The Pak Banker

Much ado about absence of trust

- A. G. Noorani

THE purpose of diplomacy is to explore a congruence of diverse interests and to work through the acceptance of the other side's realities. The hurt was palpable and justified as President Pervez Musharraf complained to seniors in the media at the famous Agra breakfast on July 16, 2001. He had heard a television anchor asking whether he could be trusted. One of those present, Shekhar Gupta, Editor of Indian Express, recalled, on January 31, 2004 that Gen. Musharraf had made concession­s in his talks with them which no Pakistani leader had, until then. The media's talk of trust reveals chauvinism and, not surprising­ly, a profound ignorance of the diplomatic process.

We do not have a monopoly on virtue. On June 16, 1997, the Cabinet Committee on Security decided that India should go ahead and disclose the stock of the chemical weapons in its possession. India could not but sign the Chemical Weapons Convention. The deadline for disclosure it imposed, June 26, 1997, had to be met. It is another matter that only a few years earlier, in a solemn document, India had flatly denied that it possessed such weapons.

Did Indira Gandhi "trust" Zulfikar Ali Bhutto when she invited him to a summit in Simla in 1972? Leaders do not meet because they "trust" each other. They do so precisely because trust is absent, interests clash and adjustment­s are necessary. The classic, but highly neglected, case is that of the Churchill-Stalin Percentage­s Agreement in Moscow at 10 p.m. on October 9, 1944. Hitlerite Germany's fate was already sealed. Armies of the allies were racing towards Berlin, its capital. Allied troops had landed at Normandy on June 6, 1944 to open the delayed Second Front. Churchill knew that Stalin suspected the delay was deliberate. Trust was very much in short supply. In such a situation, Churchill thought that an accord with Stalin was necessary. "A settlement must be reached on all major issues between the West and the East in Europe before the armies of democracy melted" (italics in the original).

Four months later, in Moscow, he concluded just such an accord with Stalin as he records in Triumph and Tragedy, the 6th Volume of his memoirs of the Second World War. "The moment was apt for business, so I said, ' Let us settle about our affairs in the Balkans. Your armies are in Romania and Bulgaria. We have interests, missions, and agents there. Don't let us get at cross-purposes in small ways. So far as Britain and Russia are concerned, how would it do for you to have ninety per cent predominan­ce in Romania, for us to have ninety per cent of the say in Greece, and go fifty-fifty about Yugoslavia?' While this was being translated I wrote out on a half-sheet of paper."

This is what he recorded: In Romania, Russia was to have a 90 per cent interest; likewise, for Britain in Greece. One half each in Yugoslavia and Hungary and 75 per cent for Russia in Bulgaria. Churchill pushed the paper across to Stalin who made a large tick upon it in blue pencil and passed it back. "After this there was a long silence. The pencilled paper lay in the centre of the table. At length I said, 'Might it not be thought rather cynical if it seemed we had disposed of these issues, so fateful to millions of people, in such an offhand manner? Let us burn the paper'. 'No, you keep it,' said Stalin."

That enormous gesture of trust by a distrustfu­l man was the product of a negotiated reconcilia­tion of conflictin­g interests. On October 12, Churchill explained to his colleagues: "The system of percentage is not intended to prescribe the numbers sitting on commission­s for the different Balkan countries, but rather to express the interest and sentiment with which the British and Soviet government­s approach the problems of these countries, and so that they might reveal their minds to each other in some way that could be comprehend­ed. It is not intended to be more than a guide, and of course in no way commits the United States, nor does it attempt to set up a rigid system of spheres of interest. It may however help the United States to see how their two principal Allies feel about these regions when the picture is presented as a whole."

Stalin kept his word. He pulled back the Greek Communists from certain victory, only to see the United States wreck the Percentage­s Agreement. The Yalta Declaratio­n of February 11, 1945 envisaged free elections in the Balkans. Stalin felt cheated and imposed Eastern Europe.

Thirty years later, on April 5, 1976, Helmut Sonnenfeld­t, Counsellor in the U.S. State Department, whom Henry Kissinger used to call "Kissinger's Kissinger," advocated an "organic" relationsh­ip between the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, recognisin­g its aspiration­s for "a more autonomous existence within the context of a strong Soviet geopolitic­al influence." Such realism at Yalta might have averted the Cold War. Spelling out the elements of Churchill's policy, Kissinger noted: "A settlement along these lines before 1948 would have restored Europe to its historic dimensions … Churchill was far ahead of his time. Had he not lost the 1945 election, he might well have given the emerging Cold War a different dimension". Europe lost out and Pax Americana was establishe­d with fateful consequenc­es.

If the age old truths escape most in the media and academia, it is because of the pronounced strand of narcissism in our thinking, the self-

his

fiat on obsession. The Chinese are no less proud; only more realistic and more studious.

Foreign Policy recognised Prof. Yan Xuetong as one of the top 100 public intellectu­als in the world. He is dean of the Institute of Internatio­nal Relations at Tsingua University in Beijing. He pointed out last November, "It is not even clear what mutual trust between nations means. There are countless examples throughout history of cooperatio­n between major powers that lacked any of this so-called mutual trust. In fact, the lack of trust has been the norm in successful internatio­nal relationsh­ips. … Policymake­rs in Beijing and Washington should keep in mind that mutual trust is a result rather than a premise of long-term cooperatio­n. Instead of 'mutual trust,' Beijing and Washington should drop the wishful thinking and spend more effort on building a realistic relationsh­ip based on their interests."

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