|
This
year the subcontinent's summer does not look to be one of diplomatic
discontent. A string of confidence-building measures by Delhi and
Islamabad has radically changed the diplomatic environment in South
Asia, where strategic pundits only a month ago were hinting at the
horror of another war between India and Pakistan. The beginning
of this new season of hope started after the Indian Prime Minister,
Atal Bihari Vajpayee, during his visit to occupied Kashmir, spoke
of extending a hand of friendship to Pakistan. Then speaking before
the Indian parliament he reiterated his commitment to solving all
outstanding issues, including Kashmir, on the basis of "humanity,
democracy, and Kashmiriyat."
Pakistan's Prime Minister, Mir Zafrullah Khan Jamali, went
a step further. He welcomed the peace overture from India that very
day and, even better, followed it up with a telephone call to Mr
Vajpayee. Speaking from written notes, and in the presence of others,
including the foreign secretary Riaz Khokhar, who was feverishly
taking notes, Prime Minister Jamali welcomed the Indian prime minister's
statement and suggested that there should be substantive and comprehensive
dialogue to resolve all issues. He also invited Mr Vajpayee to visit
Pakistan.
Highly-placed sources confirm that the idea of the phone call came
from the president, who first directed the Pakistan Foreign Office
to investigate into Vajpayee's likely response. Once satisfied that
it would not be cold shouldered, he gave the go-ahead.
The days that followed were marked with confusion. While the Indian
response to the Jamali offer reiterated the familiar refrain of
the need to end cross-border terrorism, the cables from Pakistan's
High Commission were encouraging.
"We never expected the Indians to jump at the Jamali offer,
so their statements did not surprise us. The good thing, however,
about their response was its tone and the language used. All this
suggested a change in the offing," said a foreign office spokesman.
But the scale of change took the Pakistani establishment by surprise.
The Indian prime minister's announcement before the parliament which
stated the need to restore normal diplomatic ties with Pakistan
by appointing a High Commissioner and resuming suspended air traffic
was swift.
The same day, President Pervez Musharraf, Prime Minister Jamali,
foreign minister, Khurshid Kasuri, foreign secretary, Riaz Khokhar,
and the ISI Chief, Lt General Ihsan- ul Haq met in a closed door
meeting that lasted for hours.
The meeting was called to decide a whole range of initiatives which
Pakistan could come up with to match India's offer, including the
name of the new High Commissioner.
"The agenda of the meeting was to see how we can better the
Indian move and also debate how realistic this new opportunity was,"
said a senior foreign office official, who had access to the minutes
of the meeting.
But understanding the full range of the motives behind Delhi's change
of heart and diplomatic tone is still a bit of a mystery for Pakistani
officials. Assessments and explanations cover a broad spectrum.
One is that Delhi has been influenced by the futility of its coercive
diplomacy, stating that as the US went to war against Iraq, India
too, should opt for a pre-emptive hit against Pakistan. "Washington's
terse response that there was no parallel between the two cases,
gave the hawks in India a reality check," said a senior military
official close to General Pervez Musharraf.
Another explanation being peddled in the foreign office is that
Mr Vajpayee wants to make his final move before the compulsions
of the upcoming elections narrow his room to manoeuvre. "Regardless
of his contradictory statements, Mr Vajpayee is a man committed
to peace. He is alive to the situation in Kashmir and knows that
it is not viable", says Niaz A. Naik, Pakistani former foreign
secretary, who met Mr. Vajpayee as a central figure of backdoor
diplomacy in the late nineties.
But over and above these theories hangs the fact that Washington
is nudging both India and Pakistan away from their stated positions
on Kashmir. The swift peace moves and the confidence-building measures
have all come before the arrival of Richard Armitage, the US deputy
secretary of state, along with Christina Rocca, assistant secretary
of state for South Asia.
Western diplomats are quite candid in saying that while the US will
not unfurl a roadmap for Kashmir in deference to Pakistani and Indian
sensibilities, Washington's fingerprints are all over the new winds
of change blowing across the region.
"Washington does not want to see a change in the scenery, but
a change in the situation. It wants to see both sides get back to
the negotiating table. It wants to turn regional events like the
SAARC summit into signposts on the road to peace," says a European
diplomat in the capital.
Some of the elements of this roadmap-by-a-different-name are already
visible. Diplomatic sources indicate an ideal scenario they would
like to see unfold over the coming months:
*Pakistan will end all support to the Kashmiri militants and bring
infiltration down to point zero.
*Pakistan will dismantle all the training camps and cut off all
weapon supplies to the militant groups operating in the name of
Kashmir.
*Pakistan will eventually disown Hizbul Mujahideen and withdraw
field commanders from the occupied territories.
*India will cease its manhunt that has led to the deaths of civilians
in the past and gradually scale down its search and eliminate operations.
*India will end its war of threats and cease talk of a preemptive
strike and hot pursuit.
*Pakistan and India will encourage dialogue between the Kashmiris
from both sides and the Kashmir committees from both sides will
facilitate the process.
*All normal diplomatic relations will be established and special
attention will be paid to the person-to-person dialogue, especially
dialogue involving politicians and media-men, and members of the
sports community.
Whether such a radical change can be brought about through concerted
diplomatic efforts remains to be seen, given the compulsions of
domestic politics on either side. Pakistani officials decline to
comment on these suggestions and say that peace is a regional need
and not an international compulsion - a claim that will be tested
closely on the plane of US diplomacy in the region in the coming
months.
|