Mumbai attacks: Need for restraint

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1 December 2008 Editorial
Publication Date: 
Mon, 2008-12-01 03:00

Leaders in India and Pakistan need to exercise restraint in the wake of the Mumbai developments, said International Herald Tribune in an editorial yesterday. Excerpts:

It should not be hard to trace the assault on India’s commercial center to the masterminds behind the operation. Indeed, Indian officials have already said they have evidence pointing to Pakistan as the place of origin.

Consequently, there is a grave danger that the carnage in Mumbai could provoke much higher levels of violence across a wide arc of South Asia. This is what will happen if Indian and Pakistani leaders allow the Mumbai atrocities to undo the recent rapprochement between their two governments. Those leaders will come under intense pressure to stoke nationalist passions. They need to exercise restraint.

The terrorists’ barely concealed ties to Pakistan suggest that a key objective of the Mumbai assault was to fan the dying flames of Indian-Pakistani conflict. Which is all the more reason for both governments to avoid falling into that treacherous trap.

For the government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of India, the first priority should be to make a crucial distinction for the Indian public. Singh has blamed the murders in Mumbai on “external forces.” What he ought to explain to his people is that even if there were Pakistanis among the terrorists, that does not mean they were acting on orders from Pakistan’s elected civilian government.

India’s leaders know that extremist Pakistani groups as well as Al-Qaeda have a strong interest in provoking fresh hostilities between Pakistan and India. A revival of India-Pakistan tension could relieve much of the domestic pressure on those groups; it could justify a renewal of support for the Taleban on the part of Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence; and it could return the domestic focus in Pakistan to the plight of Muslims in Indian-ruled Kashmir.

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