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Like
a drunk's morning-after, Pakistan in the days following General
Pervez Musharraf's super-hyped visit to Delhi, is in the throes
of confusion. Islamabad's diplomatic gains from the mid-April summit
are less obvious to keen observers of India-Pakistan relations than
the Pakistani team's exploits in the cricket field. In spite of
President Musharraf's repeated pronouncements that the fundamentals
of Pakistan's India policy are intact, increasingly, there is a
perception to the contrary in the country.
"
Unless
Kashmir, which is the real bone of contention, is resolved, the
peace process cannot be sustained" says The Nation, a hawkish
Punjab-based newspaper. And a columnist in the Dawn writes, "No
wonder India
[is] ecstatic, at a lossfor words to express
[its] elation at Pakistan, under a military ruler, no less finally
working
India's agenda, and far from feeling any sense of
loss or shame, revelling in the spirit of surrender."
Opposition
parties, particularly the religious alliance, MMA, have lambasted
the summit in Delhi as "national humiliation."
The
politicians' derision could certainly owe in part to the fact that
the General continues to hold firm sway over domestic politics.
The General however has his own take on it.
"They
(the opposition) would never give me credit for anything; they cannot
bear that what everyone thought was impossible (lasting peace with
India)
I have laid the foundation for it," a visibly
irritated President Musharrraf told a Pakistani journalist who had
asked him at the end of the India visit whether this would help
him domestically.
So what exactly has President Musharraf gained from his talks
with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh?
Trust
is the first word his close aides utter. "He thinks that Manmohan
Singh is very focused and genuinely wants to settle all disputes
with Pakistan. In private he (the President) has often admitted
that his comfort level with Dr Manmohan is much better than it was
with Atal Bahari Vajpayee," says a military source close to
the President.
Musharraf's own statements about the ambience at the meetings and
the frankness with which he raised the issues of the Baglihar Dam
and Delhi's reluctance to hand over Jinnah House to Pakistan partially
explain his satisfaction with the meetings in Delhi.
"I
am convinced that we two leaders have the gravest responsibility
to ensure that the peace process does not go off-track, and today
I got the clear sense that we both understand this very well and
that is our hope," Musharraf told a close confidant immediately
after a more than hour-long one-on-one conversation with Dr Manmohan
Singh in Delhi's Hyderabad House.
However, Musharraf's optimism does not owe entirely to his
parleys with Dr Manmohan Singh - some hard-nosed considerations
also underpin his assessments about the future of the Indo-Pak relationship.
"We
must understand that at this point India-Pakistan relations are
moving on three tracks: the first is the track of composite dialogue,
which is formal and the slowest, the second is the CBMs track, which
is public and reflects mutual understanding, and the third is the
backdoor track, which is the most crucial because this is where
the bedrock of durable peace is being built. This track has been
kept away from the prying eyes of the media and directly links President
Musharraf and Prime Minister Dr Manmohan," says a civilian
source closely involved in the third track.
But part of the problem for Musharraf lies in the realm
of public diplomacy - here the score does not look good for Pakistan.
Despite joint statements replete with lofty claims about how the
discussions on Jammu and Kashmir are moving towards "a final
settlement," President Musharraf has little to show in concrete
terms.
Insiders in Musharraf's camp admit that India has not given
any commitment on scaling down its troops in Kashmir, or easing
the harsh laws restricting civil liberties in the troubled state.
Nor has Islamabad's suggestion of involving the leaders of the two
factions of the All Parties Hurriyet Conference in the talks process,
evoked a positive response from India.
At the end of his visit to Delhi, President Musharraf himself
told a close aide in confidence that while he was satisfied with
the peace process moving forward, Pakistan's core concerns on Kashmir
"largely remain unmet."
Back in Islamabad, top-ranking policy makers share this assessment
and express a degree of disappointment with India's approach to
addressing the Kashmir conundrum's political and human rights dimensions.
Some of the Kashmiri leaders, who met General Pervez Musharraf in
Delhi, also pointed out that talks between the two countries continue
to skirt around the most contentious areas of the Kashmir dispute.
"You are moving too fast, without any quid pro quo,
and there is an impression that Delhi is being bailed out,"
Yasin Malik, head of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, told
Musharraf. The hardline Syed Ali Geelani, chairman of one faction
of the APHC, was provocative, irking Musharraf by questioning the
very basis of the engagement with India.
Musharraf's impatience with dissenters of his initiatives
is understandable. For him too much is at stake in sustaining the
dialogue, even while he frankly admits that the progress on Kashmir
remains low on the list of gains in respect of public diplomacy.
"He truly believes that Pakistan's biggest diplomatic
challenge in the post 9-11 world is to refashion its image as a
responsible member of the international community which uses dialogue
as the means to settle border disputes," says one of President
Musharraf's close aides.
Observes a western diplomat: "He has calculated that
engagement with India is the best way to address the image issue.
By not subjecting dialogue with India to the settlement of the Kashmir
issue (Pakistan's traditional stance), he has at once won acclaim
abroad, and lessened regional tensions. That is quite remarkable
for a general in uniform whose chief scientist has admitted to running
a global network of nuclear proliferation."
Image-refurbishing is, however the only dividend of the peace
process Musharraf is so keen to engage with India on.
In his frequent meetings with a group of foreign policy advisors,
including intelligence officials, generals, and the Foreign Office's
South Asia experts, Musharraf's refrain is that Pakistan has to
gain "economic muscle to remain globally relevant."
"The centre of his thinking hinges on building a strong economy
as a base for strong diplomacy. If trade gets him closer to that
goal, he will follow trade; if a gas pipeline is the way to effect
that end, he will pursue it," says a member of this elite group
of policy advisors.
This thinking feeds into another realisation that has crystallised
in military circles in Pakistan in the past few years.
"The strategic matrix has changed for us. We do not have to
deal only with India . It is also Afghanistan which is less than
stable, there is Iran that is threatened by the US, and the US itself
which has not closed the case of proliferation against AQ Khan.
It is a four front situation that requires a change of diplomatic
tack," says a top intelligence official.
Missing from the "four-front situation" is another element:
a domestic pot that has been kept boiling by die-hard religious
militants, Al-Qaeda hitmen, and tough sardars in Balochistan defying
the writ of the state.
Add to this mix growing global and domestic pressure on Musharraf
to leave his post as army chief by 2007 and allow strong opponents
like Benazir Bhutto of the Peoples Party and Nawaz Sharif of the
Pakistan Muslim League(N) to return to the political fray, and the
Pakistani President's precarious position becomes evident.
He has, intelligently, thus chosen peace with India as the one pill
to cure his many pains. It gives the international community a big
reason to continue to back him, and he uses this to blunt the political
opposition, rebuild the national economy, and allow him strategic
breathing space to deal with Iran and the US.
By any yardstick, this remains a delicate permutation, one that
requires a fine balancing act. There is no guarantee that it will
not be disrupted by freak incidents, common in South Asia. But as
long as the process of normalisation of relations with India inches
forward, Musharraf is likely to persist with the path he has adopted.
And this is where Pakistan's policy towards India has fundamentally
departed from the past pattern: it no longer aims for a diplomatic
score as exciting as Shahid Afridi's 45-ball hundred in Kanpur;
it is tuned to play a long test series, even if matches keep on
ending in frustrating draws on Kashmir.
"Peace in Kashmir will come slowly, subtly and in an environment
that is not vitiated by threats of war and conflict," says
a foreign office official who travelled with the President to Delhi.
To get a sense of how long this process will be, presidential sources
point to the tricky Irish Peace Accord. "It started in the
'70s; moved forward with the recognition by both parties that they
had to address the dispute. Facilitated by the push from an integrated
EU and the US, and even with all its faults, the Good Friday agreement
finally came about. Using the same yardstick, Pakistan and India
are somewhere in the first phase of negotiations where there is
an agreement that the Kashmir problem has to be addressed. It is
not a glorious achievement, but still a very important one,"
says a Musharraf aide.
Seen from that angle, the road to peace looks inextricably linked
to regional stability and integration. This is something President
Musharraf has clearly started to appreciate more than ever before.
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