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The
official Pakistani mind is made up of some of the toughest chemical
substances known to man. And transforming this mind or educating
it, as any pedagogue even remotely familiar with the problem will
tell you, ranks high among the list of human mysteries whose code
has yet to be broken.
Pity
Pakistan's rulers, therefore, who have had to go through such a
harsh school of experience over the past three years that some of
their most sacred shibboleths have had to be discarded along the
way.
Hawkishness was their inherited attitude, something they
were brought up with and which came naturally to them. In the aftermath
of September 11, General Musharraf didn't have to think very hard
when, turning towards India, he said, "Lay off." That
was reflex action on his part. Now the same person is bending over
backwards in an effort to put the derailed process of normalisation
back on track.
Indeed
his references (plaintive?), to meeting or not meeting Mr. Vajpayee
(I'll meet him if he wants to meet me), have been so frequent as
almost to have become a national embarrassment.
A change of heart? A change of stripes? Rather, a change
of circumstances. Back in 2001, Pakistan's permanent establishment
(read army/ISI) was still riding the tiger of jihad and thinking
that with the American connection restored, Pakistan could have
its cake and eat it. It could carry America's bags in Afghanistan
and simultaneously sustain jihad in Kashmir.
As anyone could have told our bonzes, this was a huge fallacy.
But basking in the first flush of American favour, and preening
themselves on their smartness, Pakistan's military rulers thought
they could have the best of both worlds. Having to contend with
the real world in the meantime, they are now the wiser. Far from
being able to ride and control the jihadi tiger, they have found
themselves on the receiving end of its menacing snarl. Vividly demonstrated
by two failed attempts on Musharraf's life within eleven days of
each other.
Hence
the great transformation we are seeing in 'decision-making circles'
in Islamabad: trained hawks awkwardly trying to fly like doves.
You may say that they are coming late to the sport. After all, Nawaz
Sharif was on to the same peace trip almost five years ago, and
that was before Kargil happened. But better late than never.
There's the Yank factor too, although not as vital as is
made out by some pundits. The Yank interest is Afghanistan and Al-Qaeda
with the Americans wanting the Pakistan army to look west to help
plug and seal the Pak-Afghan border instead of playing games along
the Line of Control. Thus the apparatus or the philosophy of jihad
is the last thing the Yanks are in any mood to tolerate. It took
some time for Pakistan's military wizards to get the message. But
now it is coming in loud and clear. This too has had a sobering
influence on their "strategic" (no escaping this word)
predilections.
These factors - one external, the other internal - coming
together have brought about the brand new attitudes we are seeing.
Which doesn't mean that there is any more clarity in Islamabad
about where the present moves may lead. There is still the insistence
on Kashmir being the "core issue," although with the jihadi
bargaining tools slipping from Pakistan's fingers, this refrain
is becoming shriller. Pakistan is also having a hard time explaining
what Musharraf meant when he said we have left the UN resolutions
aside. Indeed if we have, what's our locus standi on the Kashmir
dispute? Pakistan is now reduced to saying that with Pakistan having
shown flexibility, India must respond in the same vein. Indeed it
should but if it doesn't what do we do? And where do we go?
There is no Kashmir solution on the table or even in the
wings. All that the two countries can hope for in the short-term
is an improvement of atmosphere, more movement on the ground, more
people coming and going. And then hopefully they can sit down to
discuss Kashmir - and that's about it. The utmost that India can
afford to do is give some measure of autonomy to the Valley within
the bounds of the Indian Union and the Indian constitution. Nothing
more. The LoC is not going to change and if any geo-strategists
in Pakistan (may their tribe increase) think otherwise, they need
a serious reality check.
Our horizons, however, should be wider. We do ourselves and
our national cause no service when we say Kashmir is the "core
issue." The core issue is the mess we've made of our affairs,
the militarisation, not so much of Pakistani society as of the Pakistani
mind that we have managed to achieve. To secure some form of mental
liberation, we have to rid ourselves of these shackles. Which won't
happen unless the geo-strategic community, serving and retired,
straddling the broad wastes between 'Pindi and Islamabad, defines
Kashmir as a problem not a cosmic symbol and stops using it as an
excuse for the military's continued dominance of Pakistan and its
people.
We keep weeping about democracy without realising that in
the Fortress Pakistan that we have created, with its high walls
and fake geo-strategic theories, democracy is a plant that just
can't survive. The atmosphere inside is too noxious. We have to
open the Fortress to fresh winds from the outside for the stale,
poisonous atmosphere to dissipate thereby giving democracy and political
institutions the chance to grow and survive.
Which amounts to saying that all of us have a stake in the
present moves towards peace with India. We need peace with India
not to confer any favours on India but to do ourselves a favour.
Yes, the Indians have a problem in Kashmir because the Kashmiri
Muslims are fed up with Indian rule. We must show sympathy for the
plight of the Kashmiri Muslims and to the extent that we can - basing
our position upon the UN resolutions - we must work towards a solution
which commands their support. But always remembering one thing when
we thus speak: that what we failed to win on the battlefield we
can't win on the negotiating table. The real world doesn't operate
in this manner.
We have fought two and a half wars for Kashmir (the half-cocked
volley being Kargil), and all that we have to show for our military
prowess is the Line of Control, the utmost extent of our military
brilliance. To think therefore that some miracle hidden in the mountains
which, if it were only discovered, can change the LoC to our advantage,
is to add to our record of folly on the Kashmir question.
Pakistan needs to grow up. Our adolescence has lasted for
too long which becomes all the more aberrant when we see how the
world around has changed. For fifty and more years we said the enemy
was India. But look where the threat is coming from nowadays. India
was not behind the attempts on Musharraf's life. India is not behind
the charges that Pakistan sold or peddled nuclear secrets to Iran.
The pressure on our nuclear programme is coming from the United
States, not India.
By basing our entire foreign policy on hostility towards
India, we have made ourselves vulnerable to other pressures. Why
do we lick America's boots every now and then? Because we think
that by doing so, and by receiving small change for our efforts,
we prime ourselves vis-a-vis India. What kind of brilliance is this?
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