Quite clearly, between two countries which share an adversarial
relationship, there is nothing that can ever be called a ‘personal’
visit by one head of state to the other country. And between India and
Pakistan, this is quite simply impossible because in this era of 24x7
TV, a media circus will inevitably surround such a visit giving it
saturation coverage and analysing every turn of the head, every wink,
nudge, shrug, nod and what have you. At the political level, such a
‘personal’ or even a ‘non-official’ visit (for instance a cricket match)
serves as a convenient excuse for the leaderships of the two countries
to touch base and use the occasion to confabulate with each other. Thus
it is that the moment it became known that Pakistan's President Asif
Zardari wanted to go on a pilgrimage to Ajmer, the Indian leadership not
only extended all due protocol to him but also graciously invited the
Pakistani president to stop over in New Delhi en route to Ajmer for a
meeting followed by a lunch with the Indian Prime Minister.
The official line in both Islamabad and New Delhi is that Mr
Zardari’s visit is purely personal and the Indian PM is hosting a lunch
for him only to extend courtesy to a visiting head of state. There is
really nothing on the ground to suggest that the officials are burning
the midnight oil to prepare for some kind of intense dialogue. And yet,
hardly anyone in the two countries is taking the official line on face
value. Notwithstanding denials by officials who are going blue in the
face trying to dispel any notion that the meeting between the Pakistani
President and Indian PM has been elaborately choreographed, most
analysts are convinced that the pilgrimage is actually a smokescreen for
holding direct high level talks between Mr Zardari and Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh.
Asides the fact that political leaders of India and Pakistan are
notorious for entering into a dialogue without adequate preparations –
Agra 2001 is a prime example – the speculation that the meeting between
Zardari and Manmohan Singh will give some sort of a push to the dialogue
process between the two countries is also fuelled by the recent
breakthrough in trade relations with Pakistan moving to a negative list
of trade items pending the grant of MFN status to India. This was a long
standing demand of India and is being seen (quite wrongly, it must be
said) as a concession made by Pakistan. What is more, ever since the
obnoxious Shah Mehmood Qureshi was removed as foreign minister and was
replaced by Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan has been making all the right
noises towards India, sending signals that it is genuinely interested in
normalising relations with its eastern neighbour. Although the Indian
permanent establishment is rather sceptical about genuineness of
Pakistan's professed intentions for good relations, at the political
level the Indian leadership appears to be falling over itself in trying
to reach out to Pakistan and clasp the extended hand. Not surprisingly
then, observers are waiting to see what, if anything, comes out of the
meeting between Zardari and Manmohan Singh. And it is precisely this
expectation, rather anticipation, that India needs to guard against.
To some extent, there is recognition in India that Zardari probably
doesn't have the political capital to effect any major breakthrough with
India and therefore it would be unrealistic to expect him to deliver on
anything substantial on issues of critical importance to India. Many in
India would also argue that any assurances that Zardari gives to India
on the issue of terrorism cannot be taken seriously because he just
doesn't have the power to fulfil these assurances. After all, the terror
machine in Pakistan is controlled by the military establishment of that
country and given the frailty of the political system, and his own
precarious position, it is unlikely that Zardari can or will take on the
powerful Pakistan army in order to live up to any commitment he makes
to India. As a result, no one should be surprised if the issue of
terrorism is raised in only a very pro forma manner by the Indian side.
Paradoxically, it is this palpable weakness of successive Pakistani
leaders that serves as a trump card for them in their dealings with
India. Chances are that Zardari will play up on both his sincere desire
for good relations with India as well as his weak position within his
own country to try and extract some major concession from his Indian
interlocutors, without of course conceding anything in return. In other
words, what Zardari will do is that when pressed on the issue of
terrorism, he will explain his difficulties and constraints in
addressing this issue immediately. He will in all likelihood play the
‘Mullah-Military card’. His pitch will be: “help me by giving me
something that I can take back with me to my country and marginalise the
military-mullah alliance on the back foot; without such a grand gesture
from India the mullahs and the military will destabilise my government,
depose me and take over power and then India will have to contend with a
radical or at least a very hard line government in Pakistan, dominated,
if not run, by the military-mullah alliance”. He will wave the trade
deal as a sign of his commitment and in turn seek concessions on what
some ignorant analysts, commentators and other sundry peaceniks call
‘low hanging fruit’, namely Sir Creek and Siachen, on which there is a
false propaganda that a deal is all set to be inked if only the Indian
leadership summons the political courage and displays the political will
to do so. This is exactly the tactic used by successive Pakistani
leaders with their Indian counterparts and this has always been
successful in extracting concessions from India – Ayub Khan used this
after the 1965 war, Bhutto after 1971, Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif
when they were at the helm of affairs.
Having fallen for the same beguiling Pakistani logic time and time
again, India now needs to put a stop to this Pakistani version of ‘Apres
moi le deluge’ and no better occasion to do this than Zardari’s
forthcoming visit. While India should wish Zardari well – he is probably
the most visionary leader Pakistan has got in a long, long time and his
policies, domestic and external, hold the potential for making Pakistan
a ‘normal’ state – his survival is neither India’s responsibility nor
is it India’s primary interest vis-a-vis Pakistan, and most certainly
not if this has to be achieved at the cost of surrendering India’s vital
security interests or compromising on India’s sovereignty.
The big problem however is the obsessive quest of the current Indian
dispensation to settle all the problems with Pakistan even if it means
sacrificing India’s interests in the process. No one should therefore be
surprised if India once again makes the same old mistake of trying to
rescue a Pakistani leader by making concessions and ending up with the
worst of both worlds – not only giving the Pakistanis what they wanted
at India’s cost, but also failing to save the person for saving whom
these concessions were made in the first place.
Author is Senior Fellow in Vivekananda International Foundation
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