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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, July 19, 2001 |
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Engaging Pakistan: after Agra
By C. Raja Mohan
WHY HAS India chosen to engage Gen. Pervez Musharraf beyond Agra?
The answer is fairly simple. Getting a handle on Pakistan,
remains at the top of India's foreign policy priorities. Fixing
the `Pakistan problem' has become vital in the realisation of
India's own aspirations for a larger role on the world stage.
After having initiated a successful redefinition of India's
relations with the major powers in the last couple of years, New
Delhi now hopes to demonstrate its ability to manage the affairs
in its own neighbourhood.
Despite all the difficulties and frustrations that arise in any
serious interaction with Pakistan, India hopes to stay the
course. It has no other realistic alternative. Pakistan is too
large to be either ignored or isolated. It is equipped with
nuclear weapons and cannot be coerced into accepting solutions
imposed from outside. It has the unique ability to get under our
skin. For historical and cultural reasons, Pakistan is
inextricably tied to our domestic political discourse and there
is no running away from it. Few major nations have had to face
the kind of problem that India faces from Pakistan - an intense
but intimate adversary.
There were no shortage of provocations this time around from the
Pakistani side. Gen. Musharraf's insistence on meeting the
leaders of the Hurriyat Conference in New Delhi and the leak of
the videotape of his `off- the record' meeting with Indian
editors queered the pitch in the final stages of the Agra talks
and left a bitterness among his hosts.
Beyond the provocative style of Gen. Musharraf, there were
serious differences on substantive issues, in particular on
cross-border terrorism. The Agra talks highlighted India's basic
difficulty in dealing with Pakistan. Islamabad's reluctance to
give up its lever of cross-border terrorism leaves New Delhi in
an untenable position of negotiating with a gun to its head.
Equally troubling for India has been the attempt by Gen.
Musharraf to discard the past agreements between the two nations
at Lahore and Shimla, to reshape the negotiating framework
between the two nations to focus exclusively on Kashmir.
In spite of all these problems, the talks between the Prime
Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, and Gen. Musharraf came very
close to being declared a huge success. The two sides were just a
couple of steps short of an agreed formulation on Kashmir and an
``Agra Declaration''. India and Pakistan are now not too far away
from defining a mechanism to address the deep differences that
divide the two nations.
The decision to invite Gen. Musharraf, the initiatives taken in
the runup to the visit, and the way its outcomes were handled
suggest India is groping for new ways to address the problems
with Pakistan. The long- term success of India's engagement with
Pakistan will, however, depend on a four-pronged strategy.
First, India needs to overcome the parity syndrome. The nature
and history of Pakistan's quest for parity with India is well
known. It is deeply rooted in the divide that emerged in the
Indian national movement between the Congress and the Muslim
League. A sequence of wars between the two new nations, the
dynamics of the Cold War, and the acquisition of nuclear weapons
tended to reinforce the image of parity between India and
Pakistan. Calling the meetings at Agra a `summit' adds to the
semiotics of parity.
But there is no reason why India should tie itself down with the
parity syndrome. India has always objected to being treated on a
par with Pakistan. Yet India has also found it difficult to rise
above the parity syndrome. If India can lift itself up, it can
get a totally different perspective on Pakistan. Today the major
world powers are beginning to acknowledge the different
directions in which India and Pakistan are headed. They are also
adopting policies based on their different interests in both
countries.
The Vajpayee Government has sought to take advantage of this
opportunity to overcome the parity syndrome. But its policy
initiatives are often cramped by its ideological mentors in the
Sangh Parivar who find it impossible to grow out of the self-
imposed notion of parity with Pakistan. The world view in India
defined by deep-seated religious hatred demands tit-for-tat
responses, and it plays into the hands of the religious
extremists in Pakistan.
The antedeluvian thinking of the Hindutva forces is reinforced by
those demanding, in the name of national security, mindlessly
muscular policies towards Pakistan. For many of these tough
talking strategists, there is only one way of skinning the cat -
through force and perpetual antagonism towards Pakistan. India
needs to resist demands for a Rambo-like approach and develop a
smarter strategy that combines political, cultural and economic
factors to alter the dynamics of the relationship with Pakistan.
Second, India must always retain the initiative. Traditionally,
Indin foreign policy has been reactive and reluctant to take the
initiative in crafting a different relationship with Pakistan.
But in inviting Gen. Musharraf, taking unilateral initiatives in
the runup to the summit, and in handling the outcome, India has
shown a different temperament today.
India has finally begun to discover the value of taking
unilateral steps that might help redefine the context of the ties
with Pakistan. The decision to act without reciprocity on
educational exchanges, on granting access to its market, and in
offering talks on confidence- building measures is an important
breakthrough in Indian thinking. To be effective, this policy
needs to be sustained and better presented than it was this time
around. The first step for India is to quickly implement the many
unilateral measures it announced before the arrival of Gen.
Musharraf.
Third, India needs to separate its Pakistan policy from
emotionalism. In war or peace, Indian policies towards Pakistan
tend to be dominated by sentimentalism. That is rooted in the
intimate but adversarial relations between the two countries.
Many of the earlier initiatives towards Pakistan were grounded by
the mismatch between the romantic sentiment and the harsh
reality. India should not expect dramatic advances in its
relationship with Pakistan. Instead, it must concentrate on a
process of patient engagement that would let one concrete step
follow another.
Finally, India needs to work with the broader global forces to
transform the relations with Pakistan. India's experience in the
Cold War demanded that it resist the impingement of the outside
world in its dealings with Pakistan. But now India has a great
advantage in letting the forces of globalisation transform the
economic and political context of Indo-Pakistan relations.
It is in India's strategic interest to promote regional economic
integration in the subcontinent and facilitate cross-border and
trans- national projects such as natural gas pipelines. Pakistan
cannot hope to meet the challenges of globalisation by shutting
itself off from the Indian economy. This gives India, for the
first time, a powerful lever to reshape the political relations
with Pakistan over the long term.
In seeking to remove the real sources of threat from Pakistan,
India needs to work closely with the major powers to prevent its
neighbour from heading down the path of a failed state. India
alone does not have the power to transform the internal dynamics
of Pakistan. Only a cooperative endeavour between India and the
major powers can produce stable arrangements that will help
Pakistan overcome its current internal difficulties.
A Pakistan at peace with itself and its neighbours will
dramatically transform the regional situation. Such a Pakistan
can prosper by linking the economies of the subcontinent, the
Gulf and Central Asia. Creating that `bridge state'in Pakistan
must be one of the most stimulating strategic tasks India has
ever undertaken.
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