2 June 2008
Balochistan-Cruches Of History
Since 2000 the Kachhi Canal, Mirani Dam, Gwadar Port, Makran Coastal Highway, Saindak Copper Project and Quetta Water Supply Scheme were announced by Islamabad. Over 300 percent increase was made in the national budget for development programs in Balochistan. These things have failed to materialize from paper into concrete. Along with the development programmes came in the Punjabis, Pushtuns, Sindhis and Chinese work forces. The Baloch people suffering from economic distress developed clash of economic interests with the Chinese and other Pakistanis. Examination of economic indices of this period brings out the facts of glaring disparity between Balochistan and Punjab and Sind. The Balochs, like the Bengalis were treated as raw material suppliers.
Some sources allege that the fourth phase of Baloch insurgency was triggered off by sexual assault on a female doctor, Dr. Shazia Khalid, by a gang of Punjabi employees of the PPL at Sui. Islamabad handled the matter in a cavalier fashion. Accumulated anger incensed the people and they mounted attack on the Sui facility. Nawab Akbar Bugti, the leader of Jamhoori Watan Party of Balochistan, stated that the attack was a manifestation of anger of the people and had nothing to do with nationalist struggle for freedom by the tribals. General Musharraf retaliated by ordering the ISI and the Army to mount operations against rebel Baloch forces headed by Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti. Bugti’s critics alleged that he had rebelled demanding higher royalty payment for Sui gas. These charges have not been proved.
Before proceeding further on the present phase of Baloch struggle it must be pointed out that Pakistan has been facing innumerable problems from its multiple fault lines-toeing the USA line against war on terror, Taliban, Al Qaeda, MQM, and the Waziri tribal unrest. The Balawaristan Movement (Gilgit-Skardu-POK) can be added to this cart. Musharraf also faces tremendous pressure from the home grown jihadi tanzeems, which have intricate relationship with the Inter Services Intelligence and International Islamic Jihad Movement. His agenda is topped by the Kashmir pie, which Pakistan is trying to eat and keep since 1947. In the backdrop these problems growing Chinese, USA, Afghan and Indian interests in the Baloch tract have complicated the geostrategic dimension. We propose to discuss these in later paragraphs.
The Balochstan Liberation Army and factions like Balochistan Liberation Front are piloting the present phase of resistance movement. Balach Marri, the son of Nawab Khair Baksh Marri, heads the BLA. His force of about 300 is well armed with sophisticated weapons. These weapons are purchased from former Taliban elements in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Afghan militia members and international gunrunners. Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, before his assassination, headed another group of Baloch fighters in coalition with Balach Marri. After his death, Pakistani sources point out, his surviving grandson Brahmhdag Bugti is heading the liberation struggle.
There have been spates of attack on Sui gas installations, pipelines, powerhouses and several convoys of the armed forces in Quetta, Dera Ismail Khan, Kohlu, Dera Bugti etc places. On occasions Chinese workers were kidnapped and in a few cases they suffered fatal casualties. Islamabad retaliated by deploying over 25,000 troops and bombing and strafing rebel strongholds at Kohlu, Dera Bugti, Marri and Mengal tracts. It is not our intention to catalogue the incidents and count the body bags.
Carlotta Gall, New York Times correspondent visiting the area in April 2006 reported having witnessed deep bomb craters caused by MK-82 bombs. According to her, “Hundreds of political party members, students, doctors and tribal leaders have been detained by government security forces, many disappearing for months, even years, without trials in well-documented cases. Some have been tortured or have died in custody, say officials of Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission.”
She proceeds to comment, “In places like Dera Bugti and Kohlu, government forces have carried out reprisals against villagers, Baloch leaders and human rights officials say. In a case documented by the Human Rights Commission, the Frontier Corps killed 12 men from Pattar Nala on Jan 11 after a mine explosion near the village killed some of its soldiers. Two old men from the village who went to the base to collect the bodies were also killed. The next day, the 14 bodies were handed over to the women of the village. Local fighters say the Frontier Corps has carried out 42 such reprisal killings in the last three months, the latest involving six villagers during the week of March 6.”
President Musharraf made several recent pronouncements expressing his intent to crush the movement and develop Balochistan. He impugned foreign interference; obviously direct indictment of Afghanistan, India and Russia. Speaking at Charsadda on February 12, 2006 Musharraf sternly warned the Baloch resistance forces and offered certain imaginary carrots. Again speaking at Lahore on March 24, 2006 Musharraf asserted, “These two or three Sardars who are fighting against their own people will be sorted out very soon. They are already on the run as they know they have lost support among their own people.”
Musharraf again asserted on June 20 that Baloch revolt was crushed. However, Daily Times commented in an editorial on June 21, 2006, “The evidence for the pacification of Balochistan is not strong. The Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) has not ended its operations and the big sardars are still challenging the writ of the state through statements and disruptive action on the ground. Acts of sabotage against public projects have not stopped and those who are inclined to go against the “terrorists” are being picked off by the rebels. State employees who show enthusiasm in their work and thus displease the “liberation” movement walk in fear of the consequences of their “betrayal”. Above all, the linkage of insurgency with Baloch nationalism is nowhere near being broken by the efforts made in Islamabad… The rhetoric and sentiment of nationalism in Balochistan is economy-based because of the awareness of the people that Islamabad derives its major economic resources from the province. Almost in pattern with all such provinces in the world, nationalism has acquired the sharpness of separatism, which has an exaggerated effect on a centre that has been obsessed with unity in past history… President Musharraf’s opinion that the insurgency has ended in Balochistan must spring from the awareness that his “action” in Balochistan has not been the quick surgical strike the world thought it would be. The longer it takes to decide the discord in the province the more difficult it will become to pacify it.”
Military dictators like Musharraf are not generally propelled by newspaper editorials realistic ground tremors. They act for self-preservation. The Pakistani dictator is confident that force alone can cow down the Balochs. Finally, he got better of the most well known face of Baloch resistance. Nawab Akbar Bugti, leader of the Bugti tribe, president of the Jamhoori Watan Party and the driving force behind the anti-government rebellion in Balochistan. Bugti was killed in a massive military operation in the Bhambore Hills, an area between the cities of Kohlu and Dera Bugti. Balach Marri, commander of the BLA was also reportedly killed along with 80 close family members and followers of the Nawab. Pakistan army claimed that the cave in which Bugti was hiding had caved under heavy bombardment. Reliable sources indicate that ISI operators trapped the Nawab and he was killed in cold blood after a close-quarter encounter.
Earlier the federal government exercised its powers under Section 11(b) of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 and declared the BLA a terrorist outfit.
After Nawab Bugti’s death president Mussaraf claimed that the stray terrorist incidents in Balochistan was eradicated. Claimers and disclaimers from a military dictator do not reflect the real state of affair in a country. A Bugti, Marri and Mazari might be assassinated. Millions of Bengalis and Balochs might be consigned to flames but as Historian Suret Khan Marri tells, “The movement is there. Sometimes it is crushed. Now it is the fifth insurgency, and it has spread all across the Baloch area.”
Suret Khan’s statement is supported by events that followed the dearth of Nawab Bugti. Balochistan has been ‘tackled’ by the Islamabad junta but the Baloch people have not been won over for the causes of a Unified Pakistan. The fault line is widening rapidly.
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The Balochs’ homeland is strategically important to Pakistan. Bangladesh was not a strategic outpost of Pakistan. It was a raw material extraction tract for the Punjabi and assorted money-market controllers of Pakistan. It was an extension of the fallacious Two-Nation theory that still recognise the centrality of religion in the making of a nation. Punjabistan, which is erroneously projected as Pakistan, has miserably failed to assimilate the ethnic, linguistic, cultural and regional economic interests of the people of Sind, Balochistan, NWFP and other regions.
Besides the Chagai nuclear testing range, Balochistan is the main base for space programme and rocket experimentation facilities of Pakistan. Baloch copper fields at Saindok are being exploited with assistance of Chinese company MRDL. Saindok has assumed importance after gold and silver were struck. Sharig is a coal-mining town in which Chinese presence is significant. Recently huge deposit of gas was confirmed from Sharig exploration sites.
Besides copper, oil and natural gas (Sui) large deposits of coal, silver, gold, platinum, aluminium appreciable deposits of Uranium have also been found in the Baloch tract. In fact, Balochistan is the only tract that promise extraction of Uranium to quench Pakistan’s thirst for weapons grade fissile materials.
In addition to the strategically important Gwadar harbour nearing completion with Chinese collaboration, Pakistan and Kuwait have recently developed Port Qasim on Makran coast. The Jiwani peninsula near Iran border is being developed as a strategic airport and berthing facility for Naval ships. Jiwani and nearby areas are being explored for petroleum and some Chinese firms are aiming for offshore exploration for oil reserves.
The Makran coast has a secret port facility near Ormara, used by Pakistan’s Hangor Class submarines. Knowledgeable circles in Pakistan allege that the secret port in between Gwadar and Karachi is being used to receive clandestine missile and weapons supplies from China and North Korea. Some secret weapons supplies by the CIA are also landed at Ormara facilty.
Recent information indicates that Adi and Damb on Sonmiani Bay are being developed as strategic ports. Pakistan is reportedly seeking US help to develop the Bay as a big naval base.
Important strategic airports in Balochistan are at Gwadar, Pasni, Turbat (also a mining complex), Juzzak and Robray. Situated near Iran and Afghanistan borders these airports are valued by the USA for strategic use against Iran, if such a situation arises in near future.
Quetta does not need any introduction. Pakistan’s strategic road head to Kandahar in Afghanistan, Quetta witnessed massive mobilisation by Pakistan, USA, Saudi Arabia and other forces that had coalesced into a coalition to fight the Soviet forces in Afghanistan. Quetta had also housed the ISI operational forward base; besides being used by the Afghan mijahideens and the Arab mercenaries under command of Osama bin Laden. Even now Quetta is being used
by Pakistan to clandestinely support the resurgent Taliban forces. Under no circumstances Pakistan would like the Afghan, Indian and other forces to have any toehold in the strategically important capital of Balochistan. From Pakistani point of view Balochistan has assumed more importance as a number of Taliban elements and members of Gulbuddin Heckmatyar's Hizbe Islami have been settled by the ISI in the Pushtun majority areas of Balochistan and in areas around Quetta. Whatever president Musharraf may assert about Pakistan’s war against Taliban and Al Qaeda, it is widely known in Pakistan that Balochistan bases are being used by the Taliban, Gulbuddin Hikmatyar and Osama bin Laden against Afghan, USA and NATO forces. Repeat showing of the Taliban forces in Afghanistan are being staged from Waziri and Baloch tracts of Pakistan. Musharraf wants to paint the resurgent Taliban movement with brush of ‘people’s war.’ Pakistan watchers have confirmed reports of two live Taliban camps 120 km due south of Chaman in a hill valley and near Sheihk Manda, north of Quetta. The USA has the historic habit of behaving like the proverbial Ostrich when it comes to assessing real strategic value of its presumed allies. It is difficult to convince Washington that Pakistan and not Afghanistan is the fountainhead of Islamic jihad. With so much of strategic, economic and geopolitical factors at stake Pakistan cannot afford to have a roaring insurgency in Balochistan. The Bugti fire has been apparently doused, but Balochs are preparing for renewed fight for their rights, though circumstances in Afghanistan and Iran are not conducive to their strategic preparations. The Bengali Pakistanis fought a single war of independence. The Balochs have fought four so far. Baloch leaders say they are ready to fight another four to achieve their goals. The Chinese have a big stake in Balochistan. Besides collaboration with Pakistan in nuclear and missile technology, developing mining facilities and modernising the Gwadar port, China is interested in joint operation with Iran and Pakistan for laying oil and gas pipelines from Makran coast through Baloch territory, part of Sind, Punjab, and POK to destinations in Xinjiang province of China. This would facilitate China to curtail a longer sea route via the Straits of Malacca and areas of American naval presence in South East Asia. With the same objective in view China is exploring the possibility of laying a pipeline from Bangladesh to China via Myanmar. The Daily Times of Pakistan reported on May 24,2006, that prime minister Shaukat Aziz was actively considering ‘a feasibility study for an oil pipeline from Gwadar port to Western China to transport China’s oil imports from the Gulf. The Gwadar and Karachi ports offer the shortest access to the Arabian Sea for Western China, as well as Central Asia, Aziz said at a seminar on 55 years of Pakistan-China relations, organised by the Institute of Strategic Studies. A major oil refinery at Gwadar would further facilitate China’s oil imports. Pakistan is now in a position to exploit its strategic location at the crossroads of South Asia, Central Asia and West Asia to promote “corridors of cooperation.” The Chinese are also worried about presence of Uighur rebels in Taliban and Al Qaeda camps in Waziristan. There were unconfirmed reports that the BLA had taken helps from the Xinjiang rebels to procure weapons and to plan attacks on Chinese facilities in Balochistan. Closely linked to Chinese interest in Balochistan are the aspects of up- gradation of the Karakoram Highway, communication between Gilgit-Skardu and connecting Kashgarh and Urumqui (Xinjiang) with Pakistan. Elaborate comments on these aspects deserve a separate treatise. Innayatullah Baloch writes in his book, The Problem of Greater Balochistan, that the strategic importance of Balochistan has had a positive as well as a negative effect on Baloch nationalism. The Baloch people believe in the saying of the Prophet, ‘salla Allahu ‘alayhi wa salam’- Whoever fails to oppose a tyrant is guilty of tyranny. However, the USA does not appear to be appreciative of the noble spirit of the Baloch people. To Washington a Saddam is a tyrant and a Musharraf is a ‘dictator of garden variety.’ It allowed the Bengali Muslims to be butchered by Islamabad and in Balochstan Washington is repeating the same act. America’s strategic consideration categorise Balochistan as a ‘pivot of history.’ The tract and its people have become pawns in the proverbial “Great Game” of Central Asia. Halford Mackinder, a former Director of the London School of Economics had long back described Balochistan as a gateway to the Central Asian heartland. This holds good even today. The USA considers Pakistan as a key geostrategic ally for strengthening its Great Game against Iran, China, and burgeoning influence of Russia in the CAR countries. Afghanistan has become another quagmire for the USA and Pakistan knows well that Washington cannot but depend on its treacherous ally to fight the Taliban, Al Qaeda and to manipulate the Islamic jihadis of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Chechnya and Uighur rebels of western China. With a stand off situation with Iran, Venezuela, Peru, Columbia and Panama the USA has to depend more on Arab oil. The Russian authorities have entered the oil market in a bigger way and Washington is worried about re-emergence of the Kremlin as another Cold War superpower. It is keenly exploring the possibilities of tapping the oil rich CAR countries and piping down the oil from Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan etc countries through Afghan and Baloch territories of Pakistan. Balochistan has the potential to offer energy corridor to the Central Asian Republics. There exists a plan to construct a gas pipeline from Daulatabad to Gwadar through Afghan territory for onward export to the USA and South East Asia. For this purpose, under the US aegis, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan have already concluded an agreement. About 30% of gas facilities Balochistan are being controlled by the USA. It is, like the Chinese, also engaged in on and offshore exploration of oil and gas in Baloch areas. Some reports indicate that the CIA and the ISI are collaborating to subvert some of the tribes like the Jamalis, Marris and Bugtis. Due to its common border with Afghanistan, the United States considers Balochistan territory as important for military operations against Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. In fact, the United States has military bases in Dalbandin and Pasni on the Balochistan coast. Strategic and economic interests often bring strange bedmates together. No wonder Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and USA are using the Baloch territory as a convenient strategic bed. Pakistani media and political personalities aligned to the junta have often blamed India and Afghanistan for aiding the Baloch rebels. According to Daily Times of Pakistan (09.01.06) president Musharraf clearly blamed India for backing the Baloch militants, “There are lots of indications, yes indeed… There is a lot of financial support, support in kind being given to those who are anti-government, anti-me and to those feudal people who are anti-national.” Musharraf told a visiting Indian CNN-IBN team said that he was “annoyed” and “disappointed” by Indian government statements and alleged actions in Balochistan. “It’s a direct interference in our internal affairs.”Pakistani Foreign Office spokesperson Tasnim Aslam also responded by accusing India of “an unacceptable proclivity to interfere in the internal affairs of its neighbours…Such tendency is contrary to efforts aimed at building an environment of trust, peace and stability in South Asia.” Federal Information Minister and the president’s chief spokesperson Sheikh Rashid had said that good relations with neighbours had restrained Pakistan from making public evidence of the involvement of foreign countries in the Balochistan insurgency. Speaking to the Reuters, he commented in Peshawar, “We have evidence that foreign countries are involved…but we don’t want to spoil the good relations we have with our neighbours.” Pakistan Muslim League Secretary General Mushahid Hussain in an interview to the Outlook India magazine said (16.04.2006), “RAW has established its training camps in Afghanistan in collaboration with the Northern Alliance remnants. Approximately 600 ferraris, or Baloch tribal dissidents, are getting specialised training to handle explosives, engineer bomb blasts, and use sophisticated weapons in these camps.” Similar allegations have been made against the Afghan government. Some Pakistani leaders went to the extent of alleging Russian proxy involvement through Karzai government. They forget that Karzai is a USA and not Russian surrogate. It would be futile for an Indian to rebut Pakistani allegations. It is better to fall back on the US sources to contradict Pakistan. The US sources have refused to accept ‘involvement of foreign hand’ in Balochistan. Khalid Hassan, writing in the Daily Times on April 04, 2006 reported that The Karnegie Endowment for International Peace report authored by Frederic Grare concluded that, “Almost six decades of intermittent conflict have given rise to a deep feeling of mistrust towards the central government. The Baloch will not forget General Pervez Musharraf’s recent promises and the insults hurled from time to time at certain nationalist leaders. The projects that were trumpeted as the means to Balochistan’s development and integration have so far led only to the advance of the Pakistani military in the province, accompanied by the removal of the local population from their lands and by the intense speculation that benefits only the army and its henchmen.” The Grare report argued that Baloch nationalism was a “reality” that Islamabad could not pretend to ignore forever or co-opt by making promises of development that were rarely kept. “For the moment, with little certainty about the conclusion of an agreement between the central government and the nationalist leaders, the province is likely to enter a new phase of violence with long-term consequences that are difficult to predict. This conflict could be used in Pakistan and elsewhere as a weapon against the Pakistan government. Such a prospect would affect not only Pakistan but possibly all its neighbours. It is ultimately Islamabad that must decide whether Balochistan will become its Achilles’ heel.” According to the Carnegie report, in the last 30 years the conflict in Balochistan resulted in 8,000 deaths, 3,000 of them from the army. The province seemed to be heading for another armed insurrection. The report identified three separate but linked issues that keep alive Baloch nationalism: Pakistan’s strategic evaluation of Baloch territory, centrality of the role of Army and promotion of Islamism to recapture lost bases in Afghanistan. In the process, Pakistan has criminally neglected the genuine aspirations of the Baloch people. The Carnegie Foundation report summed up the international reactions to Pakistan’s criminal activities in Balochistan; “Today’s crisis in Balochistan was provoked, ironically, by the central government’s attempt to develop this backward area by undertaking a series of large projects. Instead of cheering these projects, the Baloch, faced with slowing population growth, responded with feat that they would be dispossessed of their land and resources and of their distinct identity. In addition, three fundamental issues are fuelling this crisis: expropriation, marginalisation and dispossession…. Since India reopened its consulates in Jalalabad and Kandahar, it has been suspected of wanting to forge an alliance with Afghanistan against Pakistan. At the least, it is thought to want to exert pressure on Pakistan’s western border to force it to give up once and for all its “terrorist” activities in Kashmir, and, if possible, to bring the “composite dialogue” to an end on terms favouring India. India may also see the Chinese role in the development of the Gwadar port as a potential threat to its economic and strategic interests in the area. Pakistanis, Grare added, also suspected Iran of supporting Baloch activists to counter a Pak-US ‘plot’ to make Balochistan a rear base in a future offensive against Iran. Iran also wants its Chah Bahar port, renamed Bandar Beheshti, as an outlet for Central Asia at Pakistan’s expense. The Carnegie Foundation report believes that Pakistanis, including the Baloch, see the US as a potential troublemaker.” The pains of the Baloch people cannot be diagnosed by brief narration of their heroic struggle and international strategic power play in the region. Something must be told about blatant Human Rights violations. Wahid Baloch (31.01.2006) of Baloch Society Of North America, USA, drew attention to appalling human rights violation in Baloch territory. According to him ‘Pakistani dictators have started the 5th military operation against the innocent Baloch people, using US gunship helicopters and F-16 jets, to crush their peaceful struggle against the occupation of their land and exploitation of their resources by Pakistan.”
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan in a January 2006 report accused President Pervez Musharraf’s military-led government of “gross human rights violations” in Balochistan. The HRCP rejected government claims that it was not using regular armed forces in a crackdown in the province launched last month after rocket attacks by tribal militants battling for greater autonomy and control of natural gas fields. The group said it had “received evidence that action by armed forces had led to deaths and injuries among civilians” and that “populations had also been subjected to indiscriminate bombing”.
The HRCP report said that up to 85 percent of the 22,000-26,000 inhabitants of Dera Bugti had fled their homes after paramilitary forces shelling repeatedly hit the town. “There were alarming accounts of summary executions, some allegedly carried out by paramilitary forces. The HRCP received credible evidence that showed such killings had taken place…Across Balochistan, the HRCP team found widespread instances of ‘disappearance’, of torture inflicted on people held in custody, and on those fleeing from their houses,"
Asma Jahangir, Chairperson of HRCP said, “I have a very different view. It is not a matter of Indian government or Pakistan government. My view is that human rights issues are universal…And I think when our government takes out the issue of the massacres that took place in the Indian Gujarat, not only our government but all governments of the world should make India accountable for what they did…And therefore, it is just right that when systematic human rights violations are taking place as they took place in Gujarat and what is taking place in ‘Baluchistan’, that the world community does pay attention to it. India is part of the world community and India is part of the region and I hope that not only India but other countries do pay attention…so what is happening in ‘Baluchistan’ is grave enough to take notice of.”
The Baloch fault line is wider than the East Pakistan tectonic gap was. No amount of scholarly research can sum up the pains of the Baloch people, no strategic consideration can heal the wounds and no amount of Armed attack on the Baloch people can subdue them. Mr. Najam Shethi has spoken the sanest words in his Daily Times editorial on 04.10.2006. I quote him, “ In short, one can say that Pakistan itself emerged from a separatist nationalism that could have subsided had the All India Congress handled it well. But after becoming a state Pakistan quickly developed further separatist symptoms, which point to a future of many mini-states in the region. Let us accept that all sub-nationalisms aspire to a national state but are thereafter incapable of applying closure to the process of fragmentation…
Balochistan must stay inside Pakistan and the federation must learn to mould itself to the need of the federal units to be as autonomous as possible without actually destroying the state. There were times when we thought that Awami National Party’s (sic) Six Points were not negotiable; today hardly anyone will disagree that they could have been accommodated. These days, states do not come to an end easily. In fact many states in the recent past reached the “black hole” status and stayed like that without changing their morphology. There are many “failed states” in our world, which are on the map because the international system doesn’t allow annexations any more…
Pakistan was the result of Muslim separatism. It runs the risk of splintering under the weight of the regional demands for autonomy. To prevent the emergence of mini-states in place of the federation, it must nurture its provinces into mini-states by consent. Balochistan has to stay within Pakistan to become autonomous. Once outside, it will succumb to further fragmentation and chaos.”
To a conscious Indian a question pops up: Has Delhi worked on any Baloch strategy? The pundits and trusted friends of the Establishment might answer gorgeously. A common man’s view is: Delhi has very little time beyond daily political survival angst.
Maloy Krishna Dhar is a former Joint Director of Intelligence Bureau
Balochistan and its strategic importance Divide And Rule
Throughout recorded history, Balochistan has attracted travelers, historians, politicians, and military generals. In their оown heydays the Persians, Greeks, Mauriyan’s, Parthian, Scythians, Sassanid, Arabs, Ghazhnavids, Ghorids, Mongols, Mughals, Durranis and British all camе to Balochistan. T hey, it would seem, used Balochistan for passage and as springboard and not for permanent settlement with the exception оf the Arabs who lived here for three centuries and the British who stayed for about а century. Much оf the Arab heritage was however destroyed by the Mongols. То begin with, the British had occupied Balochistan to guard their lines of communication, between their bases in India and Afghanistan and not for the exploitation of its natural resources. Balochistan, or parts оf it, had been rich and prosperous once. The geographical location and the habits and peculiarities оf its people made it important, nevertheless. The British could not use it as military base. In its geopolitical context Sir Thomas Holdich described the ancient Balochistan in these words:
А country of great and flourishing cities, of high-roads connecting them with well-known and well-marked stages; Armies passing and re-passing and а trade which represented to those that held it the dominant commercial power in the world, flowing steadily century after century through that country which was fatal to Alexander, and which we аrе rather apt now to consider the fag-end оf the Balochistan wilderness. The army оf Alexander the Great on the way back home from India passed through Balochistan. Near Patala, about 30 miles southeast оf Hyderabad, Alexander split his army into three divisions and dispatched each one оf them through а different route ultimately to assemble at the port оf Hormuz in Persia. One division, under General Craterus, consisting оf heavy transport (elephants) and bulk оf stores and invalids passed through Bela, Mula Pass, Kalat, Quetta, Kandahar, Helmund to Kerman and Hormuz. The main body оf Alexander’s army, under his оwn command, marched along the Makran Coast it is where the Baloch army faced the Alexanders army with stiff fight Alexander himself was wounded with a poison arrow later he died of that wound. It will be noted that Alexander had followed, what seemed, new land routes between South Asia and the Middle East. These routes over the time have proved to be of great strategic importance to invaders coming from the north and going towards the Arabian Sea, or conversely moving upward from the southern shores or those traversing from east to west (and vice versa). Over the last more than two thousand years these routes have not lost their importance. They have been in constant use. Lately, these routes have assumed great importance, more so after the Soviet’s invasion оf Afghanistan.
During the Arab ascendancy in Balochistan, the Makran coast route was the most significant communication channel in the region. It was freely оf used for three centuries, from the 7th to 10th century’s АD. Several towns along the coastal route developed into places оf military importance, as replenishment centers. Balochistan was well placed to provide marshalling facilitiesеs to invading armies to recoup and re-equip before proceeding to India. Muhammad Bin Qasim, the young and brilliant Muslim general, first came to Makran and established а firm base there. Не re-equipped his expedition and secured lines of communication by occupying the towns of Kanazbur or Banajbur present Panjgur and Armabil (modem Las- Bela), before attacking the port town оf Debal on the mouth оf the Indus in Sindh. It will be noted that Muhammad Bin Qasim did not follow the beaten northern route to India. Не preferred the southern (Makran) route which had the advantage of running parallel to the Arabian Sea. It sounds reasonable to assume that as а military strategist he appreciated the advantages thatparallel land and sea routes would provide to his army by employing land and maritime forces simultaneously.The valleys of Kej, Gomal, Zhob, and the mountain passes like Khojak, Bolan and Mula, provide means оf comparatively easier соmmunication through high mountain ranges. The passes, successively lying from north to south, have been used for centuries by invaders and traders alike. They inter-connect the important towns’ оf Kandahar, Quetta and Kalat with the lower Indus basin. They link the Upper Highland with Lower-Highland. provide vertical movement from the Arabian Sea to the landlocked Afghanistan. Likewise, the Kej and some other valleys provide horizontal movements from East tо west and vice versa.Balochistan’s mountain ranges, less Brahui, Kirthar and Suleiman, mostly run horizontally, from East to West. they аre an obstacle for vertical movement from Makran Coast to Afghanistan border, оr соnversely, in а southern drive from the north to the Arabian Sea through Central Balochistan. The Kharan Desert is а major obstacle and аnу army moving from the West towards Balochistan would be deflected either to the north or south of it. They will be tempted to choose between two routes; one, in the north (Zahedan to Quetta) and two, in the south (Panjgur tо Bela). Incidentally, these natural approaches provide the shortest routes to the Indus basin from the West by following the(а) Zahedan Pishin-Dera Ghazi Khan route or (b) Panjgur-Bela route. But, beyond Indus River, the going to the east again becomes diffiсult. The east bаnk of the Lower Indus is flanked by the thar and Cholistan Deserts. The hills in the west and deserts in the east оf Indus channels invading armies from the south tо north (оr, vice versa) along the course оf the river Indus and its tributaries.This insight is gained from the experience оf Alexander, Muhammad Bin Qasim and the British. There fore most invaders from the west chose to enter India by way оf the northern passes particularly Khyber Pass. However, across the Goldsmith’s line in Seistan (Iran) major military maneuvers аre possible through Farah-Saharan-Chabahar-Highway running close to western border оf Balochistan. There аrе nо obstacles, such as those encountered in the Lower Highland. Instead а good metal led highway exists linking the Soviet Union and Afghanistan with the Makran Coast at the port оf Chabahar. Similarly, in the east in Balochistan а parallel route exists from Kandahar through Quetta, Bela to Karachi. It has bееn the most obvious and historical approach. It is fairly well developed in terms оf telecommunication systems, roads and railways. The credit for developing railway communication in Balochistan goes to the British. They built а railroad through а difficult mountainous terrain, at places gaining а height оf 6,000 feet above the sea level. It is one оf the highest railroads in the world.The laying оf the railway line in Balochistan has its own history and military background. During the First Afghan War in 1839, when the British columns оf the Indus Army advanced from Sucker (Sindh) tо Kandahar, the losses in terms оf men, animals and baggage оn the way were very high. Thousands оf men and animals perished.Among other lessons оf the First Afghan War that the British learnt, one was that they must have secure means оf communication from Rohri/Sukkur to Quetta and beyond. Likewise, they must achieve а logistics capability оf carrying men and materials in bulk speedily. The answer lay in constructing а railway line which was the most modem means оf communication in those days. After the Second Afghan War (1878-80) the British finally decided to link Sindh and Balochistan through railway. In the year 1885 the existing railway line in Sindh was extended to Quetta. It entered Balochistan at Jhatpat and winding its way to Sibi reached Quetta through the Воlаn Pass. А branch line from Sibi through the Harnai Pass terminated at khost in Harnai District. The railway line from Quetta junction was further extended to the border town оf chaman through the Khojak pass. The Khojak railway tunnel is а masterpiece оf engineering. It was constructed at а height of 6,398 feet above sea level in Khawaja Amran Range. It was considered to be the longest tunnel in South Asia, having а length оf 12,870 feet or 2.4374 miles. The railway line enters the Khojak tunnel near Shellabagh, about 60 miles north оf Quetta. The tunnel is preceded by а single span railway bridge which is 150 feet long and 234 feet high. The railway terminus in chaman оn the Afghanistan border that also serves as the railhead for Kandahar. The local traffic оn this line is very high. Over the years, this railway has served Afghanistan’s in-transit trade for transporting fruit and other goods to India and to other foreign countries through the port city оf Karachi. The railway line through-Khojak Pass served as the backbone оf Afghanistan economy unti1 Soviet intervention in 1979.The railway bridge and the tunnel have great military value as they lay оn the main approach between Afghanistan and Balochistan, Amir Abdul Raman Khan Оf Afghanistan had vehemently resented the construction оf this strategic tunnel by the British. Не said, “cutting” а tunnel through the Khojak hill they (British) were pushing the railway line into my country just like, а knife into my vitals". His remarks highlight the importance оf this railway tunnel as it gives added strength to the Khojak Pass and facilitates quick transportation оf forces to а convenient рlасе opposite Kandahar. Militarily, commercially and psychologically, it has threatened Afghanistan from the south, more precisely from the garrison in Quetta. The defense of Quetta will be greatly depending оn the control оf the Khojak Pass along with the bridge and the tunnel as they form the northern gate of Quetta. Their control will determine the local superiority of contending forces in the areas, and in а large measure the defense of the BalochistanAnother railway lineе was laid from Quetta to Zahedan. This lineе, like the Quetta-Khojak railway itself, was not justified оn grounds of local traffic. Only one train, а week plies on it between Quetta and Mirjawa, the Pakistan railway terminal on the Iranian border. Before 1960 Zahedan was the last stop оn this lineе. This railway line was built to provide outlet for movement of goods and peoplе to and from the north through Zahedan - Mashad route. During the World War-II Quetta Zahedan section of the east while North Westen Railway was intensively used to ferry war supplies to the Soviet Union via Zahedan - Mashad route.Road construction received special attention during the Ayub era. The Pakistani part of the RCD -Highway linking Pakistan with Iran and Turkey runs through Balochistan. Starting from КKarachi it winds up and down the hills through Веlа, Khuzdar, Kalаt to Mastung. From there it takes а westward swing to Nushki, Dalbandin and Zahedan in Iran and beyond to Turkey. The RCD - Highway has shortened the distance between Karachi and Quetta by 140 miles. It has opened new avenues of cooperation between the neighboring countries. It has the potential to promote travel and expand trade and cultural relations.The construction of this highway would help in bringing about national integration, in that, people living in far flung areas of Balochistan would thus be able to play greater part in the nationa1 life оf Balochistan. The impact оf this highway would be great оn the socio-economic and politica1 development о Balochistan. Militarily, the RCD - Highway has а specia1 significance, since for а considerable distance it runs parallel to the west оf the river Indus and the Kirthar Range. It also provides а safer alternate route from Karachi to Mastung and by link road to Quetta and beyond to Multan, Islamabad and Peshawar. The importance оf this route would be great as it is planned to link it with the proposed Indus - Highway.Incidentally, Ba1ochistan has got "nationa1 status" for its international road links which are placed under National Highway Board. The RCD - Highway, as part оf an integrated national сcommunication system would help in the economic development оf the different area оn the approaches leading into Balochistan from the north, south and the west. Ba1ochistan has а Coasta1 Ferry Service a1ong the Makran Coast. Boats regularly call оn Jiwani, Gwadar, Pasni, Ormara, Ras Malan and Sonmiani. А long felt need at these bays and ports relates to adequate docking facilities. Development оf modem sea ports in these parts would cost billiоns оf dollаrs.Balochistan would be the major beneficiary оf the CENТO economic aid and technical assistance if Pakistan would give the fear shear to Balochistan. The CENТO/RCD Microwave link from КKarachi to Ankara passed through Balochistan. Its general alignment is along the RCD - Highway. The telecommunication link is also connected’ with Quetta, the hub of rail, road and air communications in the area. Besides RCD Microwave link, the Balochistan was brought оn national and international dialing through integrated Microwave and Satellite Communication Systems. Interestingly, Balochistan had the distinction оf being the very first part оf South Asia to be linked with Europe telegraphical1y. That was in 1863, when the first telegraph line from Karachi to connect the Indo-European Telecommunication System was completed through Pasni and Gwadar. Yet another link with the Indo-European System was provided by а line which ran from Quetta to rebat Kila оn the Iranian border.The aim of Pakistan and Iran to built Modern communication network in Balochistan to build viable defense and also for exploiting its natural resources, particularly minerals. Pakistan looks for a comparison with how the Russian have lately exploited the mineral resources оf their Central Asian states might be useful for Pakistan to exploit the mineral wealth of Balochistan.А cursory glance at the current mineral map of Balochistan would show the existence of four main areas in which minerals have been discovered or worked: (1) Raskoh Hills in Chagai district; (2) Along the Makran coast; (3) Sibi-Kalat, Khuzdar areas, and (4) Marri-Bugti areas.Balochistan is rich in minerals. There are several known deposits of metallic and non-metallic minerals. The discovery of natural gas fields at Sui in 1953 and of Pirkoh in 1982 and, likewise the discovery оf а copper belt at Saindak in 1962 by satellite imageries hint at the possibility of finding even richer reserves of minerals in Balochistan. The Sui and Pirkoh natural gas fields in Marri-Bugti area alone account more than 18 Trillion Cubic Feet (ТСР) of proven reserves. Today all industriеs in Sindh, Punjab and NWFP are run оn gas from these sources. Note; Balochistan is not included in this list because she does not receive its share because of Punjabi short sightness. It is also being used for power generation and as а raw material in the production of chemical fertilizer at Mu1tan, Punjab. Likewise, natural gas is used as domestic fuel in most of the major cities of Pakistan. Such heavy dependence оn natural gas makes it а vital, albeit, hazardous resource. Disruption in gas supply can cause econоmic and psycho-socio problems, and May indeed, incapacitate Pakistan during а defense related emergency.Thus the security оf gas supply at production wells and at main distribution headwork’s is оf great importance for survival of Pakistan as country. The case study оf Saindak copper deposits wou1d bring home the point. These deposits extended between the Afghani and Iranian parts of Balochistan as at present Balochistan is divided and ruled by these three countries these deposits can be a point of dispute between them. In fact, the copper belt extends to Cheshma in to Iranian part of Balochistan. Saindak deposits, are оnе оf the largest in the world and if utilized in the befit of the peoples of Balochistan cou1d provide a lots jobs and improve the life of people but unfortunately the occupaning forces never want any relief for the local people so they have closed the Saindak plant and threw away the labor force and made many peoples job less hence left them without any source of lively hood.Balochistan’s geography presents а tier оf natural barriers and topographical constrictions with temperature inversion demanding highly trained combat troops, sophisticated equipment and armaments to fight а specialized conventional war in northern mountain below freezing temperature in the winters, and then in the desert, in summers with one оf the highest temperature table in the world.The invasion оn Balochistan also demands а thorough military planning and а good preparation over а long period. No invader could debouch in Balochistan unless hе has established а firm base in its neighboring areas like Afghanistan, Iran and the Gulf. Second, the ejection or routing of holding forces by the invaders would be а difficult operation. That is why the invading armies’ оf а first class European powers camе up оn the periphery оf Balochistan and stayed back in preparation to invade and advance through it, but they did not achieve any success. Third, between the two matching armies the initiative would lie with the one who is holding forces in Balochistan.Balochistan is large in аreа: and, it has long common frontiers with neighboring countries. Consequently а large, and technically sound professional army, would be needed tо safeguard its territorial integrity in the broader framework оf so called Islamic Republic оf Pakistan. Balochistan defense will also require а strong navy with good docking facilities in the various bays оn the Makran Coast. In the absence оf these, Balochistan could become another Biafra.The adjoining gulfs, seas and, indeed, the Indian Ocean as а whole are infested with rival navies, among them American, Russian, British, French and Indian. Each one оf these navies, which have elements of nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers, could help bolster or jeopardize, as the case may be, the potential оf Pakistan’s rather small navy. Meanwhile, the Arab/Persian Gulf and the peripheral countries аrе fastly building their own navies. But will they be able tо form а formidable naval forces? Divided as they are for lack оf effective institutional arrangements in the foreseeable future? Will they be allowed tо do it by the Western/Eastern Powers or India which is emerging as а regional power. These аrе some pertinent questions tо ponder. The answer would partly lie in the ethnic-socio-political composition of the people of Balochistan. Their will, to resist aggression and determination tо wage war for decades, love for freedom and faith in Balochistan could be formidable for аnу intervener/adventurist regional or superpowerIn sum, Balochistan’s geo-strategic significance never dwindled; instead, it continued to figure high in all eventualities. For example, recent idea of the Americans to pump out the central Asian gas and oil through Afghanistan via Balochistan and using Balochi port to deliver it through out the world is infect a historical chance for Balochistan to get more development, investment, and improvement to quality of life of its citizens.Another important project is on discussion is that of Iran India gas pipe line, which will also pass through Balochistan, here it is to bee seen the occupying forces will give the Baloch people to utilize its self earned revenues for her peoples well fair, or they will be sent to Punjab’s development, or in army generals pockets and will end up in Swiss bank accounts. It should be noted that for central Asian pipe line Afghanistan will get 300 million dollars per year as she provides transit facilities, question is how much the Balochistan will get while providing not only transit but giving her ports to deliver it to the world markets. We strongly recommend the world community and the concerned parties any deals which concerns Balochistan and Baloch peoples interest, must get the authorization from Baloch leaders and community first before they cut some deal with pirates states like Pakistan or Iran, other wise all the deals concerning Balochistan and Baloch interest will be irrelevant and has no meaning for Baloch people and Baloch would not give any kind of security guarantee to such deals. Its unending importance lays in its geography and in the dauntless and warlike natives the Baloch like the Spartans: the only variant, which could not be altered by the British or even by other nations
Divide And Rule" Afamous quote of the Oppressors
First Baloch National Resistance 1984
The ruler of the Khanate of Balochistan, Mir Ahmad Yar Khan,is claimed to have been coerced by Jinnah to sign the document of accession. Balochi nationals support this claim, but it is not widely supported as many supported accession and dispute such claims as unrealistic and contrary to popular support for Jinnah, as the Khan of Kalat ruled even after death of Jinnah under the government. However, The Khan was not an absolute monarch; he was required to act under the provisions of the Rawaj (the Baloch constitution).The incorporation of the Khanate resulted in a few anti-Pakistani rallies and meetings in certain areas of the Khanate. To subdue the anti-Pakistani sentiments, the Army of Pakistan was placed on alert. The Government of Pakistan decided to take complete control of the administration of Balochistan (Khanate) on 15 April 1948. The A.G.G. in Balochistan conveyed the orders of Mohammad Ali Jinnah that the status of the Khanate, "would revert back to what it was during the preceding British rule. Besides the policy of the central government of Pakistan towards the Khanate, Jinnah also refused to give Autonomy to Balochistan."In April 1948, several political leaders from Balochistan such as Mohammad Amin Khosa and Abdul Samad Achakzai were arrested. The Anjuman-i-Watan Party (pro-congress), headed by Samad Achakzai, was declared unlawful.First Baloch National Resistance 1948Prince Abdul Karim KhanThe refusal to grant autonomy and the continued existence of the Sandeman system resulted in unrest. Thus, on the night of 16 May 1948, Prince Abdul Karim Khan, the younger brother of the Khan, decided to lead a national liberation movement.He invited the leading members of nationalist political parties, (the Kalat State National Party, the Baloch League, and the Baloch National Workers Party) to join him in the struggle for the creation of an independent "Greater Balochistan". Apart from his political motives, the Prince was a member of the royal family and the former governor of the Makran province; the recognition of Sardar Bay Khan Gichki as a ruler of Makran by Pakistan upset him.Beginning of Movement and AlliesHe decided to migrate to Afghanistan in order to get help and to organize the liberation movement. Prince Karim wrote to the Khan on 28 June 1948 explaining the causes of his migration.Some of the prominent political leaders who joined him were Mohamed Hussain Anka (the secretary of the Baloch League and the editor of Weekly Bolan Mastung) • Malik Saeed Dehwar (the secretary of the Kalat State National Party) • Qadir Bakhsh Nizamami, a member of the Baloch League and prominent members of the Communist Party, Sind-Balochistan branch, and Maulwi Mohd Afzal, a member of Jamiat-Ulm-e-Balochistan