UNITY AT GUNPOINT
THE WEEKLY ECONOMIST (London) April 3, 1971.
East Pakistan's Sheikh
Mujib looks a loser today, but it is more likely that President Yahya has
chosen the road that leads to a civil war he cannot win.
President Yahya has taken desperate action.
He has chosen to break the deadlock about Pakistan's future by breaking Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman and his Awami League. No one thought he would dare to try, and
still less that he would succeed. But now it seems the army, after its sharp
and bloody takeover, has the upper hand. The reports from foreign journalists
whom the army failed to expel quickly enough show that in Dacca, at least, the
army's claim to have won control was accurate. And after prolonged fighting,
The same may now be true of Chittagong, the province's main port. How much
resistance there still is elsewhere is untlear. The army owed its apparent
success to the suddenness with which it struck arresting a number of the Awami
League leaders as well as shooting up parts of Dacca—and unpreparedness of the
Awami League Organisation.
But though he may have pacified the main
cities, shattered the Awami leadership and cowed many Bengalis into
submis-siveness, President Yahya's problems are only just beginning. He will
find it difficult to police the countryside ; much of East Pakistan split by
innumerable waterways, is the sort of terrain regular soldiers hate but
guerrillas love.
Like neighbouring West Bengal, East Pakistan
has its share of Pro-Peking peasant revolutionaries preaching violence. So long
as Sheikh Mujib promised the fruits of autonomy through negotiation they
remained weak and eclipsed by Sheikh Mujib's rising star. But that the army has
moved in so bloodily their argument that the violence can only he met with
violence may seem unanswerable. Presumably their numbers will rise. And so will
the level of the Ganges and Brahmaputra which, by the time the monsoon comes in
May or June, will make most of East Pakistan impassable for any troops but the men
with an automatic and a sack of rice. No doubt the guerrillas will be pretty
unco-ordinated, because the .army seems to have rounded up a good many of their
potential leaders ; but even a disorganised resistance may be widespread enough
to tie down a lot of the 70,000 troops in the eastern region. And President
Yahya has a major logistic problem in getting supplies and reinforcement all
the way from West Pakistan.
There are other
problems for President Yahya besides the threat of guerrilla action. He will
have to get the life of the province, which has been running at a trickle for
the past month moving again, and this with a population embittered by the
re-imposition of the West. Pakistani military rule. The bit-terness will have
been compounded by the Army's apparent disregard for civilians. Some Bengalis
willing to serve the Martial Law regime will, of course, be found ; a lot of
others are just not going to co-operate. President Yahya may well have to
import Punjabis to run the civil service, and use the army to run essential
services. Nor has he any guarantee that West Pakistan will keep quiet. It
probably will. But the minority provinces of Baluchistan and North-West
Frontier hove already shown sympathy for Sheikh Mujib's ideas about provincial
autonomy. Martial Law will presumably continue to apply in West Pakistan and
even Mr. Bhutto may be weary of a situation which prevents him from taking
power in any -shape.
In the same speech
in which be branded Sheikh Mujib a traitor, President Yahya reiterated that his
main aim remained the onme i.e. the transfer of power to the people's elected
l'Inirorientatives "as soon as the situation permits". But when
wrmit. And who will be regarded as an acceptable representatives of East
Pakistan ? If Sheikh Mujib is ruled out the President will either have to hope
that a quisling will emerge to negotiate with him, or call new elections. Unless
these elections are rigged it is hard to see any one now winning the east
Pakistani vote except of a ticket not of autonomy, but of independence. It does
see that unless President Yahya drops his present definition of the “unity and
integrity of Pakistan" he will never shed the office he so fervently disclaims.
The optimistic hope
is that tight martial law will cool the situation down to a point where some
sort of negotiations on provincial autonomy could start again. This hope
depends on, whether you believe that President Yahya was negotiating at Dacca
in good faith or just buying time for military preparations. There is evidence
that he was doing both. But if the President did not think the talks would
solve anything, it is dif-ficult not to agree with him. For the talks were only
about the-conditions of Sheikh Mujib's attendance at the National Assembly ; they did not tackle real question
of the Sheikh MTh's six-point plan for East Pakistan. And those six points
would inevitably have divided President Yahya and Sheikh Mujib’s sooner or
later. Control of foreign trade would have let East Pakistan to trade with
India, which would have given it one-main attribute of indezendent foreign
policy. There is no halfway house in the land of autonomy Sheikh Mujib was
demanding, So, however, much one may dislike what President Yahya has done 'it
is difficult not to agree with him the negotiations over Sheikh Mujib's demands
could only result in all or nothing. President Yahya has decided on nothing.
The fact that
Bengali resistance seems to have been easily crushed by the army makes it
unlikely that anyone abroad is going to offer recognition to Bangladesh. But
guerrilla activity may get outside help, notably from India. On. Wednesday the
Indian Parliament unanimously passed a resolution, moved by Mrs. Gandhi,
condemning the use of force in East Pakistan. There is pressure on Mrs. Gandhi
to go further than this, West Bengalis have already offered arms and shelter to
East Pakistani 'freedom fighters". But Mrs. Gandhi is alive td the dangers
of overt, official support, she has warned "Indians that '‘one wrong step
or one wrong word may have an effect entirely different to what we all
intend". She should be cautious in her acts as her words. The Pakistani
array would crack down the Bengalis all the harder if Indian involvement were
suspected.
No doubt Mrs. Gandhi
also fears the long-term effects of guerrilla co-operation between East and
West Bengal. If Maoist propaganda came to replace Hindu-Muslim mistrust, it
could lay the foundations of a united Bengal, independent of India, too. But
Mrs. Gandhi will find it hard to seal off India's 900 mile border with East
Pakistan; and unofficial Indian support would create the classic RECIPE for
guerrilla success with Pakistani guerrillas striking out of a safe Indian
hinterland.
Not surprisingly,
there has not been a word from Peking about the crisis. The Chinese must be
having difficult times in making their minds up. On the one hand they have
helped to 'equip the army and have supported it over Kashmir, a policy which
has won them warm praise from West. Pakistanis and Mr. Bhutto in particular.
The Chinese have close links with West Pakistan all weather road through the
Himalayas has just been opened and they also have strategic interest in
main-training them, most favorable status in, this area, where four nations'
meet., On the other hand, the Bengali revolt may develop into just the sort of
"Liberation War" that Peking usually feels tempted to support. Of
course, Maoists are going to play a large part in any guerrilla campaign in
East Pakistan. But Chinese support for the Bengalis would mean support for a
movement which wants closer relations with India and would jeopardize China's
special relationship with West Pakistan.
This is the time
Peking had been confronted with such a startle choice between national and
ideological interests. The Chinese would probably like to duck the whole
dilemma by ignoring it ; that will be difficult if a call for help come from
the Bengalis. But at this moment outside help will only keep a bloody civil war
dragging on. Foreign sympathizers with East Pakistan's plight would be better
advised to use such Influence as they have in urging President Yahya to offer a
resumption of the dialogue with Bengal before he finds himself fighting an
insoluble guerrilla war.
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