Baloch National
Insurgency 1973-1977
A long-dormant crisis erupted in Balochistan in 1973 into an
insurgency that lasted four years and became increasingly bitter. The
insurgency was put down by the Pakistan Army, which employed brutal methods and
equipment, including Huey-Cobra helicopter gunship, provided by Iran
and flown by Iranian pilots. The deep-seated Baloch nationalism based on tribal
identity had international as well as domestic aspects. Divided in the
nineteenth century among Iran,
Afghanistan,
and British India, the Baloch found their aspirations
and traditional nomadic life frustrated by the presence of national boundaries
and the extension of central administration over their lands. Moreover, many of
the most militant Baloch nationalists were also vaguely Marxist-Leninist and
willing to risk Soviet protection for an autonomous Balochistan. As the
insurgency wore on, the influence of a relatively small but disciplined
liberation front seemed to increase.
Bhutto was able to mobilize domestic support for his drive
against the Baloch. Punjab's support was most tangibly
represented in the use of the army to put down the insurgency. One of the main
Baloch grievances was the influx of Punjabi settlers, miners, and traders into
their resource-rich but sparsely populated lands. Bhutto could also invoke the
idea of national integration with effect in the aftermath of Bengali secession.
The shah of Iran,
who feared a spread of the insurrection among the Iranian Baloch, generously
gave external assistance to Bhutto. Some foreign governments feared that an
independent or autonomous Balochistan might allow the Soviet Union
to develop and use the port at Gwadar, and no outside power was willing to
assist the Baloch openly or to sponsor the cause of Baloch autonomy. During the
mid-1970s, Afghanistan
was preoccupied with its own internal problems and seemingly anxious to
normalize relations with Pakistan.
India was
fearful of further balkanization of the subcontinent after Bangladesh,
and the Soviet Union did not wish to jeopardize the
leverage it was gaining with Pakistan.
However, during the Bhutto regime hostilities in Balochistan were protracted.
The succeeding Zia ul-Haq government took a more moderate approach, relying
more on economic development to placate the Baloch.