http://www.telegraphindia.com/1060220/asp/opinion/story_5850159.asp

The Telegraph (Calcutta) Monday, February 20, 2006

HOW THE STALEMATE MACHINE WORKS

Sanjib Baruah

The obvious lesson of Kakopathar is that counter-insurgency operations and 
negotiations towards peace do not go together, writes Sanjib Baruah The 
author is at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi, and Bard College, 
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York

The developments in Assam over the past few days have made one thing 
clear: that reports in recent years of the United Liberation Front of 
Assam losing influence have been highly exaggerated. At least that is not 
the case in those parts of rural upper Assam  the home ground of ULFAs 
exiled top leadership and the site of the recent unrest.

For a number of days, pro-ULFA slogans and sentiments have been in open 
display as villagers of the Kakopathar region blocked a national highway, 
stormed army pickets, vandalized vehicles and even dug up the highway to 
protest against the custodial killing of a fellow villager by the Indian 
army. That the army describes the victim as an ULFA hit-man has had no 
effect on the publics sense of outrage. Nine persons were killed in a 
police firing of protesters. ULFA called an Assam bandh on February 13, 
protesting against the Kakopathar firing and its chairman, Arabinda 
Rajkhowa, compared the incident with the Jalianwalla Bagh massacre.

The backdrop to these developments might initially seem awkward. The 
second meeting between the government of India and the ULFA-appointed 
peoples consultative group had just taken place in Delhi where the 
government even promised confidence-building measures to facilitate what 
could some day be called a peace process. However, important differences 
exist on the government side on whether to negotiate with ULFA. No less a 
person than Assams governor, Lieutenant General Ajai Singh  architect of 
two counter-insurgency operations against ULFA  publicly opposes 
negotiations. What is there to negotiate with them? he asks. Instead, he 
favours instilling fear in the rebels so that they cannot dictate terms. 
By contrast, Assams elected chief minister, Tarun Gogoi, has been strongly 
supportive of negotiations. Singh and some others in the security 
establishment would probably interpret Kakopathar as no more than a 
temporary setback. But if a single incident could become a trigger to such 
public anger and expression of pro-ULFA sentiments, one can hardly have 
confidence in the security establishments reading of the ground situation 
and its recipe for bringing about peace.

Indias track record of ending internal armed conflicts is quite poor. 
Today the world has numerous intra-state armed conflicts, and everywhere 
they last long  on average about seven years as opposed to six months for 
international wars according to one count. However, the duration of 
intra-state armed conflicts in India  and in the rest of south Asia  have 
been much longer than the world average. The Naga war  despite the 
nine-year old ceasefire  will soon enter the sixth decade, making it one 
of the worlds oldest armed conflicts.

There are many reasons why most of our conflicts have been long-lasting. 
But one common factor seems to suggest itself. Those who study armed 
internal conflicts emphasize the role of a mutually hurting stalemate 
felt by conflicting parties  as a necessary condition for pushing 
conflicts in the direction of a negotiated settlement. These theorists 
argue that when parties realize that further military escalation would not 
produce victory and that the costs of the status quo are unacceptably 
high, a conflict becomes ripe for resolution.

But in India, even when conflicts have been terribly hurtful, localized 
suffering has not easily translated into high costs for the government 
side. Doing something about conflicts in the Northeast may be important 
for our national-level politicians, but no government has fallen because 
of the way it has handled or mishandled them. And after decades of 
counter-insurgency and attention to security, we have further cushioned 
our decision-making elites from the hurting effects of a stalemate.

In a new two-tiered order, the top echelons of the bureaucracy, the army 
and the political establishment who live and travel with very high levels 
of security are now the security haves. Under these conditions, despite 
enormous suffering by civilians, those who favour a military solution or 
rather a victors peace tend to win policy arguments. They seem to believe 
that given the obvious military superiority of the governments side, all 
armed groups can be eventually bullied into submission. This of course has 
meant, in effect, stalemated long-duration armed conflicts and the costs 
being paid almost entirely by the security have-nots.

One obvious lesson of Kakopathar is that counter-insurgency operations and 
efforts toward a negotiated peace do not go together. Kakopathar 
underscores the absence of a solid coalition on the government side in 
support of negotiations. What has made the two meetings with the PCG 
possible is simply an electoral calculation that in post-Illegal Migrants 
(Determination by Tribunals) Act Assam, the ethnic Assamese vote might 
matter to the Congress more than usual. Appearing to be on the side of a 
negotiated peace with ULFA might give the Congress an edge over the Asom 
Gana Parishad among this segment. But since this posture does not have to 
be maintained beyond the elections, there is no need to try to build a 
stable political coalition to support a negotiated peace. Thus the serious 
differences between the governor and the chief minister can just be put 
aside. Were we serious about a negotiated peace, there might have been 
pressure for the governor to resign. After all, there could be no better 
confidence-building measure than making a civilian, and someone untainted 
by counter-insurgency operations, the next governor.

Decisions made under these political conditions can only reinforce the 
existing stalemate. Daniel Ellsberg had coined the term stalemate machine 
to describe the American political logic of successive presidents 
committing just enough resources to Vietnam so as not to violate two 
critical domestic political rules of thumb: to not lose South Vietnam to 
the communists before the next election and not commit US ground troops to 
a land war in Asia. Pretending to work towards a negotiated peace with 
ULFA while carrying on counter-insurgency operations is an Indian version 
of a stalemate machine.




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