The abrupt cancellation of the NSA-level Indo-Pak
talks in New Delhi scheduled for Aug. 23-24, 2015, on “terror” and “other
outstanding issues” (‘Kashmir’ not mentioned) signifies a dangerous drift in
Indo-Pak relations, which could potentially lead to a disastrous cataclysm in
South Asia. The circumstances of the cancellation are disturbing and
portentous.
India as the major South Asian power needed to display statesmanship of
a high order to ensure successful conduct of the meeting not allowing it to be
derailed on spurious grounds. Kashmir is by no means in “undisputed” possession
of India as claimed by the Indian rulers. Nor is “terrorism” an issue unrelated
to the Kashmir conflict. Further, the separatist All Parties Hurriyat
Conference has been a part of the Indo-Pak confabulations over Kashmir since
the Vajpayee-Musharraf days. It would thus seem that Indian diplomats and
security officials as well as the Indian foreign minister have behaved
churlishly and arrogantly with their Pakistani counterparts leading to the
Pakistani delegation’s decision to walk out of the talks.
Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistani National Security Advisor lucidly and
convincingly explained his country’s position on the issue in an NDTV program.
The Indian NSA, however, chose to remain noticeably silent. The increasing
number of violent incidents along both sides of the Line Of Control on the
border, killing innocents and injuring others on a large scale and destroying
crops and property in border villages would indeed call for an independent
human rights audit and appraisal.
There is a dangerous drift in Indo-Pak relations from the days of Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee (1999-2004) to the days of Narendra Modi (since
2014) through the days of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh (2004-14). Of the three
Prime Ministers, Vajpayee was the most successful in attempting to cut the
India-Pakistan-Kashmir Gordian Knot with the able though somewhat flawed
assistance of military adventurer-turned President of Pakistan, Parvez
Musharraf. The ten-year rule by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was a “lost
decade” in terms of its tragic inability to carry forward the legacy of Atal
Behari Vajpayee on Kashmir and on Pakistan. Narendra Modi’s regime has raised
more questions than answers and failed to fulfil the expectations raised during
his inauguration in May 2014.
Prime Minister Vajpayee showed vision and statesmanship in his policies
towards Pakistan and Kashmir. Though India and Pakistan became nuclear powers
in May 1998, Vajpayee showed courage in undertaking a successful bus trip to
Lahore in Pakistan in February 1999 which resulted in the Lahore Declaration.
Despite the Kargil adventure by General Parvez Musharraf and the Gujarat
Carnage of 2002 supervised by then Chief Minister Narendra Modi, Vajpayee
persisted in his path of peace with Pakistan. General Musharraf seized power in
Pakistan through a military coup in October 1999 and made himself president of
the country. Vajpayee invited President Musharraf to India leading to the Agra
Summit in 2001. The summit talks between the two heads of state were prolonged
and successful. A last-minute hitch over whether the issue of “terrorism” or
that of “Kashmir” should be prioritized (India preferring the former and
Pakistan the latter) led the former general of the Pakistani army to stage a
walk out without concluding the discussions. Vajpayee, the statesman, failed to
invite the Pakistani president to stay a day longer in Agra, visit the holy
Ajmer Sharif and then resume the discussion towards a successful conclusion.
The Indian Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani was alleged to be the man
who stood in the way of a proper discussion between the two heads of state.
Vajpayee did make an admission of this during his subsequent presentation in
parliament. The failure to invite Musharraf to stay on for a day longer in Agra
was, however, costly and the expected Agra Declaration failed to materialise.
Despite this setback, Vajpayee continued his efforts for peace and a
settlement of the Kashmir dispute. President Musharraf, ever an out-of-the-box
thinker, while attending the 2004 SAARC Summit in Islamabad, produced his “four
point formula” on Kashmir: i) make the borders irrelevant and allow free
movement across the LOC; ii) provide self-government or autonomy, not
independence; iii) demilitarize the region; and iv) set up a mechanism for
joint management.
The formula had huge implications for Pakistan’s inherited positions and
meant a considerable movement from the past. However, Prime Minister Vajpayee
lost the 2004 elections to parliament.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh who followed was essentially a bureaucrat,
not a seasoned political leader such as Vajpayee. He was unable to take up the
“out-of-the box”proposal made by President Musharraf for discussion. He was
constrained not just by the Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), but also
by his own Foreign Service bureaucracy. The opportunity for a settlement was
not taken up. Manmohan Singh’s inability to seize a deal in the winter of
2006-07 frustrated President Musharraf who later became embroiled in a
political power struggle and was eventually forced to step down in August 2008.
The India-Pakistan-Kashmir Gordian Knot remained uncut!
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the product of the conservative,
Hindu-centric Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh, the political formation behind the
ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). His hostility to Pakistan is politically
driven. His performance as Prime Minister since May 2014 has clearly established
his inability, unlike his predecessor Atal Behari Vajpayee (also of the BJP),
to rise above his party. This has led the rulers of Pakistan to revive talk of
forgotten UN resolutions, something which the “four point formula” of Musharraf
might have prevented.
The prospects for peace in Kashmir today are worse than before. Narendra
Modi’s rejection of the role of the All Parties’ Hurriyat Conference, his
opposition to talks with Pakistan without preconditions and his overt actions
directed to communalisation of the polity are steadily eroding his credibility
as prime minister of a complex multi-religious country. An informed journalist
reports that radical separatism in Kashmir today is merging with radical Islam
of the Salafi kind. Kashmiri syncretism has disappeared. A volatile mix
prevails, which Pakistan takes advantage of. Increasing Salafi violence could
drag India and Pakistan into a war, which, since the Pakistani army is now
deployed mainly in its Western border, increases the chances of its turning
into a nuclear clash.
Kadayam Subramanian is a former Director General of Police in Northeast India and former
Director of the Research and Policy Division of the Government of India’s
Ministry of Home Affairs in New Delhi.
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