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'Musharraf may be ready to meet Vajpayee'
By Kesava Menon
MANAMA (Bahrain), DEC. 1 An individual who has been mediating
between India, Pakistan and Kashmiri leaders from both sides of
the LoC (with the blessings if not active support of the U.S.
administration), has claimed that Pakistan Chief Executive, Gen.
Pervez Musharraf, may hold a summit meeting with the Prime
Minister, Mr. A.B. Vajpayee, in New Delhi after Ramadhan if the
ceasefire does not collapse.
In an interview to Gulf News, Mr. Mansoor Ijaz, member of the
U.S.-based Council on Foreign Relations and investment fund
manager, said it was possible to devise a formula whereby Gen.
Musharraf could signal an end of support for cross-border
militancy without undermining Pakistan's known policies and
positions.
The face-saving formula that Mr. Ijaz and perhaps some other
forces active in the mediation have devised consisted of a
unilateral decision by Pakistan to support the Kashmir cease-fire
and a call to all militant groups to observe it.
``By definition a valley-wide cease-fire would imply that cross-
border violations at the Line of Control would stop and therefore
the key stumbling block for direct talks with Delhi would be
removed with out Pakistan having to concede that its military
operations along the LoC enabled such violations to occur. On its
part, India would not have to politically open up to Pakistan
under conditions which no parliamentary debate could withstand,''
Mr. Ijaz elaborated.
He said it would be ``glaringly easy'' for Gen. Musharraf to
support a cease-fire since winter snow would soon restrict the
scope for border crossings. He said he had made this proposal to
Gen. Musharraf and was expecting a response.
In an interesting discourse, that covered an appreciation of the
compulsions and requirements of different sides as well as a
prognosis of the hoped-for course of events, Mr. Ijaz suggested a
way around the ``tripartite talks'' hurdle.
If it were Pakistan's case, that they should be involved in the
negotiations on cease-fire modalities, at the outset and before
the cessation of support for cross-border militancy, then they
were betraying a ``complete lack of understanding of their own
publicly stated position.''
An insistence on this point amounted to an admission that
Pakistan was providing more than diplomatic and moral support for
the Kashmiris.
``While the world intelligence community knows how much military
support the ISI and army give the Kashmiris, it is patently
absurd for Islamabad to violate its own publicly stated position
and thereby create a false pretense for not talking.''
Initially the Indo-Pak talks could be bifurcated from the talks
between the Government and the militants but, according to Mr.
Ijaz, India would not ultimately be able to avoid a tripartite
format because militant groups would insist on it.
Mr. Ijaz did take cognisance of the central dilemma India faced
in evaluating the idea of talking to Pakistan.
Although Mr. Ijaz claimed to have contacts with various segments
of Pakistan's military and intelligence community as well as
militant groups he too asked whether it was Gen. Musharraf who
was really running Pakistan or whether it was a committee of
hardline military and intelligence officers and those who finance
Pakistan's support to the `jehadi' groups. Convinced that Gen.
Musharraf was personally interested in a peaceful settlement of
the dispute, he said in the ultimate analysis the military ruler
would be able to overcome internal resistance because a peaceful
settlement was what the Kashmiris wanted.
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