It would be facile to believe for a moment that the US is concerned about India, even though Obama said it has not forgotten the Mumbai attacks. It remembers at an opportune time. The present Zardari-Singh meeting is not terribly important, except to discuss the same old things. I also do not believe that the US bounty will suddenly make terrorism an issue. It has always been an issue.
The American establishment is only making sure it gets a sneak preview. While peace between the two countries is whimsical, the state of unrest has helped outsiders a great deal. This bane has been a boon for them, for a huge world population can be managed, if not colonised, by the simple expedient of posing as a saviour figure. It simply does not understand that terrorism in these parts is feeding off angst. It is playing on sentiment.
To put it simplistically, for the West the Mumbai attacks showed India as a rich country and Pakistan as a few men in dinghy. Good old David Headley, Hafiz Saeed’s video maker and map drawer, managed to get a visa to India and do his recce trips as a US citizen. They have him there. Do the two countries have the courage to ask America what exactly it is doing with him?
Hafiz Saeed is roaming free. His December 2011 rally against NATO killings turned out to be bigger than that of most politicians. This was not in some small town, but in Lahore, where he turned the ‘war on terror’ on it head by urging the Pakistani authorities to revoke its cooperation. Whether anybody likes it or not, there are many Pakistanis who support his organisation, Difa-e-Pakistan. Political pragmatism would make it imperative to be on his side, because at least with regard to NATO he is expressing the prevalent sentiment: “In 10 years of war that US has fought in Afghanistan, Pakistan actually lost more than the invaded country.”
Afghanistan has been a sore point with mainstream Pakistani politicians from the time of the influx of refugees during the Afghan war to the Taliban entering the plains and attacking just about every group of people. The splitting of hairs over ‘good Taliban’ and ‘bad Taliban’ has in fact blurred the lines. In the popular imagination, the U.S. is to blame for it. The audacious move to assign ‘guardian angels’, troops to watch over their sleeping comrades “against possible attacks by rogue Afghans” after an American soldier Sergeant Robert Bales killed sleeping Afghans, amounts to playing victim.
Pakistan is caught between these two victim-aggressors. It is willing to risk drone attacks, but the authorities probably believe that the rightwing within might come in handy. The view that Pakistan wishes to create communal tensions in India works symbolically to the benefit of Pakistan and India should disabuse such notions actively. If Pakistan wishes to destabilise India by hitting out at its totems of economic progress, then why would it want to do trade with India and why should the Indian government encourage it?
If India believes that the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) is behind it all, then does it make any sense to ask Pakistan to hand over Hafiz Saeed or to even try him? More importantly, if India believes that all acts of terror emanate from Pakistan, then is there any purpose in pursuing peace? Peace does not merely mean no war. It conveys a sense of confidence and trust. Neither country trusts the other.
This leaves a large opening for America, and it never fails to appear. The farce of a $10 million bounty will be played out in salons rather than in Islamabad or New Delhi. This is a huge bait for Pakistani liberals and expats to fill the U.S. coffers during the run-up to the elections. The money will be in trust, without it being spoken of in such clear terms, and the well-wisher Pakistani lobbyists will buy peace. America knows this only too well.
The obvious question would be: Aren’t there more prominent Indians in that country? Rich Indian immigrants are keener on being American; they do not have to prove their innocence, unlike Pakistanis. This is a major difference.
What has this got to do with President Zardari meeting Dr. Singh? If one is to understand some of the ‘peace’ proponents, then India is doing a subtle America without the bluster. The lead opinion piece in The Times of India had this gem:
“Clearly, Zardari has stolen an imaginative moment from the bitter-sullen history of India-Pakistan, by asking to come to pay his respects to a cherished and much-beloved saint across the Indian subcontinent. It shows what we, despite the horrendous Mumbai attacks of 2008, are still capable of. Perhaps the Pakistani president will seek forgiveness for those attacks and pray that both countries can move on by jointly erasing the scourge of terrorism. God knows, there are more people killed in Allah’s name in Pakistan today than elsewhere in the region.”
This is so full of Pat Robertson type evangelism, with its penance and forgiveness tone, that one wishes that all SAARC meetings are held at the shrine. In fact, such ‘private’ visits only reinforce the belief that we in South Asia will always mix religion with politics.
Taking such peace talks further is a piece in The Hindu jointly written by former Foreign Secretary of Pakistan Humayun Khan and former Foreign Secretary of India Salman Haidar:
“Peace within the region is an essential requirement for India to continue on its upward path. It must make renewed efforts to convince its neighbours that it poses no threat to them. It still has to fully convince them that it is ready to honour their independence and separate personality.”
How can such a thing be proved? India is fighting movements within almost as much as Pakistan is, with probably fewer casualties. The emphasis on economic progress, in fact, diverts attention away from political instability. There is no doubt that India being the larger nation has to respect other nations, but their sovereignty depends on how they manage contradictions within. Bilateral peace has little to do with this.
“To further allay apprehensions, discussions could be initiated on relocation of forces along the border and on regular meetings between chiefs of the armed forces and of intelligence agencies. The need for better understanding between the two militaries cannot be over-emphasised, because the security syndrome in Pakistan is the major obstacle in the way of progress.”
Do the armed forces act independently? They don’t. Besides, there is a difference between armed conflict and terrorism. Terrorism does not take the regular route. While Pakistan has to deal with the army as possible government, India has to handle the politicisation within the army. How they talk to each other matters little when compared with how they operate inside their own countries.
(c)Farzana Versey
Published in Counterpunch, April 4
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Image of Asif Ali Zardari and Dr Manmohan Singh courtesy Open magazine
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