RHETORIC AND REALITY
"Where, after three weeks of messy bloodshed,
do the military rulers of Pakistan
now stand? Superficially they prosper. Bangla Desh's roving bands of
"liberation fighters" have never and will never cope with the
Pakistani Army in force. That force is being deployed to flatten urban
resistance. Yahya Khan will soon have most cities and towns on a tight rein. He
will also have all the Chinese spare parts overflying rights, and hire purchase
rhetoric he can take. For the moment, the Awami League "miscreants"
are dead, incarceratea or negligible. Pakistan is
cowed, but united.
"Yet, the true balance sheet is very different.
Perhaps (ideally, and even at some cost) Pakistan is better together than
apart. Perhaps continual martial law can maintain that state and, as famine
saps revolt, bring smouldering servility. But Yahya must be forced to take a
wider view. May be a co-ordinated Bengali resistance movement will need years
to organise, but in the meantime Bengalis will remain one of the most populous
people on earth, always simmering in crowds, always ready to overwhelm and
slaughter patrols or lone Punjabi soldiers. The province which-head for
head-provides a majority of Pakistanis will have to be held down by tanks and
planes and large concentrations of troops for as long as any prophet can see.
There is no decent hope of passing the buck to some civilian regime, since
virtually every civilian politicians - bar the ancient, sickly Nurul Amin - was
obliterated at the polls last December. Collaborators with Islamabad will have no democratic
justification; they will not be able to appear in public without peril.
"The Eastern prospect, in short, is long, weary
gloom-economic stagnation,, starvation, murders, the slow growth of extremism.
Even Chinese friendship has a touch of poison in the embrace. Peking
may care little if Maoist Bengalis like Maulana Bhasani find themselves at the
wrong end of Yahya's bayonets: anything to worst the pro-American Sheikh Mujib.
But once the Awami League is defunct and East Pakistan
is given over to wild men of rebellion, then only the most stupid of generals
will be surprised to find Chinese arms in every guerilla cache. And in the West
there lies bleakness too. Mr. Bhutto may rejoice at army action today; but he
will not rejoice long if it keeps him from the power he won at the ballot box. Pakistan is a nation in hock to the World Bank
and to the aid-givers of the world: They are already turning away, gorged on
brutality Pakistani defence policy (and the whole existence of the generals)
rests on confrontation with India
over Kashmir. Pakistan
alleges that India
holds the Pakistani loving Kashmiris in check by steely repression. It is the
most ludicrous of cases now, as the junta of Islamabad openly exercises just such
repression on 75 million bonafide Pakistanis. The United Nations will surely
collapse in bitter laughter if Kashmir comes
up again. The issue is as dead as the students of Dacca University.
"Nobody can tell precisely what Yahya's
strategists whispered in his ear three weeks ago. Nobody can tell, but anyone
can deduce. They appear to have thought that cutting off the head would kill
Bengali nationalism: precisely the reverse. They appear to have forgotten about
world opinion. They appear, most insanely of all, to have ruled India out of
the military calculations, so that the uncontrolled border and aid seeping in
has them as much by the throat as proliferatin- diplomatic complications. To
reiterate: the Bangla Desh affair is not a second Biafra or the fruits of more
interminable wrangling between Delhi and Rawalpindi. It arose
simply when a well conducted, peaceful election produced a result the army
could not stand. Sheikh Mujib himself has not, in any certain sence declared
Benglai independence. He was not asking essentially for more than the programme
he legally fought and won the election on. Of course there are shades of grey;
of course, responsibility for the carnage is shared. But influential and
intelligent Pakistanis in the west can stop that carnage tomorrow if they add
up the balance sheet aright and put their soldiers in economic chains. This is
not a Sino-Soviet slanging match about Marxist technicalities. It is, at root,
a simple matter; of freedom, of morality, and of humanity".
(Editorial, GUARDIAN,
London-April 14, 1971)
Source:
Bangladesh
Documents, vol-I, p.396-397