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Musharraf charts a path to Agra
THE HIGH STAKES of summit diplomacy have impelled Pakistan's
President and Chief Executive, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, to try and
steer away from apparent craters as he explores an uncharted
terrain before his scheduled meeting with the Prime Minister, Mr.
Atal Behari Vajpayee, in Agra next month. This should explain the
clarification by Pakistan's officials that Gen. Musharraf does
not subscribe to the theory that India's invitation to him for
the proposed bilateral summit was determined by the U.S.'
pressure on New Delhi to settle its disputes with Islamabad at
this stage. It is quite immaterial whether the clarification is
in response to New Delhi's stinging rebuttal of some earlier
reports from Pakistan that its sole leader saw an American
sleight of hand behind Mr. Vajpayee's current initiative for a
definitive detente with Pakistan. Now, even prior to this storm
in a tea cup on the India-Pakistan front, it was indeed clear
that the U.S. had played no proactive role of exerting pressure
on New Delhi to call Islamabad for direct talks at the highest
level at this time. So, a prime reality relevant to the
prospective summit in Agra is that the Musharraf administration
simply wants to dispel any impressions which might only endanger
a mutual spirit of goodwill during the delicate run-up. Moreover,
Gen. Musharraf seems to be conscious of the subdued but
substantive scepticism within Pakistan that he is but a stranger
to international diplomacy of the kind required to engage India.
While this may also account for his eagerness to sustain a
certain upbeat mood of flexibility, he is no less keen to appear
firm too.
Having brought all levers of Pakistan's executive and legislative
powers under his absolute control very recently, Gen. Musharraf
has not only startled large sections of the international
community but also many of his compatriots. It is in this context
that his latest consultations with Pakistan's military
establishment and civilian-political `leadership' on the India-
Pakistan differences acquire a rare degree of importance. A
faction that is believed to owe allegiance to Mr. Nawaz Sharif,
who was toppled by Gen. Musharraf in a bloodless coup in October
1999, was not invited to participate in the latest confabulations
on the imminent Agra summit. In contrast, Ms. Benazir Bhutto's
Pakistan People's Party, which is active abroad in seeking to
unfurl a flag of rebellion against Gen. Musharraf's rule in
Islamabad, does not wish to associate itself with his current
political gestures towards India in any manner. As a result, Gen.
Musharraf's consultative preparations at home for the proposed
talks with Mr. Vajpayee have certainly not set the Indus on fire.
In a different but equally important sense, though, Gen.
Musharraf has secured a broad pre-summit `mandate' from his
military and civilian interlocutors inside Pakistan, where he
faces no conspicuous resistance at this moment. Armed with this
general `mandate', he hopes to assess Mr. Vajpayee's priorities
for peace with Pakistan as also the Indian leader's options over
the Kashmir dispute in particular. As a consequence, many ideas
are being bandied about in public discourses in Pakistan and, of
course, India. Yet, official Pakistan (as also India) will do
well to follow a prudent course of managing the present bilateral
expectations by simply brushing aside the temptation to turn the
public spotlight on one or more sets of ideas in the name of
idealism or even pragmatism. For Pakistan, a particularly emotive
issue is whether or not the leaders of the All Party Hurriyat
Conference, an umbrella conglomerate of `Kashmiri' groups, should
brief Gen. Musharraf before he meets Mr. Vajpayee. A simple
standard of statemanship is that both New Delhi, which seems
obsessed with the notion of keeping the Hurriyat out of the
India-Pakistan spectrum, and Pakistan, which appears insistent on
engaging the APHC somehow, should not allow this issue to cloud
the bilateral ambience at this sensitive juncture of fragile
hopes.
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