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Sixty Years of Meddling and Bad Blood
AP Photo
Pakistan, born in the scrabble to decolonize after World War II, has suffered from endless American and British meddling. Now is the time for slow understanding, not a quick exit.
The horrific pictures from Mumbai last week were more than just every traveler's worst nightmare. They were a stark reminder of 60 years of bad blood in South Asia. Ever since the British Empire retired itself in 1947, India and Pakistan have been mired in rancor that has often spilled over into terrorism, war, and threats of nuclear holocausts. In a week when it has also been confirmed by Barack Obama that the United States is to withdraw from Iraq, the mistakes Britain made during its retreat from empire provide lessons that may be costly to ignore.
The Mumbai attacks are the latest atrocities in a year that has seen hundreds killed by terrorism on Indian soil, from Delhi to Assam, from Kashmir to Bangalore. Even while the Mumbai siege was still raging, India claimed that the attackers were Pakistanis. The Pakistani government promised help, backtracked, and then became indignant and blustery. President Zardari's jitters hint at a shaky grasp on power. Now the Indian public is bristling for payback. A pool of gasoline has been poured out, and the rest of the world can only hope that nobody strikes a match.
The ripples from India’s partition are still destabilizing South Asia. The principle that land ought to be apportioned on the basis of its population's beliefs has set the stage for an Islamic nationalist movement which, at its fringe, we know as Al Qaeda.
Today's tensions are the product of a messy history. By the time Britain finally left India in 1947, infighting among Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, and Dalits had left the body politic seeping with open wounds. Britain's exit, under the viceroyalty of Lord Mountbatten, was a tremendous public relations success. But on the ground it was a disaster. Carving India up into three blocks—India, West Pakistan (now Pakistan), and East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) —triggered not one, but multiple genocides. The death toll is impossible to calculate, but it is estimated that in the three or four months after partition, around a million people were slaughtered.
The ripples from partition are still destabilizing South Asia. The principle that land ought to be apportioned on the basis of its population's beliefs has fueled several violent separatist campaigns, and set the stage for a modern Islamic nationalist movement which, at its fringe, we know as Al Qaeda.
But potentially the most dangerous thing of all is the unfinished border between India and Pakistan. This border was established over the course of 40 days by Sir Cyril Radcliffe, a lawyer who had never previously been further afield than Gibraltar. Radcliffe drew a line based on guesswork, running up from the Arabian Sea, through the deserts of Rajasthan and the fields of the Punjab, and petering out—it is still represented by a dotted line on maps—somewhere amid the mountains of Kashmir.
Partly, Britain left these issues unresolved because it had no choice. Clement Attlee's government inherited a country traumatized by World War II and teetering on the brink of economic collapse. The British people no longer wanted the empire, and certainly could not afford it. Modern Americans may feel their situation is not too different. Britain cut and ran, with excellent results for Britain, and appalling results for India and Pakistan.
Over a period of a little more than a year between 1947 and 1948, the retreating British also drew lines on maps and relinquished control in Israel/Palestine and Iraq. The consequences have been tragic.
In Pakistan, Muslim leader Mohammad Ali Jinnah won his campaign for a separate Muslim-majority state. The crucial lesson for today is that he did so with the resounding and possibly decisive support of the British opposition leader, Winston Churchill.







How refreshing to see someone actually look at history to see how we got here. Is the American Intelligence puzzled about what is going on in SOuth Asia?
If by "look at history" you mean spend five minutes on Wikipedia reading about the partition. The author dances across sixty years of history without drawing any kind of connections. I'm sure she could have written something more informative if she had just excerpted a page or two from her book. Poor effort.
When the attacks happened, I went back to find out what Gandhi had written about what he found the great betrayal of what hed fought for -- on the part of not just the British, but the Hindu and Muslim elites. I can't wait to read your book.
Alex Tunzelman gets Radcliffe's partition line wrong. As a princely state, Kashmir was outside his remit. He was asked to bifurcate only Punjab and Bengal - nothing to do with Kashmir.
Thank you.
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