Foreign Relations, 1969-1976, Volume E-7, South
Asia, 1969-1972
Released by the Office of the
Historian
CENTRAL
INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
9
December 1971
MEMORANDUM
SUBJECT:
Implications of an Indian Victory over Pakistan
1. An
intelligence report [text not declassified] dated 7 December 1971, from a
reliable source, says that Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi has indicated that India's
war objectives are:
A.
Liberation of Bangla Desh
B. The
incorporation into India of
the southern area of Azad (Pakistani-held) Kashmir
C. The
destruction of Pakistani armored and air force strength so that Pakistan can never again threaten India.
In the
following we assume that these objectives have been achieved, and discuss their
implications in the subcontinent and for other powers.
The
General Postwar Situation in the Subcontinent
2. India would, of course, be the dominant power in
South Asia. But its formidable economic problems
would have been aggravated by the war and its need for outside economic
assistance increased. Further, though the military power of Pakistan would be destroyed, both the former
east and west wings of that country would emerge gravely troubled from the war
and their difficulties are likely to spill over, sooner or later, into India itself.
3. Bangla Desh would probably emerge
under a kind of Indian tutelage. India will be in a position to
exert paramount influence, but it does not desire and could not maintain
outright control. Already impoverished and overcrowded, Bangla Desh's economy and social
structure have been badly damaged by civil war and by Indo-Pakistani
hostilities. The Bengaldi propensity for
extremism, radicalism, and violence, already apparent in the Hindu Indian state
of West Bengal, is likely to manifest itself
in Muslim Bangla Desh in
fairly short order. And the troubles in that new country and in West Bengal are likely to reinforce and stimulate on
another. We do not, however, believe that a new Bengali nationalism
(working for the secession of West Bengal from India and its incorporation into
Bangla Desh) is likely to
be an effective forced for the foreseeable future; Hindu-Muslim antagonisms
remain too intense, and India military power too great to permit such a
contingency. But the two Bengals will create
considerable trouble and consume much of New
Delhi's efforts and resources.
4. What
is now termed West Pakistan will also face an
uncertain future. Though the Indian military would have withdrawn after
its victory, the area would also probably have suffered considerable damage
during the fighting. Much would depend on the extent of damage to such
important and expensive Indus valley hydroelectric and irrigation projects as
the Tarbela and Mangla dams
and on the industrial plant, centered mostly in Karachi.
5.
Beyond this, West Pakistan might fall apart
politically. The area suffers from regional antagonisms and hostilities;
a major defeat could permit the emergence of centrifugal forces which could
shatter West Pakistan into as many as three or
four separate countries, successors to the four states which now make up most
of that nation. Of the four Punjab has traditionally dominated the army
and the government of Pakistan,
so far without major challenge. but if this army
is not just defeated, but disintegrates, at least some of its often disaffected
fellow nationals might seek to break away -- each in its own individual
fashion. These possibilities are discussed in more detail in an annex.
6.
It should be noted that the possible breakup of Pakistan is based on the assumption
that the Pakistani army is not simply defeated but virtually ceases to exist in
the West as well as in the East. Despite Mrs. Gandhi's defined objectives,
it is doubtful that India
will (or that it can) impose such a total defeat on Pakistan. In other words, the
Pakistani army in the West will still probably be in being when the cease-fire
sounds and, as such, more likely than not able to contain or deter any
breakaway tendencies in the West. Yahya and his
associates would probably be so discredited by the defeat that someone else
would head the government, but except in the very worst case, the army could
probably be counted on to hold West Pakistan together. Nonetheless, such
a government would be under heavy pressure from radical political forces, long
at odds with the military establishment, seeking access to power.
Outside
Powers
7.
Moscow has apparently been convinced for some
time that a close relationship with India
is central to its long-term interests in South Asia.
The USSR supported
diplomatically and materially New Delhi's
"policy of pressure" on Pakistan prior to the outbreak of
hostilities and has backed it vigorously in the UN. The USSR stands to emerge, therefore, as even more influential in South Asia
after the fighting stops than it has been. It will, as a
consequence, continue to have large and growing demands in terms of economic
and military aid to India
and also to Bangla Desh.
Even if it were able and willing to meet such demands, the USSR could not
be sure of getting all it wants in the area as a result of its prestigious
position. India,
no longer faced by a strong and hostile Pakistani military machine, would feel
less beholden to the Soviets than today, less amenable to Soviet requrests which offend its sense of dignity or
sovereignty. Indian gratitude is not a very enduring matter.
8.
Whether Soviet-Indian relations are characterized by intimacy and (on the
Indian side) dependence in future will be determined largely by how China and the US
define their attitudes toward Delhi.
If Indian-American relations are not repaired and economic aid is cut back, India will place greater reliance on the USSR. If China's current hostility to India is
sustained, the same would be true. In this case, Moscow
would have greater leverage in Delhi
and could drive hard bargains, for example, for naval facilities. But if China eventually accepts the new situation in
South Asia and moves to normalize its relations with Delhi,
the latter would probably welcome the chance to diminish its dependence on the USSR.
9.
India's achievement of its
objectives would be a matter of serious concern to China. Peking
would fear some loss of face internationally simply because it had failed to
take effective action to support a friend of long standing. More serious
from Peking's point of view would be the implications of this event for its
contest with the USSR.
10.
In its statements at the UN and on Radio Peking, China has stressed two major
propositions: that the USSR is shielding and supporting India's "armed
aggression" against Pakistan and attempting thereby to control the
subcontinent and the Indian Ocean; and that there is no guarantee for the sovereignty
and territorial integrity of various countries if India, with Soviet support,
is permitted to sue the "pretext" of self-defense to commit
"armed aggression" against Pakistan.
11. Both
of these propositions are designed to embarass the USSR and to gain credit for China as a "principled" defender of Third World interests against the machinations of the
Great Powers. But they almost certainly reflect a genuine and deep-seated
concern that the USSR will
make an important advance in position and influence in the subcontinent, adding
to the "encirclement" of China,
and providing in the longer run a military and political base for further
expansion of Soviet influence in the Indian Ocean and Southeast
Asia.
12.
If China accepts the India fait
accompli, its concern will still remain and it will have to devise longer range
and more sophisticated means for limiting or undermining Soviet/India
collaboration. Basically, its alternatives would be to try gradually to
strengthen West Pakistan and to weaken India
via subversion or in time compete for influence in New Delhi with the Soviets. This latter
course may eventually appear attractive; Delhi
may not relish too close an embrace with the USSR and thus might be disposed to
welcome Chinese overtures.
13.
But the Chinese may be in no hurry to shift the focus of their efforts in the
subcontinent. They will not wish to appear as "fair-weather"
friends, they have gone on the record with very strong condemnations of India, and they
don't like Indians particularly. India
is potentially a big power rival and the Chinese may have serious doubts that
any Sino-Indian rapprochement would serve any purpose other than permitting India to gain
more aid from all sides and hasten the growth of its economic and military power.
For these reasons, we believe that Sino-Indian relations will remain tense for
some time.
14.
Of the regional powers, Iran
much more than Afghanistan
has involved itself in Pakistan's
struggle with India.
The Shah would probably provide a defeated West Pakistan
with oil, some money, and some military equipement.
He might even see Iran's
interests served by moving to exert deeper influence in Pakistan's
affairs, but, at least initially, we doubt that he would devote much of his
real resources to such a project. More generally, however, the defeat and
dismemberment of Pakistan
would clearly enhance Iran's
importance in the Persian Gulf-Indian Ocean area. As a result, other
governments may eventually come to take Iran at something closer to the
Shah's view that he must rely on himself as far as possible to gain his foreign
policy objectives.
Wider
Implications
15.
As indicated, the successful achievement of India's political-military
objectives would alter power relations in the subcontinent in a highly visible
way. Because the USSR
would have helped to bring about this result by overt diplomatic, propaganda,
and material support to India,
an impression would be left in many quarters that Soviet power and policy were
effective and had served the USSR's
ally well. Since US policy would have suffered a reverse and since US power and influence tend to be measured
relative to that of the USSR,
some in other states might think that they should take into accoun
in their own calculations some revised judgment of the US-USSR power equation.
16.
Such impressions and calculations are often transitory in effect, though in
this case a widely held impression that Soviet weight in the world is growing
would no doubt be reinforced in some degree. It is another thing,
however, for states involved in confrontation situations in other areas, say
the Middle East or Southeast Asia, to draw
concrete inferences and to act in different ways than they are now
acting. It is unlikely that Egypt
would conclude that the USSR
would be willing to take greater risks on its behalf; if it did so,
Moscow would be quick to disabuse Cairo of the notion. The states in
Southeast Asia which are concerned about US disengagement from that area
would find new reason for concern and perhaps would lend a readier ear to
Soviet efforts to build influence there, but they would be most unlikely to
undertake any sharp turn of policy.
17.
The key factor determining wider effects of the current events in South Asia would be what the Soviets think these events
mean. In a general sense Moscow
would be encouraged to think that its power and influence were growing and that
it could entertain the idea of playing a stronger hand in some other
contexts. But the Soviets are unlikely to abandon the careful calculation
of risks they customarily bring to particularly situations. Moreover,
they would not wish to compromise the general line of their current foreign
policy which, vis-a-vis the West, operates under
slogans of detente, negotiations, etc. This would be especially the case
if the current developments in South Asia, as seems likely, deepened their
quarrel with China.
ANNEX
Possible
Breakaway Elements in West Pakistan
1.
The eight million Sindhis, residents of the southern
part of West Pakistan and centered around the cities of the Hyderbad
and Karachi,
often hostile to the Punjabis, could declare their independence. Indeed, West Pakistan's principal civilian political figure, Z.A.
Bhutto is a Sindhi, and though the recipient of a heavy electoral mandate in
December 1970, has never been permitted to take office by the Punjabi
military. Undoubtedly resentful, he could in extreme circumstances seize
the initiative and secede, preferring the leadership of a small, weak,
comparatively unimportant country to remaining out of power.
2.
The predominantly tribal residents of the NWFP have long been objects of
international contention. They have close ties with Pushtu
speakers in eastern Afghanistan.
Kabul has long
believed that the Pushtuns belong together,
and that the present Afghan-Pakistan frontier is a line arbitrarily and
unfairly drawn by the British raj. Their claims
on this area have led them in the past to quite serious confrontations with the
Pakistanis. Indeed, were Pakistan
to begin to fall apart, the Afghans would probably help the process along by
moving to detach the NWFP and bringing it under their protection.
3.
Baluchistan,
primitive, frequently lawless, and isolated, is not likely to be able to assume
the status of an independent state. It could thus remain attached to the
Punjab, though it is conceivable that it would be absorbed by either Afghanistan (givign
that landlocked country an outlet to the sea) or by Iran. Both these countries
already have Baluchi speaking residents.
4.
The Muslim Punjab, with its capital in Lahore,
would remain a not inconsiderable country of over 30 million people.
Provided it had not been too badly damaged, it would probably recover
economically fairly rapidly. It would remain the focus of bitterly intractable
anti-Hindu, anti-Indian sentiments. But if Mrs. Gandhi's objectives above
are met, the Punjab -- either as the dominant figure in a still united West
Pakistan or as a separate country -- would no longer pose a threat to India.
Nor would it have the international stature previously enjoyed by a united Pakistan.
Rather it would probably be viewed by most powers as a state on the order of Afghanistan:
remote and of no great consequence.
Source:
Doc 170, vol E7, South
Asia Crisis, Department of State.