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Amid mounting tensions
India and Pakistan agree to resume composite dialogue
By Deepal Jayasekera and Keith Jones
30 September 2006
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India and Pakistanbitter rivals since the 1947 partition
of South Asiahave agreed to resume the composite dialogue
they initiated in early 2003 in the wake of a year-long war crisis
that saw New Delhi amass a million troops in battle-formation
along the Pakistan border and Islamabad issue thinly veiled threats
of nuclear retaliation .
After meeting September 16 on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM) Summit in Havana, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh and Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf issued
a joint statement in which they announced that they had directed
their foreign secretaries to resume the composite dialogue
at the earliest possible opportunity.
In July, Manmohan Singh officially put the dialogue on hold
after charging, without providing any evidence, that Pakistan
was complicit in the July 11 Mumbai train bombings which killed
close to 200 people and injured hundreds more.
There is little reason to believe the resumption of the dialogue
will produce any substantive movement by either side on the chief
issues in dispute. These include, but are far from limited to,
jurisdiction over the former princely-state of Kashmir. India
and Pakistan have twice gone to war over Kashmir and since the
late 1980s, the Indian-held part of Kashmir, Jammu and Kashmir,
has been the site of an insurgency, which has enjoyed Pakistans
political and logistical support and been brutally suppressed
by Indian security forces.
Facing mounting popular and elite opposition at home, Pakistani
dictator Pervez Musharraf is desperate for something he can hold
up as proof that his alliance with the Bush administration is
providing benefit to Pakistan in the form of US pressure on New
Delhi to make concessions to Islamabad.
The Indian ruling class, for its part, is acutely aware of
Musharrafs weakness and calculates that Indias growing
economic, military and geo-political clout will only cause the
already substantial power-gap between the two states to grow in
the years to come. It therefore continues to prevaricate on the
Kashmir issue, while arguing that the strengthening of Indo-Pakistani
economic and cultural ties and other confidence-building
measures should not be held hostage to the Kashmir
dispute.
Both Singh and Musharraf have repeatedly affirmed their support
for a comprehensive settlement to the Indo-Pakistani dispute and
fear the domestic and international fallout should the peace process
unravel. Yet intense geo-political competition between the two
states across the length and breadth of the subcontinent has never
abated. Indeed there is much evidence to show that with peace
process slowing, if not outright stalling, over the past 18 months,
the geo-political rivalry has intensified, with India and Pakistan
vying for influence in Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri
Lanka and each accusing the other of fomenting violence and terrorism
within its borders.
Below are a few of the most spectacular of the charges and
counter-charges leveled by Indian and Pakistani authorities in
recent weeks.
* Addressing a meeting of state chief ministers in New Delhi
on September 5, Singh, without directly naming Pakistan, said
Concern about the increasing activities of externally-inspired
and -directed terrorist outfits in the country is justified. .
. . Intelligence agencies warn of a further intensification of
violent activities on their part, with the possibility of more
fidayeen [suicide] attacks.
* Pakistan officials have accused New Delhi of helping the
anti-government insurgency in Balochistan, Pakistans largest
province.
According to Pakistani media reports, New Delhis foreign
intelligence agency, RAW (Research and Analysis Wing), was blamed
for the Balochistan insurgency earlier this month at a meeting
chaired by Musharraf. The News International said it was
disclosed at the meeting that RAW has pumped huge money,
into the province, transferred arms and ammunition via Kishan
Garh into Dera Bugti, from various routes, all of which have now
been sealed.
On September 4, Pakistani foreign office spokesperson Tasnim
Aslam accused India of trying to destabilize Pakistan, adding
that Afghan territory was being used for such activities. Subsequently
Pakistani authorities clarified that they were not accusing the
Afghan government of fomenting unrest in Pakistan, but India of
using Afghanistan to funnel support to the Balochi rebels.
* The outgoing Pakistani High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, Bashir
Wali Mohammad, himself a retired head of Pakistans Inter-Services
Intelligence Agency, has accused RAW of carrying out the August
14 claymore mine attack on his motor convoy in Colombo.
Wali Mohammad escaped unhurt from the attack, but seven people,
including four Sri Lankan military personnel charged with guarding
him were killed.
Wali Mohammad has dismissed Colombos claim that the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were responsible for the
attack, saying RAW targeted him because it is angry over the increasing
military ties between Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
Wali Mohammed accused RAW of starting a proxy war in
a third country by carrying out this lethal attack.
The Indian High Commission in Colombo is quite disturbed
with the fast-growing bilateral relations between Sri Lanka and
Pakistan.
India has called the charges it was involved in the August
14 attack preposterous and absurd. But
it has made no secret of its concern over the dramatic increase
in Pakistans military cooperation with Sri Lanka, concerns
that have been fanned by the repeated failure of negotiations
to finalize an Indo-Sri Lankan defence pact.
B. Raman, a former top officer in RAW, wrote in the Indian
news magazine Outlook on August 18, The increasing
involvement of Pakistan in the counter-insurgency operations against
LTTE in Sri Lanka is a matter of serious concern from the point
of view of Indias national security.
Hindu supremacists attack anti-terrorism mechanism
In announcing the resumption of the composite dialogue, Singh
and Musharraf said that they had agreed to put in place
an India-Pakistan anti-terrorism institutional mechanism to identify
and implement counter-terrorism initiatives and investigations.
Given the intense hostility that exists between the two governments
and especially their military-security establishments and given
that the Indian elite is adamant that in the name of the war
on terrorism Pakistan should cut off all support to the
Kashmiri insurgency, such a mechanism has an air of unreality
about it.
It appears to be largely a cosmetic gesture aimed at defusing
the anti-Pakistani public mood Indias government helped
foment with its charge that Pakistan bore responsibility for the
Mumbai terrorist atrocity, although it is possible the mechanism
could facilitate some substantive Indo-Pakistani collaboration
against Al Qaeda and a handful of other groups both governments
view as antithetical to their interests.
In any event, the mechanism has already become a bone of contention
between the two governments. After Singh said the mechanism would
be a test for Pakistan, Musharraf declared that it
would be a test for both countries. An institutional arrangement,
said Pakistans military strongman, is required for
both sides ... [W]e also have some observations about interference
in our country.
The Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), meanwhile,
has taken to the ramparts, accusing the Congress Party-led United
Progressive Alliance (UPA) government of betraying Indias
national interests.
Yaswant Sinha, a BJP stalwart and former foreign minister,
condemned the joint statement by Singh and Musharraf as an
unprecedented capitulation of India before Pakistan on the issue
of cross-border terrorism. He added that resumption
of the Foreign Secretary-level talks between the two countries
in the background of increased violence from Pakistan is not acceptable
to us.
His remarks were subsequently echoed by former BJP Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Whatever took place is not right,
Vajpayee told a Hindu supremacist newspaper. The joint statement
between Singh and Musharraf is a conspiracy against India.
Its implementation will jeopardize the situation in Jammu and
Kashmir.
In its attack on the anti-terrorism mechanism, the BJP has
been joined by sections of Indias military-national security
establishment.
Indias BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government
responded favorably in late 2002 and early 2003 to Musharrafs
appeal for a rapprochement, after failing to cow Pakistan into
submission with threats of war and coming under pressure from
the Bush administration and Indian big business to seek an accommodation
Pakistan.
But since falling from power in 2004, and in keeping with its
attempts to destabilize the UPA government through all manner
of provocations and chauvinist appeals, the Hindu supremacists
have increasingly disparaged the peace process, although refraining
from calling outright for it to be abandoned.
The UPA has frequently conciliated the Hindu right, especially
when the latter has worked in tandem with, and articulated the
views of, sections of the national-security establishment, such
as in the post-Mumbai bombing push for the UPA government to publicly
blame Pakistan.
The Bush administration has warmly welcomed the agreement to
resume the composite dialogue. It is anxious for relations between
India and Pakistan to be normalized, as political instability
in South Asia is an obstacle to its plans to make the area, and
especially India, a major site of US foreign investment and an
anchor of US geo-political influence in Asia.
But the USs predatory ambitions are also an enormous
destabilizing force, including in relations between South Asias
two nuclear powers.
Both India and Pakistan strongly favor the building of a pipeline
to bring Iranian gas to South Asia, a project that would have
huge economic benefits and also boost the peace process. Washington,
however, is determined to thwart the project, as it cuts across
its efforts to bully and weaken the Iranian regime.
Even more importantly, the US push to make India a linchpin
of its plans to counter Chinas rise threaten to add a new
explosive dimension to the six decades long Indo-Pakistani conflict.
To the dismay of the Pakistani elite, the Bush administration
is seeking to cement a global strategic partnership
with India by giving India a special status in the world nuclear
regulatory regime. Under the Indo-US nuclear accord, India will
gain access to foreign civilian nuclear technology and fuel, allowing
it to devote the resources of its indigenous nuclear program to
the building up its nuclear weapons program, and to lessen its
dependence on foreign oil and gas imports.
After Musharrafs request for a similar deal was rebuffed
by Washington, Pakistan turned to its longtime close ally China
for assistance in expanding its own nuclear energy program.
See Also:
US threatened to bomb Pakistan back to
the Stone Age
[27 September 2006]
What the debate in India over
the US nuclear pact shows
[29 August 2006]
India indefinitely postpones
peace talks with Pakistan
[19 July 2006]
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