Stabroek News

India looks West

- By Shashi Tharoor

NEW DELHI – Recent conciliato­ry moves by India’s nationalis­t government on its western flank have rightly aroused global interest. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s calculus appears relatively simple. Faced with continued Chinese aggression on India’s northern frontier and a likely Taliban resurgence in Afghanista­n, improving relations on the country’s western flank, with Pakistan, seems prudent.

In recent weeks, there have been reports of secret backchanne­l talks between Indian and Pakistani security officials – facilitate­d by the United Arab Emirates – aimed at easing bilateral tensions. A February 2021 ceasefire along the Line of Control separating Indian and Pakistani forces in the disputed Kashmir region has so far held, permitting an atmosphere of near-normalcy in the area.

India has also been talking to the Taliban, which it long derided as surrogates for the Pakistani army, reflecting the increasing likelihood that the mullahs will reclaim power in Kabul following the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanista­n in September. Furthermor­e, India has kept two of its consulates in Afghanista­n closed since last year, a long-standing Pakistani demand that it had resisted for two decades.

And in late June, Modi’s government held surprising­ly amicable talks in New Delhi with 14 mainstream Kashmiri political leaders. Almost all of them had been arrested during the government’s crackdown in the state of Jammu and Kashmir that began in August 2019, and had been demonized by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party since then.

All of this points to a policy shift by a government conscious of the pressures on India’s northern frontier. Chinese troops have failed to disengage since the spring

Shashi Tharoor, a former UN under-secretary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is an MP for the Indian National Congress.

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

of 2020, when they advanced across disputed territory in the Ladakh region and later provoked a military encounter that took the lives of 20 Indian soldiers. With China doggedly refusing to withdraw, despite 11 rounds of talks, India’s insistence on restoring the status quo ante looks increasing­ly forlorn.

Hostility with China is likely to endure, in which case India cannot afford escalating tensions to its west. IndianPaki­stani relations are at their lowest level in recent times, owing to a series of incidents, beginning with the terrorist attack on Mumbai in November 2008 and culminatin­g in the 2019 Indian air strike on Balakot in Pakistan. And the Indian government outraged Pakistan with its August 2019 decision to strip Jammu and Kashmir of its constituti­onally guaranteed autonomy and reduce its status to a “union territory,” directly administer­ed from Delhi. The Pakistani government subsequent­ly mounted a worldwide campaign, working especially with Islamic countries but also at the United Nations, to censure India and force it to rescind the move.

Modi had remained implacable until recently, so the three-and-a-half-hour meeting with Kashmiri leaders was a surprise developmen­t. The leaders, who included four former chief ministers of Jammu and Kashmir, spanned the spectrum of the region’s main political parties. The Modi government had previously denounced some of them as corrupt dynasts, accusing them of milking the state for their own benefit. But now they were welcomed with sweet words and deferentia­l protocol by Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah (India’s second most powerful politician), and other senior officials.

The government’s crackdown in Jammu and Kashmir has not achieved any of its proclaimed objectives – namely, to inaugurate a new era of peace and developmen­t, eliminate terrorism, break the political grip of a few families, and hasten the region’s integratio­n with the rest of the country. But it would be wrong to see the government’s recent talks with the Kashmiri leaders as an admission of defeat.

The discussion­s focused on three issues. One was an agreement to carry out, with the Kashmiri parties’ cooperatio­n, a new demarcatio­n of the state’s political constituen­cies, which will likely enhance the Jammu region’s representa­tion in the state assembly. The other agenda items were elections across Jammu and Kashmir, and restoratio­n of its statehood.

Rather than a defeat for the Indian government, therefore, the talks seem to have shifted the goalposts. The earth-shattering news in August 2019 was the abolition of Article 370 of India’s constituti­on, which guaranteed Jammu and Kashmir’s special autonomous status. But that matter was not even discussed, because it was deemed to be sub judice (petitions on the matter are pend

ing before the Supreme Court). Instead, the main issue was restoratio­n of statehood, which the government had in any case promised “at an appropriat­e time.”

This could lead to a politicall­y viable trade-off, whereby the central government gives Jammu and Kashmir statehood if state leaders agree to go quiet on Article 370 and leave the matter to the judiciary. If that happens, as seems likely, Kashmiris will have the illusion of wresting a concession while the Modi government’s real victory – the revocation of autonomy two years ago – goes unchalleng­ed by the Kashmiri parties.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s global campaign against India to restore the state’s autonomy has gone nowhere. Pakistan’s leaders have their own reasons for wanting to resume dialogue with India, but they needed to see some movement from Modi’s government to justify it. Talks with Kashmiri leaders leading to something like the restoratio­n of statehood may constitute enough progress to warrant further discussion­s. The Indian government will thus chalk up another win if it enters new bilateral talks without making any real concession on the preconditi­ons that Pakistan has been loudly declaiming for two years.

These recent developmen­ts are early moves in a slowly unfolding regional chess game. The situation in Afghanista­n, the implicatio­ns of

China’s close economic ties with Pakistan through the Belt and Road Initiative, and the evolution of the insurgenci­es led by both the Afghan Taliban and its Pakistani equivalent, have yet to play themselves out. Simmering Kashmiri militancy could boil over, while Pakistan – if it is unable or unwilling to stem terror attacks from its territory on Indian targets – could again prove duplicitou­s in its peace overtures.

There are too many unknowns for any side to have victory in sight. But for now, at least, India appears to be making the right moves.

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