By: Kayhan Int’l
Peace requires a great deal of courage, while war is the devil’s instrument for wreaking death and destruction upon the children of Adam and their achievements.
Peace requires a great deal of courage, while war is the devil’s instrument for wreaking death and destruction upon the children of Adam and their achievements.
The current conflagration in the Subcontinent between the two nuclear-armed rivals, following surgical air strikes on supposed terrorist camps in Pakistan-held Kashmir by New Delhi, which lost two aircraft and shot down one from Islamabad, in addition to the helicopter crash in Indian-held Kashmir that killed the Minister of Tourism of Nepal, has sent alarm bells ringing throughout the region.
The need of the hour is patience and prudence to properly probe the recent terrorist blast at Pulwana that killed 42 Indian soldiers, in order to eradicate the roots of terrorism, instead of fanning the flames of war and hatred.
Terrorism, of course, is the brainchild of Satan, and the terrorists, though they resemble mankind in appearance, are Lucifer’s children begotten through erring human beings, and should therefore be weeded out without any clemency.
This weeding out of the terrorists, however, requires forceful diplomacy combined with coordinated military action, rather than any headlong rush into what might spiral out of control into an unwanted war, with all its undesirable consequences for the two sides and unnecessary loss of life for both soldiers and civilians.
True, the Pakistan-based terrorist outfits which on February 13 and 14 used similar dastardly tactics on either side of the borders of Pakistan – in Iran and in India – to kill and injure scores of security personal of the two countries, deserve to be decimated, but this requires cooperation with the authorities in Islamabad for a proper probe, instead of any blatant military action against the sovereignty and integrity of that country, whose government might not be a party to such acts of terrorism.
The doors of diplomacy should never be closed nor should the overtures for peaceful solution rejected.
Both India and Pakistan, who over the past seventy years have fought four wars, need to control their emotions, since one wrong move may turn out to be suicidal for the two sides.
War will neither resolve the crux of the problem between the two countries, that is, the disputed land of Kashmir, nor will it strengthen the position of the ruling parties in New Delhi and Islamabad.
The Islamic Republic of Iran, as the prime victim of terrorism, and the target of frequent murderous acts by terrorists operating from Pakistan, is well aware of the external factors that are plotting to engulf the South Asian region in a war in pursuit of their own ulterior motives; hence it calls for restraint by the two sides.
It is easier to start a fight, on the assumption of revenge or to show that the government is not weak, by yielding to the war-mongering cries of irresponsible elements who never expect to fight or be hurt themselves – as the soldiers do, or as the civilians living in the war zones suffer.
So what is required is courage, in its real sense, to preserve the dignity of the country, safeguard its interests, and work towards diffusion of the crisis, so that concrete steps are taken to root out terrorism and the causes on which terrorists thrive.
So what is required is courage, in its real sense, to preserve the dignity of the country, safeguard its interests, and work towards diffusion of the crisis, so that concrete steps are taken to root out terrorism and the causes on which terrorists thrive.
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