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Other wars.


Hypnotized by the impasse the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  faces between starting a war with Iraq and dampening the one in the Middle East, we easily overlook the other wars that are brewing. The most alarming and dangerous is the continuing confrontation between Pakistan and India. Provocations are exchanged, resources marshaled, civilians evacuated, and armies massed at their borders. This has happened before--most recently, in January after Islamic militants from Pakistan attacked the Indian parliament. Back then, the United States, Britain, and others intervened and the two countries backed off. Will they again? Can they again?

In the current state of belligerence bel·lig·er·ence  
n.
A hostile or warlike attitude, nature, or inclination; belligerency.


belligerence
Noun

the act or quality of being belligerent or warlike

belligerence
, Pakistan's provocative missile "tests" serve to remind the world that two nuclear powers are on the brink of a major and catastrophic war. Not that the war would necessarily start with nuclear weapons landing on Islamabad or New Delhi New Delhi (dĕl`ē), city (1991 pop. 294,149), capital of India and of Delhi state, N central India, on the right bank of the Yamuna River. . The trouble, as usual, is focused on Kashmir where both countries are poised for a conventional war (a million soldiers are said to be facing one another across a porous line of control). But should hostilities break out "Hostilities Break Out" is an episode of the series Ōban Star-Racers.

The 'Earth Team' arrives on Alwas, site of the preliminaries and discovers that Eva, who calls herself 'Molly', has followed them.
 and either side falter, there are no guarantees that President Pervez Musharraf General Pervez Musharraf (Urdu: پرويز مشرف) (born August 11 1943) is President of Pakistan and the Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistan Army who came to power in wake of a coup d'etat.  of Pakistan or Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee of India would not reach into his nuclear arsenal or be compelled to do so by militants and nationalists to whom each is beholden be·hold·en  
adj.
Owing something, such as gratitude, to another; indebted.



[Middle English biholden, past participle of biholden, to observe; see behold.
. Even worse, the military in one country or the other might act on its own. India promises no "first use." Pakistan fudges the issue. More recently the Indian prime minister has threatened a "decisive battle" to end Pakistani incursions into Kashmir, while Musharraf promises that if attacked, his country "will unleash a storm and nobody will be able to stop it."

Not only are there no guarantees against nuclear use, there are no safety measures safety measures,
n.pl actions (e.g., use of glasses, face masks) taken to protect patients and office personnel from such known hazards as particles and aerosols from high-speed rotary instruments, mercury vapor, radiation exposure, anesthetic and
 either. As a result of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962, major cold war confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union. After the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the USSR increased its support of Fidel Castro's Cuban regime, and in the summer of 1962, Nikita Khrushchev secretly decided to , the United States and the Soviet Union benefited from a number of built-in safeguards, perhaps the most important, the "hot line," a dedicated phone line by which two leaders could speak directly if nuclear attack threatened.

During the cold war, the world also benefited from millions of people terrified ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 at the prospect, if not of nuclear annihilation, then of another Hiroshima. Movements for peace and nuclear disarmament (including in India) did not end the cold war or halt nuclear proliferation, but they reminded political leaders that the world was wary and watching. Imagine the reaction if a U.S. or Soviet leader with his nuclear weapons had threatened a decisive battle back in the sixties or seventies.

Today, the quiescence of massive numbers of "peaceniks," above all in the current standoff, is hard to fathom. Ironically, it is the Pentagon in a recent intelligence assessment that has raised the alarm bells of catastrophe, once the mainstay of antinuke an·ti·nuke  
adj.
Antinuclear.



anti·nuker n.
 movements. A full-scale nuclear exchange, the Pentagon report predicts, would kill 12 million people immediately, and injure 7 million others, to be followed by widespread radioactive contamination and radiation sickness radiation sickness, harmful effect produced on body tissues by exposure to radioactive substances. The biological action of radiation is not fully understood, but it is believed that a disturbance in cellular activity results from the chemical changes caused by . Significantly, or symbolically, the Department of Defense compares Pakistan's nuclear warheads to the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

Once again, world leaders are rushing to calm the belligerents, as they should. But this time more than placating two leaders is required. A consistent and vigorous international effort must bring the two nuclear nations to accept the responsibilities of their foolish weapons build-up: to start with, promises from both sides of no first use and then safeguards to prevent an accidental attack. The United States, Britain, Russia, and China all have a heightened interest and potential influence in easing the forty-seven year conflict over Kashmir, which is seeing incursions of militants from the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

With U.S. attention focused on Southeast Asia, both Musharraf and Vajpayee may be using this long-standing conflict and the threat of nuclear war to draw the international community into negotiations over a Kashmiri settlement. Maybe the two are once again, "crying wolf." But "crying wolf" doesn't mean that the wolf isn't there. Now is the time to act.

June 4, 2002
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Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9PAKI
Date:Jun 14, 2002
Words:671
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