Using ‘crazies’ like Hafiz Saeed will only harm Pakistan: Hussain Haqqani

Former Pakistani diplomat says his country was always obsessed with the size of the Indian army and resorted to irregular methods to attack India

Updated - November 17, 2021 02:35 am IST - BENGALURU:

“Pakistan always had this presumption that India has a tremendous conventional military advantage and Indian army will be much bigger than Pakistan’s. So Pakistan needs irregular methods to be able to be equal,” former Pakistan ambassador to the U.S. Hussain Haqqani has alleged.

“Pakistan always had this presumption that India has a tremendous conventional military advantage and Indian army will be much bigger than Pakistan’s. So Pakistan needs irregular methods to be able to be equal,” former Pakistan ambassador to the U.S. Hussain Haqqani has alleged.

Pakistan’s “obsession” to match India in military strength and efforts to equalise the field with “crazies” like Hafiz Saeed, would only create hatred which will bite it back, former Pakistan Ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani has said.

“My argument as a Pakistani is why do we even want to be equal [with India in terms of military prowess]? Why do not we want to be happier and prosperous and successful,” he said.

‘Obsession with crazies’

“What is this obsession about being equal and trying to equalise the field with crazies like Hafiz Saeed because he will only create hatred, which will only bite us back,” Mr. Haqqani said here on Tuesday night during an interaction on his book India vs Pakistan — Why Can’t We Just Be Friends.

“Pakistan always had this presumption that India has a tremendous conventional military advantage and Indian army will be much bigger than Pakistan’s. So Pakistan needs irregular methods to be able to be equal,” he alleged.

‘Musharraf used LeT against India’

Mr. Haqqani recalled a private conversation of former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf with Pakistani newspaper editors, wherein he said Lashkar-e-Taiba was his reserve core for fighting India and thus established the strong nexus among the Inter-Services Intelligence, terrorists and Pakistani establishment.

“He [Musharraf], in a private meeting with Pakistani newspaper editors, had said ‘Well all of you keep telling me or some of you keep telling me that I should shut down Lashkar-e-Taiba, but it is actually my reserve core in fighting India,’ a fact that establishes a strong nexus among the ISI, terrorists and Pakistani establishment,” Mr. Haqqani said.

The former Pakistani envoy said it was disturbing to know that a head of a country had thought so as these terrorists “would not do good to Pakistan” as the world had seen them attacking Shias, Ahmediyas and Christians in Pakistan, apart from India.

Mr. Haqqani said unfortunately Pakistani strategic thinkers in uniform do not realise this “disturbing line of thinking of patronising terrorists and outfits like Jaish-e-Mohammad and LeT.”

Jihadi movement in Pakistan

Throwing light on the Jihadi movement in Pakistan, the former diplomat said Zia-ul-Haq was not the first man to spread jihadi awareness as is presumed, but it was much before him.

“There is a presumption that Zia-ul-Haq was the first man to start jihadi awareness, but I argue that ‘no, it was even further back’ and there was always a desire for irregular warfare,” he said.

Deny resources to militias

Asked how to shut down the large armed militias, Mr. Haqqani said it was not easy because they were well-trained in warfare. But the establishment can put them out of business if they are denied the resources for their mobility and movement, he said.

“If we make this decision now, it will take some 15 years to put their business out,” Mr. Haqqani added.

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