Pakistan And India To Go To War Over Water?
Submitted by John C.K. Daly of OilPrice.com
A peaceful and stable Pakistan is integral to western efforts to pacify Afghanistan, but Islamabadās obsessions with its giant eastern neighbor may render such issues moot.
Since partition in 1947, Pakistan and India have fought four armed conflicts, in 1947, 1965, 1971 (which led to the establishment of Bangladesh, formerly East Pakistan) and the 1999 Kargil clash.
With the exception of the 1971 conflict, which involved rising tensions in East Pakistan, the others have all involved issues arising from control of Kashmir.
But now a rising new element of discord threatens to precipitate a new armed clash between southern Asiaās two nuclear powers ā water.
Lahoreās āThe Nationā newspaper on Sunday published an editorial entitled, āWar with India inevitable: Nizami,ā the newspaperās Editor-in-Chief and Nazaria-i-Pakistan Trust Chairman, Majid Nizami, asked his fellow citizens to prepare for a war with India over water issues. Nizami told those attending the āPakistan-India relations; Our rulers- new wishesā session at Aiwan-e-Karkunan Tehrik-e-Pakistan, which he chaired, āIndian hostilities and conspiracies against the country will never end until she is taught a lesson.ā
While The Nation is a conservative daily, part of the Nawa-i-Waqt publishing group, with a circulation of roughly 20,000, it has a website, and whatās more, close ties to Pakistanās highest military circles, so Nizamiās comments should hardly be rejected out of hand.
Furthermore, Niazmiās audience included some high ranking Pakistani officials, including Nazaria-i-Pakistan Vice Chairman Dr Rafique Ahmed; Pakistan Movement Workers-Trust Chairman, retired ColonelĀ Jamshed Ahmed Tareen; former Foreign Secretary Shamshad Ahmed Khan; Jamiat Ulema-e-Pakistan Secretary General Qari Zawar Bahadur; retired Air Marshall Khurished Anwar Mirza; retired Brigadier Hamid Saeed Akhtar and Jamaat-e-Islami Lahore Chief Ameer-ul-Azeem, among others.
At issue are Pakistanās concerns over Indiaās ongoing construction of two hydroelectric dams on the upper reaches of the Indus River. Islamabad is concerned that the 45 megawatt, 190-foot tall Nimoo-Bazgo concrete dam 44 megawatt Chutak hydroelectric power project will reduce the Indus Riverās flow towards Pakistan, as they are capable of storing up to 4.23 billion cubic feet of water, violating the terms of the bilateral 1960 Indus Water Treaty. The Indus, which begins in Indian-controlled Kashmir, is crucial to both India and Pakistan, but is currently experiencing water flows down 30 percent from its normal levels. The Indus is Pakistan's primary freshwater source, on which 90 percent of its agriculture depends. According to a number of Pakistani agriculture and water experts, the nation is heading towards a massive water shortage in the next couple of years due to insufficient water management practices and storage capacity, which will be exacerbated by the twin Indian hydroelectric projects, as they will further diminish the Indusā flow.
So, if push comes to shove, whoās got Pakistanās back?
China.
During the Boao Forum for Asia, on Chinaās southern Hainan island on 1 April, Pakistan and China agreed to support each other āin all circumstancesā and vowed to uphold their sovereignty and territorial integrity at all costs. Pakistani Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani told Chinese Executive Vice Premier Li Keqiang, āChinaās friend is our friend, and Chinaās enemy is ours,ā adding Pakistan considers Chinaās security as its own security and supports Chinaās position on Taiwan, Tibet and Xinqiang. Li replied that China would support Pakistanās sovereignty and territorial integrity in every situation, telling Gilani, āNo matter what changes take place at international level, we will uphold Pakistanās sovereignty and territorial integrity.ā
It might be noted here that in October 1962, coinciding with the Cuban missile crisis, India and China fought a brief but bitter war along their disputed Himalayan border.
Fifty years later, China and India have yet to resolve their border issues over Kashmir and China continues to claim most of India's Arunachal Pradesh to the base of the Himalayas in the absence of any definitive treaty delineating the border. Kashmir remains the site of the world's largest and most militarized territorial dispute with portions under the de facto administration of China (Aksai Chin), India (Jammu and Kashmir), and Pakistan (Azad Kashmir and Northern Areas).
No guesses therefore as to whom Beijing might back should Pakistani-Indian tensions continue to rise.
Accordingly, to keep the peace, one might paraphrase Ronald Reagan in Berlin ā āPrime Minister Singh, tear down those dams!ā
But donāt bet on it.