| Soldiers are
        for peace, not war
 By K.S. Bajwa
 "NO to an arms race" was
        boldly emblazoned across the podium behind which sat the
        president of the World Peace Council flanked by a few
        foreign delegates and the local notables. Some years
        back, this was scenario at the Punjab State conference of
        the All India Peace and Solidarity Organisation at
        Chandigarh. Sitting next to the president was General
        Gomez, who became President of Portugal when the fascists
        were over thrown and later became Vice President of the
        Peace Council. In the audience was a
        sprinkling of ex-soldiers, who had come for the cause of
        world Peace. To many, this gathering of the once standard
        bearers of Mars under the sign of the dove might have
        looked incongruous. Does not military
        professionalism seek and find its fulfilment in a clash
        of arms? Military reputations are made on the fields of
        battle and ever after soldiers proudly wear their medals.
        Do soldiers seek and start wars? There are many who
        believe that soldiers are only ticking at full tilt
        during wars and that they are ever eager for combat. It
        is also said that big military establishments provoke
        wars. These are fallacies or rather calculated
        falsehoods. Soldiers do not make war. The ruling elite and a
        horde of shadowy manipulators do. They in fact, control
        wars or peace, not the military. The function of a
        soldier is to defend his country when called upon to do
        so. He is no more blood-thirsty than a civilian or
        innately lustful for combat. In fact, soldiers are often
        sickened by war. By being fully combat ready and by
        holding out the promise of a costly retribution, they
        actually prevent wars. Man is by nature
        combative, covetous and lustful  somewhat of a
        predator. The most dynamic thrust of his ambition has
        always been pursuit of power over the destinies of
        fellow-men. His appetite is never ending. Motivations of
        self-interest gather rationales and compromises on a
        broader canvas. The vantage points of rulers become those
        of the nations. Take the case of India
        and Pakistan. A free flow of trade would replace costly
        imports with goods produced much cheaper next door. Life
        for the people could be made easier. But this does not
        serve the purpose of the military-trade-industry combine
        in Pakistan, that manipulate the power elite. So a hate
        campaign is kept alive and the barriers stay up. Wars are conspiracies
        against people. The conspirators know no ideologies,
        race, religion or national boundaries. They are beyond
        good and evil. The Caesars they put into power are their
        creatures and the people are helpless. It is well known
        that the munition barons of Europe and America were
        behind World War I. They are still there, stronger and
        more callous. They are no longer alone
         a host of multi-national predators have joined
        them. While the people suffer, the oil kings make huge
        profits out of the conflicts in West Asia. President John
        F. Kennedy knew what he was talking about when he spoke
        of "The Gnomes of Zurich". Perhaps he knew too
        much. We too have had our
        gnomes  The Gnomes of Raisina Hill! During the
        later years of Indira Gandhis autocratic rule, a
        policy thrust to extend military influence in the
        neighbouring South Asia, was formulated. Arming and
        training of LTTE cadres was a part of this plan. After
        her assasination, Rajiv Gandhi continued with this
        thrust. The culmination came in 1987, when an ambivalent
        Jayawardene was cajoled and browbeaten to sign the
        Indo-Sri Lankan Accord. Besides the promises of
        financial assistance and a military intervention to
        resolve the Tamil problem, the presence of an Indian
        warship carrying a special services battalion on board,
        provided the clincher. The Indian Peace Keeping Force
        (IPKF) was inducted into Sri Lanka without a clearcut
        national purpose and an unambiguous mandate. The wily
        Premadasa, turned the tables by lining up Prabhakaran of
        the LTTE on his side to engineer an early exit of the
        IPKF. This hapless force paid for with their blood and
        toil. As yet the Gnomes of Raisina Hill did not rest
        content. A war with Pakistan was
        always an inviting option, which would not in their
        reckoning require a great deal of legitimising.
        Brasstacks in Rajasthan was designed to provoke a
        conflict and launch an attack. Sunderji, the then Army
        Chief invented a plan to advance onto Sukhur,
        outstripping Indian Air Force fighter cover from their
        existing airfields by nearly a hundred miles. When this
        flaw was questioned by Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief,
        Western Air Command, he said that the ground forces would
        rely on the protection offered by ground to air missile
        system. How odd that an Army
        Chief driven by an ambition for military glory would
        forget the lessons of Longewala in 1971 when a Pak
        armoured column without air cover was practically wiped
        out and of the Arab-Israeli war in 1973, when the
        Egyptians with three times the number of missile system
        we could deploy, could not stop the Israeli Air Force
        from wrecking havoc upon them. While we paid heavily for
        the Sri Lankan folly, we were saved from the Brasstacks
        folly in 1987 by Rajiv Gandhi, who developed cold feet at
        the last moment. There has been a change
        in the practices of war. The world has become a hostage
        to nuclear terror. It is also much more concerned with
        liberty and equality. It is becoming increasingly vocal
        against blatant use of force by the powerful against the
        weak. Yet the powerful nations still consider the world
        their chessboard. The USA can unleash missile attacks on
        sovereign lands without warning and again the USA and the
        UK can thumb their noses upon the UN and bomb Iraq at
        will. Even more so the economic assaults with sanctions,
        political intrigues to subvert national governments,
        surrogate and proxy-conflicts, terrorism and the
        manipulation of insurgents and dissidents, have become
        the new weapons to bend nations to purpose of power. This is even a more
        dangerous armoury when viewed against the fact that
        socio-economic justice has not kept pace with political
        advancement. Economic inequalities, rivalries to corner
        scarce resources especially the sources of energy and
        over consumption by the richer nations,create social
        distortions. Exploitation of the under-developed
        countries and suppression of minorities within the
        states, generate tensions. This practice of
        instability and mistrust, contains germs of relevance,
        for powerful war machines and their continuous growth and
        sophistication. This is fertile ground for the faceless
        men of power and profit, to implant stock piles of
        horror. Is there any hope for
        mankind? Will we always live under the shadow of war,
        separated by divides of colour, race, religion and narrow
        national interests? Will this ruthless exploitation ever
        come to an end or at the least, be reduced to manageable
        proportions? Fortunately, it is not all darkness. There
        have been good omens. The world has become
        more accessible and closer. The essential universality of
        the human being is finding greater expression, both in
        dialogue and deed. A vast concourse of people has emerged
        from colonial subjugation, where freedom and equality
        have taken hold over minds of men and human fraternity
        cannot be denied. There is an urge for a stable world
        order, based on justice and equal opportunity. World opinion is
        beginning to exert powerful constraints on overt hostile
        projections and interference in internal affairs of the
        people. The governments are becoming increasingly
        sensitive to the legitimacy of their decision within the
        country and the political and economic costs in the
        international forums. As the awareness of
        human dignity and justice spreads, so will increase the
        power of the voice of people. Perhaps, the biggest hurdle
        lies within the human schizophrenia under which we think,
        judge and act on two different planes  one for
        ourselves and one for others. These double
        standards/permeate the conduct of nations and their
        dealings with one another. There is a charm between
        protestations of promotion of human rights and
        compulsions of self-interest. Salvation lies in the
        recognition of human consciousness to blend essential
        self-interest with universal well being. The struggle for an
        enduring universal peace will not be easy. The people
        must recognise the faceless men and make them stand naked
        in the dock of the world opinion. But it will be a long
        time before the gnomes are buries and the meek inherit
        the earth. The soldiers plead not guilty! 
 This feature was published on March 28,
        1999
 
 
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