MRS. CHRISTINA ROCCA : Her Past, Present & Future 
      by B.Raman
      Mrs.Christina Rocca, who has been nominated by President
      Bush, subject to Senate confirmation, as the new US Assistant Secretary of
      State for South Asia in place of Mr.Karl Inderfurth, is presently a
      foreign policy adviser for Senator Sam Brownback (Republican-Kansas).
      Mrs.Rocca, a career officer of the Central Intelligence
      Agency (CIA) since 1982, resigned from the CIA in 1997 and started working
      with Mr.Brownback. Mr.Brownback had moved two amendments, adopted by the
      US Senate in 1999, vesting powers with the President to lift sanctions
      against India and Pakistan if he deemed it fit.
      Mrs.Rocca, who belongs to Washington DC, lives in
      neighbouring Virginia along with her husband and two children. She is a
      graduate in history from London's Kings College.
      It is believed that she was closely involved in the
      operations of the CIA against the Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the
      1980s. She had twice visited India and Pakistan under her real name.
      Mrs.Rocca belonged to the clandestine operations
      Directorate of the CIA, which sends officers abroad under different cover
      jobs. In the early 1990s, she monitored the implementation of a plan for
      the buy-back by the CIA from the Afghan Mujahideen groups and the
      Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan the unused Stinger missiles
      supplied by the CIA, free of cost during the 1980s, for use against the
      Soviet troops. The CIA apprehended that these missiles might get into the
      hands of Islamic terrorist groups and might pose a threat to the security
      of the US President and other foreign VIPs, including the Prime Minister
      of India.
      Lt.Gen.Javed Nasir, the Director-General of the ISI
      during Mr.Nawaz Sharif's first tenure as the Prime Minister (1990-93), did
      not co-operate with the CIA in the implementation of this buy-back scheme.
      It was on the recommendation of Mrs. Rocca that Mr.Clinton placed Pakistan
      in the so-called watch list of suspected State-sponsors of international
      terrorism in January, 1993, and demanded that Mr. Nawaz Sharif should
      remove from the ISI Lt.Gen.Nasir and other senior officers identified by
      Mrs. Rocca as colluding with international Islamic terrorist groups. After
      Mr.Sharif succumbed to the pressure and removed them, Pakistan was removed
      from the list in July,1993.
      Since leaving the CIA in 1997, she has hardly written or
      spoken on foreign policy issues and has confined her role to advising
      Mr.Brownback on South Asia and helping him in transacting the business of
      his Senate Sub-Committee on Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs. 
      She was a member of a bipartisan group of Washington
      academics and former government officials constituted by the Washington
      Institute for Near East Policy, which, in a report on West Asia submitted
      on January 16,2001,advised the incoming Bush Administration to consider
      whether the Oslo process has run its course and might usefully now be
      replaced. It suggested that President Bush himself should "reserve
      his intensive involvement" in the Middle East peace process "for
      decisive moments," and reduce the role of the CIA in the
      Israeli-Palestinian relationship. The report urged the administration to
      "recognize the sharp differences between" Iraq and Iran, both of
      which it saw as "major threats to U.S. interests" and to
      regional stability. It said that the U.S. should act to promote political
      change in both countries, but should realize that in Iran such change can
      come though peaceful political dynamics while in Iraq it "will almost
      surely come only through violence."
      The study was guided by a Steering Group, which included
      amongst others, Senator Brownback himself and she was included as a member
      of the group on his recommendation. Amongst other members of the group
      were Mr.James Woolsey, former Director of the CIA during President
      Clinton's first term, and former Congressman Stephen Solarz, both reputed
      to be good friends of India and critics of the Clinton Administration's
      soft approach towards China's clandestine supply of nuclear and missile
      technologies to Pakistan.
      The recommendations of the report for a tougher
      counter-proliferation and counter-terrorism policy by the Bush
      Administration should be of interest in assessing Mrs.Rocca's likely views
      on the subject. The report said as follows:
      
        * "Weapons of mass destruction (WMD) proliferation
        is perhaps the most serious ongoing security threat to the United States
        from the region. The new Administration should make one of its highest
        priorities the preventing of WMD proliferation in the Middle East and,
        failing that, penalizing, deterring, and containing the proliferant.
        * "Build regional and international consensus
        about non-proliferation. Take the initiative toward creating a Middle
        East WMD-free zone. Continue to argue for direct negotiations about WMD
        among all regional states, based on the principles of a comprehensive
        peace in the area and intrusive regional inspection mechanisms to ensure
        full compliance. In the interim, encourage practical steps, such as
        confidence- and security-building measures.
        
* "To reduce the attractiveness of WMD, enhance
        deterrence and prepare a vigorous response to proliferation breakout.
        Specify that were Iraq to use WMD against another country, the United
        States would be prepared to use overwhelming military force against
        Iraq, preferably in a broad UN coalition but, if necessary, only in
        conjunction with close friends and allies....
        
*"Deepen and extend cooperation on regional
        missile defenses. Place a high priority on developing, advocating, and
        helping to implement cooperative defense against missiles among U.S.
        partners in the Middle East. Such cooperation could begin with the Gulf
        Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, which have decided to coordinate
        among themselves on missile defense, building on the U.S. proposal for a
        Cooperative Defense Initiative. Extend this to include Jordan, Egypt,
        Turkey, and - as circumstances permit - Israel. Encourage use of the
        Arrow antimissile system by Turkey and eventually Jordan, along with
        other friendly states in the region.
        
* "In recent years, state sponsorship of
        terrorism has become less prominent, just as the region has witnessed an
        increased threat from non-state actors. The new President should lend
        high-level encouragement to counter-terrorism cooperation among U.S.
        allies and friends in order to deal with threats, new and old.
        
* "Learn from antiterrorism success stories.
        These include the successes of Turkey against the PKK (Kurdistan Workers
        Party), Egypt against the Gama'a Islamiyya, and, to some extent, Algeria
        against the GIA (Groupe Islamique Armee).
        
* "Insulate antiterrorism efforts from peace
        process dynamics. Work to convince all parties in the peace process that
        antiterrorism efforts should be delinked from the ups-and-downs of
        diplomacy. In this regard, Jordan presents a positive model, whereas the
        record of the Palestinian Authority (PA) has been uneven. When lax on
        counter-terrorism, the PA needs to pay a price in terms of its
        relationship with the United States.
        
* "Strengthen response to continuing challenges.
        Enhance efforts to promote international cooperation against violent
        Islamist extremist networks. Take an active role in organizing
        intelligence cooperation - if necessary, playing an intermediary role
        among countries that do not want to be seen openly sharing information.
        Work with European and Middle Eastern countries to apply collective
        pressure on the few remaining states that provide refuge or turn a blind
        eye to such terrorists, i.e. Iran, Pakistan, Yemen, and the Taliban in
        Afghanistan.
        
* "Make more effective use of existing U.S.
        policy instruments. Follow through on official pledges to pursue
        terrorists for their crimes even when diplomatically inconvenient, for
        instance, the Khobar Towers bombing suspects in Iran. At the same time,
        be prepared to use military force against countries that provide safe
        haven to terrorists....
        
* "The process of determining the State
        Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism has ossified. Consider
        defining road maps to removal from the list, and order a policy review
        to seek ways to make the list more effective against governments that do
        little to prosecute terrorists."
      
      From the Indian perspective, amongst subjects of likely
      interest and concern to her would be Pakistan's role in Afghanistan,
      reports of Pakistan flouting the UN arms embargo against the Taliban, the
      contacts of rogue elements in Pakistan's nuclear and missile establishment
      such as Dr.Abdul Qadir Khan, the self-proclaimed father of Pakistan's
      atomic bomb, with the regimes in Iraq and North Korea etc.
      The "Dawn" of Karachi reported on her on March
      26,2001, as follows:
      
        * "She is generally regarded as a person of balanced
        and independent views, with good relations with both Pakistani and
        Indian lobbies - qualities that may also help to provide an indication
        as to the Bush administration's approach to South Asia.
        * "She is familiar with the subcontinent and its
        intractable problems, and the belief is that she is unlikely to look at
        the region from any one particular prism. "
      
      The News International of Pakistan circulated the
      following report on Mrs.Rocca on March 27,2001:
      
        * "As Legislative Assistant of Senator Brownback,
        Rocca is known to have helped him formulate a more active US policy
        towards South Asia. She also shares Senator Brownback's views on a tough
        US stance towards China.
        * "Since she had worked as Brownback aide for
        considerable time, the Senator might be an important prism to analyse
        Rocca. As Chairman of the Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near Eastern
        and South Asian Affairs, Brownback played a key role in convincing the
        Congress not to ignore South Asia, which remains the most dangerous
        flash point on earth. Brownback maintains a balanced approach between
        India and Pakistan-supporting increased relations with India without
        dumping Pakistan.
        
* "Rocca is known to have varied interests in
        South Asia as well as the Middle East. She is an activist for the
        freedom of Tibet, which indicates her anti-China bias. Some Indian
        experts see that factor favouring New Delhi.
        
* "She was part of the Presidential Study Group -
        a bipartisan, blue-ribbon commission of The Washington Institute- which
        recently suggested to the President policy options on the Middle East.
        If the recent paper produced by the Institute-co-signed by her as part
        of the group-is any indicator of her views, Pakistan can expect a
        tougher stance on issues like terrorism. The group devotes a section to
        this issue, bracketing Pakistan with Iran, Yemen and Afghanistan. It
        says that the process of determining the State Department's list of
        state sponsors of terrorism has ossified. It recommends that Washington
        order a policy review to seek ways to make the State Department's list
        of states sponsoring terrorism more effective against governments that
        do little to prosecute terrorists. Understandably, she is just a
        co-signer in the study and should not be judged from one isolated paper.
        But like her boss, she is likely to be part of that growing bipartisan
        consensus against terrorist activities." 
      
      (The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
      Secretariat, Govt. of India and, presently, Director, Institute For
      Topical Studies, Chennai. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com
      )