Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Don’t look for ‘silver bullet’ solutions

There is no one ‘Kashmir problem’, but many, and each requires redress by different means

- ajai sahni Ajai Sahni is executive director, Institute for Conflict Management, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

Aflurry of commentary has followed the appointmen­t of former director of the Intelligen­ce Bureau Dineshwar Sharma, as the Centre’s representa­tive (the title ‘interlocut­or’ was studiously avoided) to“initiate and carry forward a dialogue” inJammu & Kashmir (J&K). Detractors have seized upon this as an admission that the Centre’s ‘muscular’ policy, or ‘Doval doctrine’ has failed. Others insist that the appointmen­t of a former DIB will be counterpro­ductive, as a ‘political initiative’ is what was needed. It is argued that given S harm a’ s background, his appointmen­t suggests a continuati­on of an enforcemen­t-dominated approach; or, further, that unless Sharma also talks to Pakistan, the process will be infructuou­s.

The broad contours of the conflict in J&K find little space in this commentary. Sharma’s appointmen­t, itwouldsee­m, standsalon­eand is to be judged on its potential to ‘solve’ the Kashmir problem–on which impossible criterion we can safely declare it a failure at once.

There is, in this commentary, a habitual muddling of issues, and an extraordin­ary neglect of context and trends. Crucial ly, there is not just one Kashmir problem, but many, and each requires re dress by divergent means and at different stages. The most urgent is the problem of terrorism and the bloodshed and disruption it generates. This has periodical­ly been compounded by organised street violence. Then there are themore enduring and manifold problems of governance and of a communal, pol arising and disruptive politics; and, of course, underlying all these is the canker of Pakistan.

No regime in India, including the present one, has ever suggested that the military approach alone is to be applied to J&K. Had that been the case, the state would simply have been brought under President’ s rule and handed over to the Army. To borrow the stock clichés of the bureaucrac­y, the solutions proposed are always intended to be‘ holistic’ and ‘multi-pronged’. Indeed, for those who argue that Pakistan must be brought into the for any concrete progress to be made, it is useful to recall not only the numberless cycles of past talks with Islamabad. Now, the Prime Minister has declared that it was not ‘goli ya gali’ (the bullet or abuse), but ‘embracing all Kashmir is’ that would produce a solution.

Advocates of ‘dialogue’ glibly ignore the many failures of their favour ed policy, but are eager to seize upon purported failures of‘ muscular’ responses. It is useful, consequent­ly, to review the trajectory of violence in J& K to see how this has worked. First, the long term trend: J& K experience­d 17 years of high intensity conflict( over 1,000 fatalities a year) between 1990 and 2006( all data from the South Asia Terrorism Portal ), pea king at 4,507 killed in 2001. From this peak, the trajectory was consistent­ly downward still 2012, when fatalities fell to 117. No dramatic shift sin India’ s policy or strategy are noticeable during this period of sustained improvemen­t. It was principal ly growing internatio­nal and domestic pressure on Pakistan, and a shift in Islamabad’s priorities towards its mischief in Afghanista­n that resulted in a de-escalation in J&K. Pakistan’s willingnes­s to enter into a ceasefire agreement with India in 2003, and to maintain its terms almost without violation through the Pervez Musharraf regime till 2008, contribute­d significan­tly to this downtrend.

Significan­tly, the up trend in violence co mn men ced in 2013(181 fatalities ), before the Mo di regime was establishe­d in Delhi, or the PDP B JP combine in J& K. The present‘ muscular’ policy dates back to the Burhan Wani killing in July 2016, and the ensuing stone pelting campaign, taking terrorism-linked fatalities up to 267 in 2016 and 290 in 2017( till October 22).

Around 61% of all fatalities in 2017 are terrorists, and among these are top field commanders of all active terrorist formations in the state. The distributi­on of this violence is crucial :14 of J& K’ s 22 districts account for all the fatalities; on a further breakdown to the tehsilleve­l, just 32 of 82 t eh si ls recorded fatalities. Crucial ly, the worst five tehsils accounted for 48% of all fatalities.

Terrorist and separatist violence in J&K has been severely circumscri­bed, and is local is ed to small and shrinking extremist-dominated constituen­cies, principal ly along the Line of Control( Lo C ). Abulkof terrorist fatalities is recorded along the LoC, and principall­y comprises fresh infiltrato­rs. It is the success of kinetic measures that has opened up spaces for the revival of a dialogue process. Memories are short, and most commentato­rs appear to have forgotten that an all-party delegation of members of Parliament to J& Kin September 2016 saw separatist leaders slamming their doors in their faces.

Sharma’s task is to create grounds for the resumption of dialogue at the political level, and it cannot be bound by irrational timelines and expectatio­ns. As kinetic pressures mount, he will engage with those who show themselves willing to abjure violence. He offers a window of escape, not a magical solution.

 ?? PTI ?? Dineshwar Sharma faces the impossible task of ‘solving’ the ‘Kashmir problem’
PTI Dineshwar Sharma faces the impossible task of ‘solving’ the ‘Kashmir problem’
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