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WSWS : News
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: India
US insists on resumption of talks between India and Kashmir
separatists
By Deepal Jayasekera
14 August 2000
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Continuing its year-long intervention into the Kashmir crisis,
the United States administration has called on the Indian government
and Kashmir separatists to resume their first-ever official talks,
despite last week's ceasefire breakdown and a serious car bomb
blast in Srinagar, the summer capital of the Indian state of Jammu
and Kashmir.
Truce talks between Kashmir separatists and the New Delhi government
broke down when Hizbul Mujahideen, a major pro-Pakistani separatist
group, ended a 15-day-old ceasefire on August 8.
The Hizbul group had started the talks with the Indian regime
on August 3, but its central leader Salahuddin, revoked the ceasefire
when India rejected his demand for the inclusion of Pakistan in
the discussions. Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, speaking
in parliament on August 7, categorically ruled out any involvement
of Pakistan.
Two days after calling off the talks, Hizbul Mujahideen claimed
responsibility for the Srinagar blast, which was followed by a
hand grenade explosion in the city last Saturday. The events triggered
mutual recriminations between Vajpayee's government and the Pakistani
military junta led by General Parvez Musharraf, each blaming the
other for destroying the peace initiative.
The US call for the resumption of the talks was the second
statement from Washington in two days. A State Department official
told the Hindu newspaper on August 8, the day that the
Hizbul pulled out: We urge all sides to nurture and continue
a process of peace in Kashmir... We welcomed the initiation of
the discussion between India and the Hizbul Mujahideen and we
encourage the resumption. The US spokesman was cautious
in commenting on Hizbul's insistence on Pakistan's participation
in talks. The decision on how the talks are structured needs
to be made by the parties involved, he said.
The Clinton administration is being urged on by key elements
of the American ruling establishment, reflected in a New York
Times editorial of August 11. Washington should press
both sides to come back to the table without preconditions,
it said. Every reasonable effort must be made to avoid a
new Kashmir war. The editorial implied that the White House
should prevail upon the Hizbul Mujahideen to drop its insistence
that Pakistan be represented at the talks.
On August 3, the day that the talks commenced, Clinton phoned
Vajpayee to congratulate him and to condemn the massacres of nearly
100 people, including Hindu pilgrims and migrant labourers, in
south Kashmir on the previous two days. A rival Kashmir separatist
group opposed to the Hizbul's cease-fire was believed to be responsible
for the killings. When Vajpayee accused Pakistan of backing such
activities, Clinton reportedly promised to raise the issue with
Pakistani leaders.
After a special meeting of its Cabinet Committee on Security
on August 8, the Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP)-led Vajpayee government
publicly declared its keenness to revive the talks. A statement
expressed regret over Hizbul's termination of the truce, accused
Pakistan of putting pressure on the group, and called upon Hizbul
and other separatist groups to negotiate.
The August 3 talks were held after the Indian government responded
to a unilateral three-month ceasefire announced by Hizbul on July
24. In contrast to earlier Indian offers of limited negotiations,
the government invited the group to unconditional talks and suspended
military operations against it. Vajpayee's government also proposed
talks with the All Party Hurriyat Conference, an umbrella organisation
representing dozens of separatist groups, which are fighting for
an independent Kashmir or a merger with neighbouring Pakistan.
Subsequently, however, Vajpayee ruled out any talks with the
Pakistani government until the Musharraf regime stopped backing
cross-border terrorisma reference to Islamabad's
support for Kashmir separatist groups operating from Pakistan.
Vajpayee also declared that while talks with Hizbul were unconditional,
any settlement had to be within the Indian Constitution.
A year-long process
The turn towards talks has unfolded since July last year, when
US President Clinton secured an agreement from Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif to withdraw armed intruders from the Kargil
heights in Indian Kashmir, when India and Pakistan were on the
brink of a war.
That intervention showed that US support had tilted towards
India, shifting from the Cold War policy of backing Pakistan.
US pressure on Pakistan heightened after October 12 last year
when the military chief, Musharraf, who was the original architect
of the Kargil intrusion, ousted Sharif. The US has urged the Musharraf
regime to contain the operations of various Pakistani-based Muslim
fundamentalist armed groups, including the Kashmir separatists,
and to open talks with India.
A month before Clinton's visit to the Indian sub-continent,
the New York-based Kashmir Study Group (KSG) issued a report.
Led by influential US Kashmir businessman Farooq Kathwari, the
KSG included US Congressmen and former diplomats. It proposed
that the Indian state of Kashmir and the Pakistan-controlled part
of Kashmir become two sovereign entities or be merged into a single
state with control over its own defence and foreign affairs.
With these US initiatives afoot, senior Hizbul commanders reportedly
sent out ceasefire feelers to the Indian government via a US-based
Kashmiri early this year. In response, the Indian Prime Minister's
Office sent an intermediary to Pakistan where Hizbul leaders are
based, to begin a secret dialogue. In April, India allowed Hizbul
commander Abdul Majid Dar to return to Indian Kashmir with guarantees
of protection from army units, to engage in discussions with his
juniors.
The Vajpayee government also released several All Party Hurriyat
Conference leaders from jail in April and May and offered talks
within the Constitution. Hurriyat leaders expressed their readiness
to negotiate, while rejecting the government's pre-condition.
Unofficial talks and contacts proceeded.
During the same period, a group of politicians and officials,
including a rebel from the National Conference (NC) government
of the Indian Kashmir state, ex-cabinet minister Saifuddin Soz,
and V.K. Grover, a former officer in the Indian Home Ministry
dealing with Kashmir, travelled to Washington. Before departing,
they had reportedly held wide-ranging talks with Kashmir separatist
groups and some individuals.
These moves sparked a reaction from the NC Kashmir state government
of Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah. On June 26 it passed an Autonomy
Bill, demanding wider self-rule for the state, leaving only defence,
external affairs and communications in the hands of the central
government. But the Delhi government, in which the NC is also
a partner, rejected the plan outright.
It seems that the Kashmir government may not be happy about
being bypassed in any settlement between the central government
and the Kashmir separatists. A severe political crisis has erupted
within the ruling alliance, stoking tensions between the BJP and
the NC. Both sides are currently engaged in discussions, toning
down earlier statements.
Under severe US and international economic and political pressure,
the Indian and Pakistani governments are anxious to win the favour
of the US. Both Vajpayee and Musharraf are now scheduled to visit
the US in mid-September. Pakistani Information Minister Javed
Jabber said on August 12 that the two leaders might meet at the
United Nations in New York.
While Musharraf's government has officially denied any part
in Hizbul's truce offer, it is unlikely that the group has acted
without Pakistan's consent, given that Hizbul is strongly backed
by Pakistan and operates from there. If there is any deal on Kashmir,
the Pakistani military regime wants to be a part of it.
Kashmir has been the main subject of the conflicts between
India and Pakistan since Britain, the colonial power, partitioned
India and carved out these two states with the collaboration of
the Hindu and Muslim bourgeoisie in 1947. Two-thirds of Kashmir
is ruled by India, while the remaining one-third is known as the
Pakistan Province of Kashmir. While Pakistan calls Kashmir a disputed
area, India maintains that Kashmir is an integral part of
India.
Having trenchantly opposed international involvement in the
Kashmir issue in the past, the Indian government is today actively
working with the US. For its part, the US, having sided with Pakistan
during most of the Cold War, is pursuing definite economic, geo-political
and strategic interests in the region.
The US now sees India, once an ally of the Soviet Stalinist
regime, as its major partner in the region, considering its strategic
importance, large market and wealth of resources. At the same
time, the US does not want the disruption and volatility of a
war between India and Pakistan. If the US could get a foothold
in Kashmir as part of a settlement, the territory would be a springboard
for the US into nearby Central Asia, where untapped oil and gas
reservoirs are at stake.
The European and Japanese powers also have a keen eye on the
situation. This July's annual G-8 summit in Japan issued a statement
urging India and Pakistan to resume dialogue as soon as
possible in the spirit of the Lahore declaration in order to realise
a sustainable peace in the region. The resolution added
that, the level of tension between India and Pakistan remains
a cause of international concern. The Lahore declaration,
signed by Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif, emphasised the need for talks
between the two countries to settle bilateral disputes.
See Also:
Clinton visit to the Indian
subcontinent sets a new strategic orientation
[23 March 2000]
As Clinton prepares to visit
subcontinent
US delivers a thinly disguised ultimatum to Pakistan
[4 February 2000]
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