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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, January 03, 2001 |
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Opinion
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The wish-list on Kashmir
THE DIPLOMATIC `MUSINGS' of the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari
Vajpayee, on the ``legacy of the last century'' - the Kashmir
dispute - address some but not all of the relevant complex
realities. In his reflections, the Prime Minister has certainly
done well to recognise the urgency of a final settlement of the
Kashmir question without actually using that catch-phrase of the
Shimla Agreement of 1972. However, the canopy is short on
substance and long on sentiments. This is not to suggest that the
format of season-specific `musings' should have been fashioned
instead as a doctrinal formulation of foreign policy on Kashmir.
Yet, Mr. Vajpayee's brief diplomatic discourse on Kashmir,
designed for a target audience of his compatriots, leaves much
unsaid. He has raised new questions and left them unanswered even
as he referred to the old issue of Partition in terms that might
revive an avoidable new controversy involving Pakistan. On the
whole, four inter-related aspects of his web of ideas on Kashmir
merit objective analysis.
The centrepiece of the Prime Minister's thought-capsule, as it
were, is the avid assertion that ``we shall be bold and
innovative designers of a future architecture of peace and
prosperity for the entire South Asian region''. In order to
become ``innovative'', Mr. Vajpayee has pledged that his
administration ``shall not traverse solely on the beaten track of
the past''. Affirmed, too, is a ``commitment to peace, justice
and the vital interests of the (Indian) nation'' as the
quintessential guiding principle. Now, an ``architecture of
peace'' can surely be an evocative phrase, but it will remain no
more than a diplomatic slogan in the absence of specific
parameters. The question is whether New Delhi can quickly spell
out the follow-up details. At the least, the Vajpayee
administration should rise above its image as the practitioner of
selective neighbourliness in the specific context of its
transparent role in stalling the prospects of a routine summit of
the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC). New
Delhi may continue to cite its own dim view of the present regime
in Islamabad for the disarray on the SAARC front. But a grandiose
South Asian peace architecture is unthinkable without a genuine
bonhomie between India and Pakistan.
It is in this context that the second critical aspect of Mr.
Vajpayee's list of wishes can prove counter-productive. While
looking to the future, he is unable to avoid the temptation, more
becoming indeed of the past, of criticising Islamabad for its
persistent faith in the ``mindset that created Pakistan''. This
``mindset'' is said to sustain Pakistan's ``untenable policy on
Kashmir'' to this day. But it must be recognised that a blame-
game, whatever be the facts, is hardly promotive of any new
promise of subcontinental peace. A discourse rooted in the idiom
of the Partition can only boomerang, as Pakistan is not also
short on complaints against India, especially over its alleged
negation of its ``pledges'' under the U.N. resolutions of that
period. Difficult to exaggerate are the dangers of reinterpreting
Partition, even if inadvertently, to suit the arguments of one or
the other side. Two other facets, both related to Mr. Vajpayee's
latest reported comments on the more immediate prospects of a
forward movement on Kashmir, also require elaboration. In his
reckoning, the climate is still not conducive to a resumption of
the India-Pakistan dialogue at any level, including the highest
political echelon. Nor is the current political ambience said to
be catalytic of substantive talks between the Centre and the
separatist-militants within the ``internal dimension''. On the
``external'' side, Pakistan already tends to view as major
confidence-building measures its unilateral statements about
observing ``maximum restraint'' along the Line of Control and
withdrawing some of its troops from there. So New Delhi will
serve its cause better by being more definitive about a
propitious climate.
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