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A
ring leader of the Naroda Patiya massacre during the Gujarat carnage of 2002 has
been captured on hidden camera boasting that on completion of the killings he
felt like Rana Pratap at Haldighati. This tells of something more than a
disconcerting world view.
The
latest sting operation, 'Operation Kalank', by the intrepid Tehelka team could
prove profitable for national security yet again. Their last effort 'Operation
Westend' brought about streamlining of the weapons procurement system. This time
round it has a bearing on internal security. Security analysis would require
delving into the expose to eke out these implications.
The
more obvious aspect can be disposed off at the outset. Forces championing Hindu
fundamentalism - 'Hindutva' - have time and again transcended their right to
propagate their version of nationalism through recourse to violence amounting to
'pogroms', as against 'riots' which are as two-sided. While the state has
rightly acted with dispatch in pursuing cases of terrorism to their rightful
conclusion, similar urgency has not attended actions of the judicial system in
relation to carnages witnessed in Mumbai and Gujarat. A strategic intervention
to break this cycle can only be through purposeful political assertion.
Tehelka
has brought to fore what has been apprehended by some: that India is not
adequately sensitive to the threat posed by majoritarian communalism to national
security; and worse, that, though aware, it is not willing to face up to the
threat.
India
has often been called a 'soft state'. The remark has origins in India's seeming
inability to firmly deal with terrorism to which it has been repeatedly subject.
With the Tehelka revelations, the 'soft state' thesis has acquired an added
dimension that those who use it most are wont to perceive. Though the 'threat
within' has always had a saffron hue - complementing the popularly acknowledged
one posed by Islamists - the past record of the principal political parties
reveal they have stayed their hand when in government.
That
this facet of internal security has been missed equally by the strategic
community can be attributed to its distance from the Urdu press. Activist Jyoti
Punwani brings out the perception, amounting to a conviction amongst the
minority community, that there is more to the accidental blasts in Nanded, and
resulting leads on clandestine bomb making, than has been pursued to its logical
end by the investigating agencies ('Blatant Double Standard', TOI, 22 Oct. '07).
A plausible perspective is that the blasts at Parbani, Malegaon, Hyderabad and
Ajmer may have their origin in the machinations of elements internal to India's
polity, in addition to the trans-border forces generally blamed. There is a
persuasive case for broadening the ambit of security analysis.
The
alacrity of the state in one direction has useful fallout in dampening passions
of those seeking retribution. However, high profile cases such as the saga of
filmstar Sanjay Dutt, as part of the wider Mumbai serial bomb blast case of
1993, serve also to obscure and deflect attention from the proverbial 'dog that
did not bark'. The absence of avidness in following up cases of politically
organized riots indicates a nexus between the beneficiary political forces and
the institutions of state. It gives rise to the disquieting possibility that
sections of the state, particularly those dealing with law and order and
intelligence, are being subverted, indoctrinated and politicized.
A
necessary precondition for the state to retrieve the moral high ground is to be
mindful of the fallout. Ironically, the suspect apparatus has to be relied on to
regain lost ground. Turning it around to perform apolitically to constitutional
standards is therefore the internal security challenge requiring enlightened and
courageous political leadership, at the federal rather than provincial level.
Such an initiative could do with securitization of the issue and thereby the
mainstreaming of it.
The
identity of the state has been under concerted, if covert, assault for about two
decades now. The more visible crisis points, such as Punjab, Nagaland and
Kashmir, have been restricted competently to its periphery; but have been given
analytical attention at the cost of other candidate issues. The singular
attention paid to the Islamist threat has served to camouflage what is arguably
the more insidious threat. Recognizing a threat for its worth is the first step
in addressing it - a function of the security community.
The
problems of Pakistan next door from a majoritarian interpretation of the
nation-state serve as a constant reminder to the outcome of treading down such a
path. India's diversity and democracy has led to complacency in recognizing and
grappling with this, the more consequential threat to both. The latest 'tehelka'
is an opportunity to face up to this threat. |