Demystifying Kashmir: Navnita Chadha Behera's
Demystifying Kashmir: Navnita Chadha Behera's
Demystifying Kashmir: Navnita Chadha Behera's
http://asiapolicy.nbr.org
Robert Wirsing
Teresita C. Schaffer
Sumit Ganguly
Shalendra Sharma
Navnita Chadha Behera
Re-mystifying Kashmir
Robert Wirsing
Robert Wirsing is Professor of Security Studies at the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies.
Previously he was a South Asia area specialist in the Department of Government and International
Studies at the University of South Carolina. He is available at <wirsingr@apcss.org>.
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predilection for forcibly changing the status quo in Kashmir (p. 73), Pakistan
possesses very little that qualifies as a political strategy.
Beheras enthusiasm for her subject mounts substantially when she turns
her attention in this chapter to Jihad as an Instrument of State Policy. That her
caution in sifting fact from fiction doesnt mount along with the enthusiasm
is unfortunate. Behera cites frighteningbut frightfully inaccuratestatistics
about Pakistans descent into religious fanaticism. The use of jihad as state
policy, she writes,
had led to an exponential growth of the jihadi infrastructure
within Pakistan. It has approximately 40,00050,000 madrassah
institutions with an estimated strength of 1 million to 2 million
students. The armed jihadis number about 200,000, which is equal
to one-third of the 600,000-strong Pakistani army. Over a million
young people, who are drawn to jihad but are not armed, provide
further backing to this 200,000-strong force (p. 83).
C. Christine Fair, Islamic Education in Pakistan report stemming from a talk given in
Washington, D.C., on March 21, 2006 (Washington, D.C.: United States Institute of Peace, 2006);
Saleem H. Ali, Islamic Education and Conflict: Understanding the Madrassahs of Pakistan, draft
project report prepared with a grant from the United States Institute of Peace, July 1, 2005, copy
supplied by the author; and Alexander Evans, Understanding Madrasahs: How Threatening Are
They? Foreign Affairs 85, no. 1 (January/February 2006): 916.
Pakistan: Madrasas, Extremism and the Military, ICG Asia Report No. 36 (Islamabad/Brussels:
International Crisis Group, July 29, 2002, as amended on July 15, 2005).
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number at around 10,000four to five times less than Behera asserts. The
ICGs amended version, by the way, was necessitated by the revelation that
the ICG reports original claim that about a third of all children in Pakistan
in education attend madrasas (p. i) was itself in dire need of correction:
the inadvertent wrong positioning of a decimal, it turns out, had increased
madrasah enrollment tenfold, prompting a fierce battle over statistics between
the ICG and its critics. Perhaps Behera also needs to recheck her decimals.
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any group for self-determination. Second, in calling upon India and Pakistan
to resolve Kashmir by remaking themselves into local player-centric, multi-
layered, and essentially confederal political constructs, Behera places herself
well outside the domain of practical politics and political realism.
Teresita C. Schaffer is Director of the South Asia Program at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies. She is a retired U.S. ambassador with long experience in South Asia. She can be
reached at <tschaffer@csis.org>.
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along with an earlier work, State, Identity and Violence: Jammu, Kashmir and
Ladakh, is a most welcome remedy to this gap.
In both books, Behera describes a region that was brought together
through a series of historical accidents, but where for centuries the central
areas at least have had a strong sense of separate identity. She describes the
pull of competing identities and the decades-long ebb and flow of secular and
Islam-centered definitions of nationalism among Kashmiris. State, Identity and
Violence focuses more on the internal picture, whereas Demystifying Kashmir
puts this Kashmir-centric analysis into a broader regional and international
context.
The most compelling part of Beheras story is the interplay between
Kashmir, on the one hand, and Indian and Pakistani policy and attitudes, on
the other. The Kashmir problem began as a dispute over territory; what has
made it toxic has been incompatible national identities.
India saw itself as a secular, multi-religious state. Behera characterizes
Indian strategy as primarily political, having roots in Indias drive to fit
Kashmir into the mosaic of Indias multi-ethnic, multicultural democracy.
In theory, given the large number of other distinct local identities in the
Indian union, the Indian model should have provided a comfortable home
for Kashmiri particularism. In practice, however, Kashmirs circumstances
made it hard to apply the model. Kashmiris were from the start divided about
whether they wanted to be part of India, and Indias tactics by turns invoked
the peoples will and played fast and loose with it during long periods when
Delhi manipulated the leadership in the Kashmir valley. Behera puts it well:
Kashmiri nationalism had been stifled by Indian nationalism.
Pakistans chosen identity was as the homeland for the Muslims of the
subcontinent, but the fact that the Kashmir Valley was in Indian hands deprived
Pakistan of a major Muslim-majority region. Behera sees Pakistans strategy
as chiefly military. Having long been Pakistans major political actor, the army
saw the task of gaining Kashmir for Pakistan as the ultimate vindication of its
status as guardian of the nation. To this end, the military used a shifting blend of
conventional and sub-conventional tactics, with irregulars leading Pakistans
military efforts in 1949, a regular army operation in 1965, and irregulars back
in the forefront after 1989. I agree with Beheras judgment that the army has
been a key player but believe she somewhat short-changes two other aspects
of Pakistans strategy. The first is the strategys legal roots in the 1949 U.N.
resolutions on Kashmir and those resolutions demand for a plebiscite; the
second is Pakistans stress on Kashmirs Muslim identity. Pakistans Islamic
identity was an attraction at various times for Kashmiris alienated from
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Delhi, but the more nationalistic among them came also to resent Pakistans
insistence that Kashmiris must support accession to Pakistan.
The least known participants in this clash of identities are the Kashmiris.
They have traditionally seen themselves as a separate people, not wanting to be
absorbed into either collectivity, among whom Muslims were in the majority
and yet a distinctive, syncretistic culture flourished. Behera recounts with skill
and subtlety how different identities compete for Kashmiri allegiancethe
Islamic identity, the identity of the larger Indian world, and the sometimes
clashing subregional identities of Ladakhis, Jammuites, and residents of the
Kashmir Valley, the most intense subject of dispute. She describes in vivid
detail the way the key personalities shifted their emphasis between Islam and
Kashmiriyat. She includes a chapter on the parts of Kashmir under Pakistans
control, areas frequently omitted from analyses of Kashmir.
Especially after 1989 a militant movement that arose out of local
nationalism came to be overshadowed by its hard-line, Islamic extremist
elements; in the process the dispute over Kashmir acquired a harder
ideological edge. Behera provides a valuable account of this transformation
including the resulting toll it has taken on Kashmir itself. She acknowledges
both Indias and Pakistans efforts to manipulate not only the Kashmir issue
but also the Kashmiris themselves. Kashmirs political leaders do not appear
in a particularly favorable lightthe earlier generation had considerable
stature but were both manipulative and manipulated; todays leaders come
across as petty. Yet as highlighted by Behera there is need for real leadership
in Kashmir.
Behera devotes a chapter to the peace puzzle. She begins with a plea
for an inclusive process including several layers of discussions, some of
which would provide the framework for the participation of Kashmiris
from different stakeholder groups and different subregions. The Kashmiris,
strangely enough, have never been part of any of the serious peace efforts
on Kashmir. Pakistan has urged that its Kashmiri friends be included in the
process, though this may reflect a belief that the Kashmiris were likely to
support the Pakistani position. In recent years India has on several occasions
begun dialogues with Kashmiris. India has strenuously resisted Pakistani
and Kashmiri calls for three-sided discussions including both Pakistan and
Kashmiris; indeed, India has not been willing to conduct serious discussions
at the same time with Pakistan and Kashmiris, even if those discussions were
to take place in different rooms. Beheras call for a multi-layered process is a
way of sidestepping this historical baggage.
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Behera goes on to sketch out three broad policy options each for India,
Pakistan, the Kashmiris, and the international community. What makes
Beheras analysis of these options particularly useful is her willingness
to look at the unintended consequences that might flow from each line of
policy. Beheras own preference lies with the options that would have India
and Pakistan make a Kashmir settlement a real priority, with the Kashmiris
negotiating parallel but distinct self-government arrangements with both India
and Pakistan. Behera sees these options as, sadly, the most difficult for each
party to adopt, and, while presenting options for the international community,
does not appear to see outside countries as making much difference to the
timing or outcome in Kashmir. Interestingly, Pakistani President Musharraf
made a proposal in late November 2006, which appears to suggest this kind of
parallel self-government, so perhaps the prospects are not as bleak as Behera
suggests.
I also wish Behera had dealt in greater depth with the economic dimension.
My work on this subject suggests that there are a wide variety of measures the
Indian or Pakistani authorities could take independently of one another that
could help build peace constituencies. Additionally self-governance proposals
for Kashmir could be tremendously strengthened by a few strategically
chosen joint economic initiativessuch as combining the electric grids or,
more ambitiously, working toward a free trade area that encompassed all (or
a major part) of the old princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. This is indeed
the only context in which joint action makes sense. President Musharraf s
calls for joint administration in Kashmir is a recipe for trouble; the Indus
Waters Treaty, which is the most successful India-Pakistan agreement to
date, has held up for 46 years largely because the treaty does not require daily
interaction and joint decisionmaking by those two estranged governments.
These are, nevertheless, small criticisms. Navnita Chadha Behera has
written a valuable book. I wish only that her final chapter had not left me
feeling depressed.
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Sumit Ganguly is a Professor of Political Science, Director of the India Studies Institute, and the
holder of the Rabindranath Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations at Indiana University,
Bloomington. He is available at <sganguly@indiana.edu>.
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and substantive sense. I would point out that, unlike a host of Indian scholars
and commentators, I did not seek to blithely suggest that the insurgency of
1989 was the product of nefarious Pakistani designs. Instead my book went
to some length to show that previous Pakistani attempts to sow discord in
Kashmir had failed. Ironically, the Pakistanis managed to exploit the extant
political grievances after 1989 because a new generation of Kashmiris, who
had acquired a degree of political sophistication thanks to the economic
and social policies of the Indian state, would no longer tolerate its continued
electoral chicanery.
These shortcomings and criticisms of the work notwithstanding, I would
like to reiterate that Beheras research will be of considerable value to the
intelligent but non-specialist audience.
Shalendra Sharma is Professor in the Department of Politics at the University of San Francisco.
He is the author of The Asian Financial Crisis: Meltdown, Reform and Recovery (2003). His latest book,
From Vision to Action: Strategies to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals, will be released in 2007
by Routledge. He is available at <sharmas@usfca.edu>.
The state of Jammu and Kashmir is an amalgam of peoples of diverse ethnolinguistic and religious
background. Indian-controlled Kashmir consists of three core areas: the Kashmir Valley (or the
Vale), Jammu, and Ladakh. The Kashmir Valley is overwhelmingly Muslim, Jammu is mainly
Hindu, and Ladakh is mainly Buddhist. The Pakistan controlled sector is divided into two parts:
Azad, or Free Kashmir, and the northern territories of Gilgit and Hunza. The Chinese control the
Aksai Chin region in northeastern Ladakh.
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Authors Response
Navnita Chadha Behera
Navnita Chadha Behera teaches in the political science department at Delhi University
(India) and is a former visiting scholar in foreign policy studies at the Brookings Institution. She can be
reached at <behera@airtelbroadband.in>.
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deeply plural realities of the Jammu and Kashmir society. Recognizing this
societys rich, complex, and multi-faceted character is critically important
not only for understanding the structural causes of conflict but also for
providing opportunities to establish a just, viable, and lasting solution. I agree
with Ganguly that the nation-state is here to stay. At stake, however, is not
the resilience of the idea of nation-state per se but the need to understand
the nation-states different, as well as changing, political character. This
perspective also characterizes the central argument of the book: the Kashmir
conflict needs to be understood primarily as a political battle of state-making
involving three principal actors (i.e., India, Pakistan, and the people of Jammu
and Kashmir on both sides of the Line of the Control) rather than as either
a territorial conflict between India and Pakistan or an ideological, Hindu-
Muslim conflict.
None of the critical junctures in Kashmirs political historyKashmirs
accession to India, Sheikh Abdullahs separatist agenda in the 1950s, and
the insurgent movement in the 1990scan be fully explained without
understanding the Kashmiris divergent notions of their statehood or
those of the Indian and Pakistani leadership. Chapter one debunks the
traditional argument that the genesis of the Kashmir conflict lay in the
Hindu Maharaja Hari Singhs decision to accede to India, which violated the
partitions principle of the two-nation theory. Though the legality of Jammu
and Kashmirs accession was undoubtedly completed by Maharajas signing
of the Instrument of Accession, far more important was the political choice
of a popular Muslim leader like Sheikh Abdullah to join India as well as his
unequivocal repudiation of the two-nation theory. The rationale for Sheikhs
decision lay in the belief that Kashmirs political future would be more secure
in the democratic, secular, and federal polity of India than in the feudal state
of Pakistan. Sheikhs differences with Nehru later grew due to their divergent
notions of Kashmirs political status within the Indian Union. Nehrus attempts
to integrate Jammu and Kashmir were perceived by these areas as eroding
their political autonomy. Likewise, in the 1990s successive government
impositions of political choices on the Kashmiris and appropriation of their
political space by centralized political structures forced them to take the path
of secession. Yet this is only one part of the story.
Explanation of the outcomethe failure of the Kashmiri secessionist
agenda in the 1950s and the 1990srequires an understanding of the political
character of the Jammu and Kashmir state. This is because while fighting
against Indias integrative pressures the Kashmiri leadership had replicated
the unitary power structures in Jammu and Kashmir, thus alienating the
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Pakistani sources and 13% from international sources; in chapter six on the
Pakistani part of Kashmir, these figures are 61% and 28% respectively. This
is, however, not to overlook and regret my error, correctly pointed out by
Wirsing, in citing the number of madrasas in Pakistan.
That all four reviewers differ in their assessment on the right balance of
the factors that may be used to explain the Kashmir conflict only testifies to
the enormous challenge in presenting a comprehensive analysis of the deep
complexities of the conflict. Sharmas argument that the Kashmiri insurgency
became protracted due to its increasingly communal character is difficult to
evaluate because there is no authentic data available to prove how significant
is the proportion of those Kashmiris who believe that they are waging an
existential war of resistance against an infidel Hindu India. As chapter five
points out, even the Jamaat-i-Islami ideologue Syed Ali Shah Geelani, who
was instrumental in re-casting the political discourse and provided a religious
rationale for advocating Kashmirs accession to Pakistan, advocates the need
to bring back into the Valley the Kashmiri Pandits, who were a part and parcel
of the Kashmir Valleys composite nature. Both militants and the Pakistan
establishment have used the Islamic cardbut to no avail because the Valley
Kashmiris have repeatedly rejected it.The Valley Kashmirs strongly resented
the hijacking of their political movement by Islamic warriors who had no
respect for the religious beliefs of Sufi Islam and debunked their political goal
of azadi (independence). Among the militantsespecially the first generation
of their cadremany used the Islamic card out of a strategic and tactical
compulsion to induce their Pakistani patrons to provide funds and arms.
I agree with Ganguly that the Kashmir conflict cannot be fully understood
outside the Indo-Pakistani context; to that extent, this book builds on my
original thesis offered in State, Identity and Violence: Jammu, Kashmir and
Ladakh, which focused on the internal dynamics between the Indian state and
local identities. The strength of this book, Schaffer valuably points out, lies in the
interplay between Kashmir, on the one hand, and Indian and Pakistani policy
and attitudes, on the other. Wirsing, however, feels that there is a continuing
over-emphasis on the internalities of the Kashmir dispute at the cost of its
externalities. This is a particularly important limitation since internal factors
are unlikely to exercise a decisive veto over the peace process; that focus on
internal factors is because, as Wirsing points out, neither Pakistan nor India
has ever given highest priority to any group of Kashmiris or, indeed, to the
desire of any group for self-determination. Though a fair capsule statement,
this misses two important points. The first pertains to an important exception,
that Nehrus move to grant Kashmir a special status under Article 370 of
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