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Twelve steps to shock-and-awe Pakistan's economy

Prof R Vaidyanathan
Tuesday, December 9, 2008 3:36 IST
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Economic destabilisation of the Terror Central is imperative for rooting out terror.

I did not anticipate the huge response my inbox received for the article last week (December 2) slamming Pakistan. Many of those who wrote in have sought concrete steps to tackle the Terror Central. The terror attack on world citizens at Mumbai has created revulsion and outrage all over the world. It is imperative that India seize the opportunity provided to destabilise Pakistan.

A stable Pakistan is not in the interest of world peace, leave alone India. Army controls the country and owns its economy. A significant portion of its GDP is due to army-controlled entities (See Military Inc Inside Pakistan's Military Economy by Ayesha Siddiqa; OUP; 2007). One can easily say that Pakistan Economy and its Army/ISI are synonymous.

Unless this elementary fact is internalised, we are not going anywhere. This implies we should stop talking of a stable Pakistan since a stable Pakistan means multiple attacks on many more cities of India by that rogue organisation ISI, which is the core of the Pakistan Army and the heart of Pakistan's economy.

Let us not even assume that Zardari is in control. Poor man - he did not trust his own investigators to probe his wife's assassination - he wanted Scotland Yard to do the job. Now he blabbers that if his investigators are satisfied, then he will initiate action against terrorists sitting inside Pakistan. Periodically, the Pakistan Army likes to present some useful idiots (as Lenin would have called them) as elected representatives and we swoon over such events.

India should take the following steps to destabilise the economy of Pakistan:
n Identify the major export items of Pakistan (like Basmati rice, carpets etc) and provide zero export tax or even subsidise them for export from India. Hurt Pakistan on the export front.

Identify the major countries providing arms to Pakistan and arm twist them. Tell Brazil and Germany (currently planning to supply massive defense items to Pakistan) that it will impact their ability to invest in India. Tell Germany that retail license to Metro will be off and other existing projects will be in jeopardy.

Incidentally, after the arrival of Coke and Pepsi in China, the human rights violations of China are not talked about much by US government organs. Think it is a coincidence? Unless we use our markets to arm-twist arms exporters to Pakistan, we will not achieve our objectives.

Tell American companies that for every 5% increase in FDI limit for them, their government needs to reduce equipping Pakistan by $5 billion. That is real politics, not whining. Let us remember that funds are in desperate search of emerging markets and not the other way about. Let us also remember that international economics is politics by another name.

Create assets to print/distribute their currency widely inside their country. To some extent, Telgi types can be used to outsource this activity. Or just drop their notes in remote areas.

Pressurise IMF to add additional conditionality to the loans given to them or at least do not vote for their loans.

Create assets within Pakistan to destabilise Karachi Stock market - it is already in shambles.

Cricket and Bollywood are the opium of the Indian middle classes. Both have been adequately manipulated/ controlled by the D-company since the eighties. Chase the D-company money in cricket/ Bollywood and punish by burning D-assets in India instead of trying to have them auctioned by the IT department when nobody comes to bid for it.
n Provide for capital punishment to those who fund terror and help in that. We have the division in the finance ministry to monitor money laundering, etc. It is important that terror financing is taken seriously and fully integrated into money laundering monitoring systems and this division is provided with much larger budget and human resources. And it should coordinate with RAW.

Encourage and allow scientists/ academicians/ elites of Pakistan to opt for Indian passport and widely publicise that fact since it will hurt their self-respect and dignity. There will be a long queue to get Indian passports -- many will jump to get our passport -- since they will not be stopped at international airports. It is rumoured that Adnan Sami wants one. Do not give passports to all -- make it a prized possession. Let it hurt the army and ISI controlled country. This one step will destroy their identity and self-confidence.

Discourage companies from India from investing in Pakistan, particularly IT companies, till Pakistan stops exporting its own IT (international terrorism).

In all these, it is important that we do not bring in the domestic religious issues. The target is the terror central, namely Pakistan, and if there are elements helping them here then they also should be punished-irrespective of religious labels. If Pakistan is dismantled and the idea of Pakistan is gone, many of our domestic issues will also be sorted out.

Will the Indian elite go for the jugular or just light more candles and scream at the formless/ nameless political class before TV cameras? It is going to be a long haul and may be in a decade or so, we can find a solution to our existential crisis of being attacked by barbarians from the West. We need to combine strategy and patience and completely throw to the dustbin the 'Gujral Doctrine' by that mumbling Prime Minister about treating younger brothers with equanimity.

The doctrine essentially suggests that if we are slapped on both the cheeks we should feel bad that we do not have a third cheek to show. He, according to security experts, seems to have dismantled our human intelligent assets inside Pakistan, which has resulted in the gory death of thousands of Indian citizens in the last few years. Such is our strategic thinking in this complex world since our political class is not adequately briefed and the elite don't think through issues. Better to be simple in our talks and vicious in our actions rather than the other way.

Hopefully, this November attack will create a new vibrant India capable of taking care of its own interests.

The writer is professor of finance and control, Indian Institute of Management - Bangalore, and can be reached at vaidya@iimb.ernet.in. Views are personal.

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Readers' comments:
First, an observation. It is interesting that most readers of this article claim to be Muslims living in Pakistan. More importantly, I think it is the right of every person to have an opinion and voice it without fear of reprisal.

Now, in this particular article, I failed to see the connection between weakening Pakistan's economy and the eradication of Islamo-fascism. For a long time, it has been common knowledge that Pakistan, like many other theocratic nations, is a failed state economically. It has limped on for the past few decades, and its failure can be attributed to, mainly, the ill-thinking of its leaders in putting 'terrorising India' at the top of its list of priorities. This is known to all and, unfortunately, being an ally, the US has provided this state with all the military aid it wanted but, suffice to say, didn't need.

Now the situation on the global front is akin to giving a handgun to a monkey; being a nuclear state with no official nuclear doctrine (except the usual banter leading to "if we're pushed against the wall, we will use it") we need to remember that the case isn't that terrorists are hiding in Pakistan, the case is that Pakistan is a terrorist state. It is a rogue state that is threatening to use nuclear weapons against its neighbours with no immediate threat to itself.

But again, this is common knowledge. What's more important within the context of this article is that Pakistan has continued to be this rogue state despite being a failed country for over a decade now. Furthermore, it seems to me that the only way to really bring this country in line would be to neutralise its nuclear capability, thereby reducing it to a useless country.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009 17:13 IST
Mayank Sharma, London
Pakistan is here to stay, do whatever you can.... Such steps can only be dreamt of.
Sunday, January 11, 2009 20:19 IST
Faheem
Sir, I am what you refer to in your article as "scientists/academicians/elites of Pakistan". Just try to offer us an Indian passport. Try, and watch our response. I would rather DIE A PAINFUL DEATH than call myself an "Indian". We NEVER want to be part of India. We are proud to be Pakistanis, and we REALLY are NOT seeking a dirty "Indian passport".

This article only shows how deeply Indians hate Pakistan. But no matter how much you hate us, we will never bow our heads to India.

I know I am talking tough about India, but that is because we do not tolerate anyone threatening the nation we love. Indians need to pick: they can either have Pakistan as a friend and partner, or Pakistan as an enemy. Either option is fine with us, and either way Pakistan will survive.
Friday, December 19, 2008 2:28 IST
Qureshi
Of all the biased, ignorant, hate-filled drivel that has spouted from the media since the attacks on Mumbai, I find this the most arresting, not least because it is so unconvincing. You give no real explanation of how an economically weakened Pakistan would help India. You simply state that Pakistan is 'Terror-Central', and hope (probably rightly) that this alone will gain you supporters from the huge numbers of Indians who have missed their nation's progress over the past few decades and can still focus solely on a self-destructive hatred of Pakistan. I suppose the author writes this article only because he would be in trouble if he explicitly encouraged the slaughtering of India's Muslim population. The idea of economically paralysing a state to quell the extremist forces that it fosters borders on the moronic, as history bears out: perhaps the writer wants another Weimar republic so that he can see a new Nazi party created at his doorstep. This must be grounds for him losing his job anyway. Extremist lunatics rarely make good teachers.
Thursday, December 18, 2008 21:40 IST
Ronnie
I find the opinion naive, the analysis weak, and the research inadequate. Does the writer really think destabilizing an already ailing economy, such as Pakistan's, will help eliminate terrorism? Pakistan is already suffering... but the terrorism within it is thriving. Instability too leads to terrorism. And the conclusion of this approach is that it only hurts the common man...in fact the poorest of men. Destabilizing an economy could well be another form of the same menace. The least you could do is come up with a constructive plan of action in uprooting terrorism across the world.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008 1:40 IST
sabin muzaffar
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