By Munir Akram
In a review of Anatol
Lieven’s book Pakistan: A Hard Country, in the Guardian of May 1, 2011, Pankaj
Mishra wrote:
“[…] [A]n un-blinkered
vision of South Asia would feature a country whose fanatically ideological
government in 1998 conducted nuclear tests, threatened its neighbour with
all-out war and, four years later, presided over the massacre of 2,000 members
of a religious minority. Long embattled against secessionist insurgencies […],
the ‘flailing’ state […] now struggles to contain a militant movement in its
heartland. It is also where thousands of women are killed every year for
failing to bring sufficient dowry and nearly 200,000 farmers have committed
suicide in the past decade.” Mishra added: “This country is not Pakistan; it is
India.”
The review noted that India
has revamped its Western image in a most successful rebranding and through one
of “the cleverest PR campaigns.” On the other hand, Pakistan (which both Lieven
and Christophe Jaffrelot, in his book The Pakistan Paradox, describe as a
country with a surprisingly resilient society and institutions, despite a
history of mis-governance) seems to have “lost the narrative”.
The joint statement issued
in Ufa is the clearest and most recent confirmation of this unfortunate
reality.
Normalisation between
Pakistan and India is an imperative. But this can be achieved only if Pakistan
pursues an equal relationship with clarity, confidence and persistence.
Normalisation
between Pakistan and India can be achieved only if Pakistan pursues an equal
relationship.
In recent interactions with
India, Pakistan’s political leaders have displayed none of these attributes.
They are being played like a fiddle by Modi.
Below are the essential
aims Pakistan needs to project and promote vis-à-vis India.
Military balance:
India’s current military
build-up poses an ever growing threat to Pakistan’s security and needs to be
neutralised, either through arms control or a reciprocal defensive build-up.
To those, like the US, who
argue that this is not aimed against Pakistan, it should be sufficient to point
out that almost all of India’s capabilities are deployed against Pakistan; its
military doctrines are Pakistan-specific; and threats of aggression against
Pakistan are persistent and current.
Pakistan should propose
bold and specific arms-control measures to India, bilaterally and through
multilateral channels. The onus for refusal should rest on New Delhi.
Simultaneously, Pakistan cannot be deterred by Western admonishments from
taking measures, including short- and long-range missiles, to deter Indian
aggression or adventurism.
Kashmir:
Kashmir remains a
flashpoint for another Pakistan-India conflict. It cannot be put on a back
channel. The ongoing exchanges along the Line of Control can easily escalate.
Modi’s policies virtually ensure that, sooner rather than later, there will be
another Kashmiri revolt. Islamabad would not be able to restrain support
flowing to a new Kashmiri insurgency even if it wanted to. It is for New Delhi
to halt its repression and human rights abuses, de-militarise Kashmir and
engage in a constructive dialogue with Pakistan. This can avert a Kashmiri
eruption and a Pakistan-India crisis.
Terrorism:
Pakistan is the major
victim of terrorism in South Asia, with by some accounts 50,000 casualties
since the US-led incursion into Afghanistan. Much of this terrorism has been
sponsored or supported by India, as admitted recently by BJP leaders. India
should not be allowed to adopt the victim’s mantle.
In Ufa, Pakistan should
have insisted on reflecting Indian support to the Balochistan Liberation Army
(BLA) and the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), insisted on an inquiry into the
Samjhauta Express incident, and clarified that the legitimate Kashmiri struggle
for self-determination does not amount to terrorism.
Trade and investment:
Trade with India can be
mutually beneficial, especially in the exchange of natural resources and food,
gas and energy supplies (from Iran and Central Asia). In manufactures, India
competes with Pakistan and enjoys the advantage of size and a host of
protections.
Similarly, the Indian
investment regime is far more restrictive than that of Pakistan. The field has
to be levelled before bilateral trade and investment can be fully opened.
Transit:
Transit through Pakistan to
central and west Asia is a major Indian priority (although it is building an
alternate route from Chabahar in Iran). Pakistan cannot provide such transit to
India until the issue of Indian subversion through the BLA and the TTP has been
resolved. Even after that, Pakistan should pose two conditions: one, that the
upgradation of transit facilities involved should be financed by India or the
regional countries involved (as China is doing on the Economic Corridor); and,
two, that Pakistan should be accorded reciprocal rights for transit to Nepal
and Bangladesh through India.
Water:
Access to water is fast
emerging as an existential issue for Pakistan (and for India). To avoid food
and ecological disasters, and a possible conflict, it has become vital for the
two countries to live up to the principle of the equitable sharing of water
enshrined in the Indus Waters Treaty. Pakistan must secure this aim bilaterally
and through all available international avenues.
Composite agenda:
It is self-evident that all
the issues between Pakistan and India are interlinked and interdependent.
Progress on some will facilitate movement on others; and vice versa. The
security issue and Kashmir were rightly accorded higher priority when the
agenda for the composite dialogue was framed. The rationale for this priority
is, if anything, more compelling today. It is purblind to restrict attention to
terrorism only.
Foreign policy management:
The foreign policy lapse
reflected in the Ufa statement is, unfortunately, not an isolated incident.
There have been several other demonstrations of a naïve and simplistic approach
to foreign affairs.
As has been noted in the
Pakistani media, it reflects a dysfunction. The current complex structure at
the apex of the foreign ministry is no doubt a major problem. An even larger
problem is the inability of the professional foreign service to render good
advice to the political leadership and/or the unwillingness of the leadership
to accept it.
It is imperative to
‘normalise’ the structure, restore the primacy of the professional foreign
service, integrate the security establishment into policymaking and appoint
someone with the experience and independence required to formulate and project
a foreign policy that reflects Pakistan’s vital interests and objectives and
preserves its dignity.
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