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Following Mumbai terror attack
India indefinitely postpones peace talks with Pakistan
By M. Nessan and Keith Jones
19 July 2006
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India has indefinitely postponed peace talks with Pakistan,
after accusing elements from across the border of
having a hand in last weeks terrorist atrocity in Mumbai
and demanding Pakistan do more to suppress armed, anti-Indian
Islamicist and Kashmiri nationalist groups.
At the conclusion of a brief tour of Mumbai, where more than
180 people were killed in the July 11th bombing of seven commuter
trains, Indian Prime Minster Manmohan Singh told reporters, Terrorists
responsible for the blasts were supported by elements from across
the border. This could not have taken place or they could not
have hit with such an effect without the help of sympathisers.
Pakistan has to stop helping terrorism to take the peace process
forward.
The next day, Indias foreign secretary, Shyam Saran,
confirmed press reports that a meeting he was to have with his
Pakistani counterpart as part of the ongoing Indo-Pakistani composite
[peace] dialogue has been postponed at Indias initiative
and that the postponement is indefinite. Pakistani officials have
said that the meeting was scheduled for this Friday, but Saran
and his aides deny India ever agreed to that date.
Indian authorities have provided no evidence to support their
charges of a Pakistani connection to the Mumbai bombings. Indeed,
the police investigation, which has included police sweeps of
predominantly Muslim Mumbai slums and indiscriminate arrests,
appears to be making slow progress at best.
That did not prevent police and intelligence officials, in
the days preceding the prime ministers swipe at Pakistan,
from feeding the media with stories alleging that the terror attack
was masterminded by Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), an Islamicist terrorist
organisation known in the past to have had links to sections of
Pakistans security establishment, and of otherwise promoting
the notion of Pakistani complicity in the Mumbai terror attack.
As was to be expected, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and
the entire Hindu-supremacist right enthusiastically joined in
the denunciations of Pakistan, although these were coupled with
no less vociferous attacks on the Congress Party-led UPA government
for being soft on terrorism.
The leader of the BJP and the Official Opposition in the Lok
Sabha, L.K. Advani, had warm praise, however, for the UPA governments
decisions to suspend the next step in the peace dialogue with
Pakistan. Dr. Manmohan Singh took a brave and the
right decision by saying peace talks between foreign secretaries
of India and Pakistan have to be stopped, Advani told a
BJP anti-terrorism rally in Bhopal last Saturday.
Accusing Pakistan of failing to check terrorism from its soil
against India, Advani said, [Pakistani] President [General
Pervez] Musharraf had declared in January 2004 that he would dismantle
terrorist infrastructure against India but he has not done so.
Pakistan, which previously offered to cooperate with India
in the Mumbai investigation, has angrily denied the Indian claims
of complicity. At a press conference Monday, Pakistani Foreign
Secretary Riaz Mohammed Khan demanded New Delhi share any evidence
of his countrys involvement, while affirming that Pakistan
is part of an international coalition against terrorism
and is committed to preventing its territory from being used to
mount terrorist attacks.
Khan termed Indias decision to cancel the secretary-level
talks a negative development. The linkage,
he added, between the postponement and the terrorist attacks
in Mumbai is incongruous, a bit out of place.
Khan urged early resumption of the composite dialogue, adding
that Pakistan would not reverse any of the confidence building
measures it has taken to promote rapprochement with India.
Manmohan Singh, in a further exchange with reporters Monday
while en route to Moscow, where he was to meet with leaders of
the G-8, tied the future progress of the Indo-Pakistani composite
dialogue to the readiness of the Musharraf regime to crack down
on Kashmiri insurgents and other armed, anti-Indian groups.
While saying India would not break off its dialogue with Pakistan,
Singh said the peace process cannot move forward if terrorism,
aided and abetted from outside, continues to take a heavy toll
of lives of innocent citizens of India.
Singhs aides, meanwhile, said that he would raise Indias
complaints against Pakistan and the need for a stronger international
stand against terrorism in all the meetings he had with government
leaders while in Moscow.
Like the BJP-led government that preceded it, the Congress-led
UPA has sought to promote closer relations with Washington by
touting India and the US as twin democracies and victims of international
terrorism, thereby giving the Bush administration a propaganda
boost in its attempts to use a purported war on terror
to legitimise the conquests of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Some press reports cited Indian government sources as saying
India would try to have Pakistan branded a terrorist state.
Whatever the truth of those reports, the Bush administrationwhich
has been highly critical of the Musharaff regime of late for failing
to mount a more vigorous military campaign to crush Taliban elements
who have found refuge in Pakistans remote and historically
autonomous South Waziristan regionhas, thus far, shown no
inclination to take such a step, which, within the lexicon of
the US foreign policy establishment, would effectively threaten
Islamabad with pariah status.
US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian
Affairs Richard Boucher said Monday that the Bush administration
has seen no evidence suggesting Pakistan or Pakistan-based groups
were responsible for the Mumbai attack. Boucher also denied suggestions
that US-Pakistani relations have become increasingly strained
and that the Bush administration believes Pakistan is not doing
enough to support its war on terror. Terrorism
is a tough [problem], said Boucher, and we are all
in that fight together. The UPA governments declaration
that Pakistan shares responsibility for the Mumbai attack comes
in response to pressure from the intelligence-security apparatus,
the Hindu chauvinist right, and the corporate media. These elements
want to use the Mumbai tragedy not only to ratchet up pressure
on Pakistan, Indias traditional geo-political rival, but
to press for a more general shift to the right.
The UPA has cemented an Indo-US strategic alliance with a civilian
nuclear energy accord and opened up new sections of the economy
to foreign investment. Nonetheless, important sections of big
business fear that if the pace of neo-liberal reform is not accelerated,
India will be unable to maintain an 8 percent annual growth rate
and will fall further behind China in the race for investment.
Long before the events of the past week, the Indo-Pakistani
peace process had slowed if not outright stalled. Last fall, there
was much discussion in the press that the Kashmir earthquake would
reinvigorate the peace process. Yet, despite the enormity of that
tragedy, mutual fears and animosities made it impossible for New
Delhi and Islamabad to cooperate in any significant way.
Pakistan fears that as India grows stronger economically and
its economic, military, and geo-political ties with the US blossom,
it will become less and less inclined to make any concessions
to Pakistan. Hence the alarm in Islamabad over Indias refusal
to entertain any substantive concessions over Kashmir, which Islamabad
has long insisted is the core of its dispute with
India.
The Indo-Pakistani peace process was only launched in early
2003 under heavy pressure from the US, which saw the conflict
between Islamabad and New Delhi as cutting across its aim to make
India an economic and geo-political counterweight to China, and
after the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government failed
to coerce Islamabad into making concessions through a 10-month
war crisis. The pretext for that crisis, it should be recalled,
was a terrorist attack on the Indian parliament buildings that
India blamed on Pakistan.
While in 2002-2003, the Bush administration acted to defuse
the tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi, the USs predatory
ambitions have added an explosive new dimension to the historic
Indo-Pakistani rivalry. Washington has intervened aggressively
to try to scuttle the plans for an Iranian-Indian-Pakistani natural
gas pipeline, although it has been promoted by both Islamabad
and New Delhi as among the most important of all possible confidence-building
measures. Pakistan, to no avail, has warned that the Indo-US
nuclear accord will have a major impact on the strategic balance
in South Asia, forcing Pakistan into an arms race.
The Indian elites response to the Mumbai atrocity underscores
that it is eager to exploit its new global partnership
with Washington to pressure a weakened Pakistan, with destabilising
and potentially explosive consequences for South Asia and the
world.
See Also:
Hindu supremacists, media seize on Mumbai
atrocity to push Indias government further right
[14 July 2006]
Terrorist atrocity in Mumbai
[12 July 2006]
Indo-US nuclear accord approved by key
US Congressional committees
[6 July 2006]
Bush secures nuclear accord
with India
[3 March 2006]
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