Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Fear of the Kword

The US stand on being proactive on Kashmir does not amount to mediation. India has missed the point

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One of the continuing signs of India’s lack of confidence is that saying the word “Kashmir” in an internatio­nal forum results in near hysteria among the Indian chattering classes. The recent comments by the new United States ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, were a case in point. Haley never mentioned the word “mediation” nor, for that matter, the word “Kashmir”. She spoke largely about the US being prepared to be pro-active in preventing any conflict between India and Pakistan. At best, this was a set of ad hoc comments that were open to interpreta­tion. The US has intervened in the past to prevent conflict between the two countries – it played a key role in ending the Kargil conflict and did so in a manner that favoured India. However, this is hardly the same thing as mediation.

The first and most interventi­onist phase, lasting until the early 1960s, saw Washington actively use the United Nations or unilateral actions to force India and Pakistan to the table – and use its diplomatic leverage to find a common language. This legacy still haunts the Indian imaginatio­n, even though it came to a close over a half-century ago. For the next quarter of a century the US largely lost interest in Kashmir, preferring to tighten its alliance with Pakistan for other strategic reasons. The flare-up in Indo-Pakistan tensions during the Kashmiri secessioni­st violence of the late 1980s shifted the US to a crisis management posture. Nuclearisa­tion further enforced the sense that the primary US interest was one of preserving stability. The recent advent of global Islamic terror and the transforma­tion in Indo-US relations has meant a further strengthen­ing of the view that the US role was crisis-handling, but a genuine solution was a bilateral issue. Haley’s comments are fully in line with such a policy.

The simple truth is India is now too large an economic and military power to be told what to do on an issue like Kashmir by even the sole superpower. Kashmir mediation is a dead horse and it is time Indians stopped flogging themselves with the belief it can come back from the grave.

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