Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Pak Army reaching out to India: Report

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LONDON: The Pakistani military leadership led by Army Chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa is reaching out to India because it has realised that the way to peace and prosperity is through military cooperatio­n with New Delhi, a Pakistani analyst has said in a British think-tank commentary.

The army, which enjoys considerab­le influence over policy decisions in Pakistan, has ruled the country for much of its life since independen­ce 70 years ago.

“In a historic first last month, Pakistan’s Army Chief of Staff (COAS) Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa invited Sanjay Vishwasrao, the Indian military attache, and his team to the Pakistan Day military parade in Islamabad,” wrote Kamal Alam, a visiting fellow at the Uk-based Royal Unites Services Institute (RUSI).

In a sign that strain ties are warming up, Gen Bajwa followed this two weeks later by saying the Pakistan military wanted peace and dialogue with India, Alam said in his report.

The two countries will also take part in joint military drills in Russia in September, with Chinese participat­ion. “These initiative­s come against a background of almost weekly exchanges of fire along the Line of Control... However, they mark a change in attitudes that started when Bajwa became COAS in November 2016,” the report said.

During a visit to the UK last year, Gen Bajwa addressed a gathering at RUSI and announced the “Pakistan army is now no more insecure and feels confident of its future. He welcomed Indian participat­ion in Pakistan’s flagship infrastruc­ture project, the China-pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Another senior Pakistani officer, Lt Gen Aamir Riaz, who headed the first-ever high level contact group with India as Director-general Military Operation, made public his stance of welcoming Indian participat­ion in the CPEC project.

The report noted that both India and Pakistan have tried to forge relationsh­ips before as well. In the 1980s, Gen Zia-ul Haq, and then Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi became close. Then, Pakistani military leader Gen Pervez Musharraf and prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee also came close at a 2002 summit in Agra to resolving the Kashmir conflict despite a year-long tense situation on the border.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Pakistani Army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa
REUTERS FILE Pakistani Army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa

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