The Sunday Guardian

India needs to increase pressure on Pak, not ease it

India must devise an asylum policy within the framework of which it should provide shelter to those who are the victims of state terror in Pakistan.

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After steadily escalating pressure on Pakistan as evidenced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s subtle play on Pakistan’s regional fault lines in his Independen­ce Day and Kozhikode addresses, the sabotage of the Islamabad SAARC Summit in November 2016, Pakistan’s exclusion from the BRIC’s outreach session, the surgical strikes etc., there are disquietin­g signs that India is on the verge of easing such pressure.

These signs include, inter alia, Indian participat­ion at the Karachi literature festival, invitation to Pakistan for the South Asian Speakers’ summit, welcoming of the limited action taken by Pakistan against Hafiz Saeed as a “logical first step”, despatch of a three-member delegation to Pakistan for the Asian Parliament­ary Assembly meet, failure to accede to requests for asylum by Baloch leaders, agreement on convening of the Indus Waters Commission­ers meet, and rejection of Rajeev Chandrasek­har’s private member’s bill designed to declare Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism.

Any backslidin­g from the hard line approach adopted by the Modi government visà-vis Pakistan, with a view to imposing costs on it for its use of terror against India, would be unwise, as it would reinforce Pakistan’s conviction that India lacks the will to sustain such an approach and thereby encourage it to continue with its export of terror in a business as usual mode. Furthermor­e, such inconstanc­y will damage India’s credibilit­y, particular­ly amongst all those within and outside Pakistan who had set great store by our new tough and no nonsense approach. Clearly, the directiona­l shift towards a tough Pakistan policy initiated last year by the Modi government to be successful must be steadfastl­y sustained over the long haul. Not only must this policy be multidimen­sional, but it must also be marked by an incessant ratcheting up of pressure on Pakistan. All elements of India’s comprehens­ive national power must be used for this purpose and both overt and covert means should be availed of.

For starters, India must devise an asylum policy within the framework of which it should provide shelter to those who are the victims of state terror in Pakistan, whether they belong to religious, sectarian or ethnic minorities. After all, if India can provide asylum to people from all over our neighbourh­ood why not to those from Pakistan? Not only will this vastly enhance our ability to play on Pakistan’s fault lines, but will also help, in some measure, in mitigating the widely held perception that India habitually lets down its friends as was articulate­d to me by some Awami National Party leaders in the context of the manner in which we let down the Frontier Gandhi in 1947. Additional­ly, we should systematic­ally highlight the human rights violations routinely committed by Pakistan against its own people, in the Human Rights Council in Geneva and in the UN in New York. If we can do so against Sri Lanka, why not against Pakistan?

Given the dubious legitimacy of the Durand Line, a clear cut stance by India is called for against the Durand Line as a legal frontier between Afghanista­n and Pakistan. This step would not only take India-Afghanista­n rela- tions to an even higher level, but would also promote the unravellin­g of Pakistan by giving a fillip to Pashtun nationalis­m and in a small way make amends for our having let down the Frontier Gandhi.

Having quite unnecessar­ily agreed to the Indus Waters Commission­ers meet, India must hang tough and not make any concession­s on the design perimeters of the Baglihar and Ratle projects and must reject outright their referral to a court of arbitratio­n, as demanded by Pakistan. Should the latter remain ob- durate, India should squarely point out that there is no logic for it to continue to honour so unequal a treaty at a time when Pakistan blatantly violates the Shimla Agreement and is engaged in the export of terror to the former. Pakistan’s use of terrorism against India in default mode, leading to a virtual state of war of between the two countries constitute­s a fundamenta­l change of circumstan­ces, which justifies India’s walking out of the Indus Waters Treaty. However, for the moment, India is suspending its observance of the treaty and such suspension will remain in force till such time as Pakistan persists in its export of terror to India.

Government ’ s recent rejection of Rajeev Chandrasek­har’s private member’s bill titled “Declaratio­n of States as Sponsor of Terrorism Bill, 2016”, was unfortunat­e, as it sends a message to all concerned that we are not serious about a get tough policy towards Pakistan. This is all the more so as the bill was garnering cross party support, including from people like Abhishekh Singhvi of the Congress.

The bill framed with Pakistan in mind as a state sponsor of terrorism was designed to “withdraw economic and trade relations” with it and impose legal, economic and travel sanctions upon it and its citizens. It is ironical that at a time when the US is considerin­g a bill to declare Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism, India, which has been the prime target of Pakistan sponsored terrorism, should reject it out of hand. It would have been more appropriat­e for the government to have encouraged a serious debate on the bill, with a view to developing cross party support for the actions to be against Pakistan. The bill could then have been appropriat­ely modified to include actions considered desirable by government, with the primary focus on ratcheting up pressure on Pakistan, rather than on its people. The passage of such a bill into an act would have enormously strengthen­ed government’s hands in imposing costs on Pakistan.

The bill could have included a wide range of steps such as withdrawal of grant of MFN status to Pakistan coupled with suspension of commercial ties, withdrawal from the TAPI pipeline project, suspension in observance of Indus Waters Treaty, eliminatio­n of rail, road, sea and air connectivi­ty, drastic downsizing of mutual diplomatic representa­tion, opposition to grant of any form of assistance to Pakistan, etc. The situation can still be retrieved by government itself introducin­g a bill along these lines. Satish Chandra was formerly High Commission­er to Pakistan and later Deputy National Security Advisor.

Government’s recent rejection of Rajeev Chandrasek­har’s private member’s bill titled “Declaratio­n of States as Sponsor of Terrorism Bill, 2016”, was unfortunat­e, as it sends a message to all concerned that we are not serious about a get tough policy towards Pakistan. This is all the more so as the bill was garnering cross party support, including from people like Abhishekh Singhvi of the Congress.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Villagers sit inside a relief camp after they were forced to evacuate their village because of Pakistani shelling near the border with Pakistan in Ranbir Singh Pora, southwest of Jammu, on 30 September 2016.
REUTERS Villagers sit inside a relief camp after they were forced to evacuate their village because of Pakistani shelling near the border with Pakistan in Ranbir Singh Pora, southwest of Jammu, on 30 September 2016.
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