Can India Emulate Israel's Action In Gaza?
By B. Raman
Ever since Israel
started its military strikes in Gaza a week
ago to put down the acts of terrorism
of the Hamas, there have been demands from
sections of analysts and the general public
in our country that India should emulate
Israel and retaliate in a similar manner
against Pakistan for its complicity in the
terrorist attack by the Lashkar-e-Toiba, the
Pakistani terrorist organisation, in Mumbai
from November 26 to 29, 2008.
2. Nobody can
question Israel's exercise of its right of
self-defence to protect the lives and
property of its citizens from rocket attacks
from Gaza by the Hamas for weeks and months
now. As the Deputy Permanent Representative
of the US to the United Nations said in a
press interview after the US had refused to
join in the condemnation of Israel's action
by the UN Security Council: "Israel, like
all other members of the UN, has the right
of self-defence. This right is not
negotiable."
3. Like Israel
and other members of the UN, India too has
the right of self-defence against acts of
terrorism emanating from Pakistani territory
and sponsored by the State of Pakistan and
has the right to retaliate against Pakistan
and the duty to do so to protect the lives
and property of its citizens.
4. The question
is not whether we should retaliate. We
should if we want Pakistan and the horde of
terrorists nursed by it to take us
seriously. The question is whether a direct
military strike will be the wise and
appropriate way of retaliating against
Pakistan or should we do it through
political and diplomatic measures, followed
by deniable covert actions if those measures
do not make Pakistan change its ways.
5. For many
years, Israel has been the victim of acts of
terrorism by organisations such as the Hamas
and the Hizbollah sponsored mainly by Syria
and Iran. Its retaliation has been directed
against these terrorist organisations and
not against their State-sponsors. After the
Arab-Israeli war of 1967 and the Yom Kippur
war of 1973 Israel has indulged in military
strikes in the territory of a sovereign
state and a member of the UN only on two
occasions---- against the Osirak nuclear
reactor under construction in Iraq in the
early 1980s and against the Hizbollah's
infrastructure in the Lebanese territory in
2006. In the past,Israeli armed forces had
operated in Lebanese territory on other
occasions too.
6. Its action
against Osirak in Iraq was a success, but
its action in the Lebanon in 2006 against
the Hizbollah was not. Despite its concerns
over the nuclear sites in Iran for the
production of enriched uranium, Israel has
till now avoided any military strikes on
these sites despite public pressure from
sections of the Israeli people to do so. It
did launch an attack on a suspected nuclear
site in Syria last year, but as a deniable
covert action and not as an admitted
military strike. It has also indulged in
covert actions against suspected Hamas
operatives based in Syria.
7. It is able to
indulge in openly admitted military strikes
against the Hamas in Gaza because Gaza is
not part of any sovereign State. In the
past, Israel's retaliatory military
strikes have been against terrorist
organisations posing a threat to Israeli
citizens and property and not against the
States sponsoring them. Its actions against
States sponsoring terrorism have been in the
form of covert actions and not direct
military strikes.
8. Practically
all States facing the problem of terrorism
have a covert action capability because it
gives you a third option if political and
diplomatic measures fail. If you don't have
this capability, the only option you have if
political and diplomatic actions fail is a
military retaliation, which could be messy
when used against a next door neighbour. If
you don't use military strikes and if you
don't have a covert action capability, the
state-sponsor and the terrorists sponsored
by it develop a contempt for you.
9. The US has
bombed Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan in
retaliation for their perceived anti-US
acts, but it never does it against Cuba, its
next door neighbour. It has declared Cuba a
state-sponsor of terrorism and constantly
keeps trying to undermine Cuba's political
stability and economy, but avoids direct
military action against it despite its being
a super power because it knows it could be
messy.
10. It is hoped
the Government draws the right lessons from
its dilemma after Mumbai and tries to revive
quickly our covert action capability, which
was discarded more than a decade ago as an
ill-conceived unilateral gesture to
Pakistan.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)