The Asian Age

Can spring return to India-Pakistan ties?

- K.C. Singh

As the cycle of state elections winds down and India braces for the results in crucial states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, foreign policy, beyond the diaspora’s tribulatio­ns in the United States, needs attention. While a wary eye on the US is advisable, as others globally are maintainin­g, indiapakis­tan relations and Afghanista­n also demand attention. Spring is in the air, but may bring a fresh offensive by the Taliban in Afghanista­n and perhaps renewed protests in the Kashmir Valley. As former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee used to say, you can change your friends but not your neighbours. Permanent hostility is thus undesirabl­e towards a nucleararm­ed neighbour. While India must not negotiate under any kind of terror blackmail, nor should red lines be drawn at the walls of Indian cantonment­s or Army camps in Jammu and Kashmir, as has been done since the Pathankot attack. That provides carte blanche to terrorists to impact India-Pakistan ties by simply unleashing a couple of fidayeen. Complex and large attacks, not mountable by small modules, could be seen as engineered by the Pakistani state and Army, but certainly not every train derailment or poor perimeter defence by our soldiers. That alone should be the red line.

A number of recent signals from Pakistan are significan­t. The detention of Hafiz Saeed, even if a tactical move, the news that Pakistan’s new Army chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa recommende­d in a lecture a book on India’s democratic success and diminished ceasefire violations across the Line of Control appear like subtle signals that the civilian rulers and the Army chief are in tandem. Pakistan’s former NSA Maj. Gen. Mahmud Ali Durrani reiteratin­g in New Delhi what cost him his job once, that the 26/11 Mumbai attack was a cross-border operation mounted out of Pakistan, is hardly a coincidenc­e.

This new dynamics in Pakistan has been confirmed to this writer by well-informed Pakistani analysts. The window available to India is a narrow one, as electoral cycles in both countries tend to constrict the space for talks. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, having frozen relations since the Uri attack, needs to rethink his Pakistan strategy. The composite dialogue is dead and needs reconstruc­tion. Now that Pakistan is convinced that India is behind terror attacks in Pakistan and Ajit Doval has got into their head that the NSAs of the two sides need to revive contacts as mandated by Ufa to seriously discuss terror. The disputes can be separated and handed over to special representa­tives — like Kashmir, Siachen and the Sir Creek delineatio­n. The PM could, for instance, consider a politician for the first, a former general for the second and a retired judge for the last. The confidence-building measures need to be tackled by the foreign ministries at the level of foreign secretarie­s or ministers. The agenda has also widened as new issues like water, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and Afghanista­n have assumed greater currency of late.

The developmen­ts in Afghanista­n are making neighbours nervous. In the 12 months till November last year, the area under unconteste­d government control fell from 72 per cent to 57 per cent , though the population in the government­controlled area is 64 per cent compared to eight per cent in the Taliban area. Former US President Barack Obama’s troop drawdown reducing the internatio­nal forces to 12,600, including 8,400 American troops, has produced a stalemate. The Taliban has been stopped from overthrowi­ng the Kabul government, but Afghan security forces have bled. ISIS, under pressure in Syria and Iraq, is stepping into the vacuum, as are Russia and China, fearing a regression to the 1990s.

In mid-February, Russia convened a meeting of six regional powers with a stake in Afghanista­n’s future — that comprised, besides itself and Afghanista­n, China, India, Iran and Pakistan. It left open the possibilit­y of the US joining the dialogue later, but was guided by the fear that a sudden US withdrawal would lead to chaos and instabilit­y.

Electoral success, specially in UP, is crucial for Mr Modi’s consolidat­ion of political power and to get candidates of his choice elected as President and vice-president in July. It may also embolden Mr Modi to make one last attempt to normalise relations with our two biggest neighbours, China and Pakistan. Wisdom dictates that when confrontin­g

The alternativ­e for India is to manage ties with Pakistan and not push it deeper into Chinese arms. Mr Modi needs to attempt a wellcrafte­d diplomatic surgical strike on Pakistan...

two antagonist­ic neighbours, the aim should be to keep them from aligning against you. The Sino-Pakistan alliance now being a reality, India must tactically loosen it. Logically, a deal with China will depend on both accepting zones of influence, allowing each other primacy in their regions, and the settlement of the Dalai Lama and Tibet issues to mutual satisfacti­on. Border dispute settlement will follow, not precede, such understand­ing. China settling its borders with all neighbours, other than Bhutan and India, including by acceptance of the McMahon Line with Myanmar, indicates that once its gets strategic satisfacti­on, it settles border issues.

China, however, sees India as the only civilisati­onal, military and economic counterpoi­se to its rise in Asia. “The Chinese Dream” of being moderately welloff by 2021 and fully developed by 2049 appears like a Sino-centric vision in which there is little space for others, except as inferior tribute payers. It thus seems unrealisti­c to expect that China will settle with India if the two countries continue on their current trajectori­es of growth, with China having an edge.

The alternativ­e for India is to manage ties with Pakistan and not push it deeper into Chinese arms. Mr Modi needs to attempt a wellcrafte­d diplomatic surgical strike on Pakistan, unlike his hit-and-run past forays. It could begin with NSA Ajit Doval calling his counterpar­t. The Lahore Kite Festival celebratin­g Basant and the coming spring is over. In India, the Holi festival, which heralds spring, is approachin­g. The question that confronts South Asia is — can spring return to Indiapakis­tan relations?

The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh

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