Kanwal Sibal
Peace with Pakistan is a desirable goal, but peace should be equally
desired by both sides and both should contribute to it in equal measure.
The burden of making peace should not fall on India while Pakistan
retains the freedom to disrupt it at will.
Normalization of India-Pakistan relations should not be predicated on
demands by Pakistan and concessions by India. Historically, Pakistan is
not a victim of India’s war-mongering; it is India that has suffered
Pakistani military aggression and jihadi terrorism. Pakistan is more
obliged to convince India of its peaceful intentions rather than the
reverse.
Claims
The notion that India as the bigger and stronger country has to be
generous with Pakistan is egregious. If this principle should dictate
the conduct of international relations then China should be generous
towards India on issues that divide us- which it decidedly is not- and
the US, as the world’s most powerful country, should be making
concessions to virtually all others- which it decidedly does not do.
Once again we hear talk about culling the low hanging fruit of
Siachen in order to politically enable the Prime Minister to visit
Pakistan towards the year end. This agreement will supposedly provide
the required substantive outcome that can be jointly celebrated. Why
India must make a territorial concession to make its own PM’s visit
possible and Pakistan need not act on terrorism is not explained.
Those who advocate withdrawal from Siachen- or more appropriately
Saltoro as Siachen lies to its east- need to clarify whether we are
occupying Pakistani territory. If we are, withdrawal could be mooted.
If we are not, then why should we withdraw from our own territory simply
because Pakistan contests India’s sovereignty over this part of J&K
and insists we accept its position. Should such obduracy inspire trust
in its intentions?
The 1949 and the 1972 agreements delineate the LOC till NJ9842, with
the line going “northwards towards the glaciers” beyond that.
“Northwards” cannot in any linguistic or geographical interpretation
mean “north-eastwards”, but Pakistan and the US unilaterally drew the
line several decades ago from NJ9842 north-eastwards to the Karakoram
pass controlled by the Chinese.
In reality, because the entire state of J&K acceded to India
legally, the areas not in control of Pakistan are rightfully Indian
whether we physically occupy every inch of our own territory or not. We
were compelled to occupy the Saltoro Ridge to prevent Pakistan (under a
certain Brigadier Musharraf) from occupying it and threatening our hold
over the Shyok valley and potentially Ladakh itself. Why should Pakistan
have wanted to occupy these punishing heights if they have no strategic
value?
Saltoro need not have “strategic” value if our borders with both
Pakistan and China were demarcated, neither had any claim to our
territory and relations with both were normal and friendly. It is
because this is not the case that we are being compelled to position
ourselves the closest possible to the source of the threats. Why
withdraw to positions easier to hold physically and lose available
defence depth? Should the army brass take decisions on these questions
or the civilian authority?
Siachen is the Pakistan army’s agenda. General Musharraf admitted
that Kargil was Pakistan’s riposte to Siachen. The argument that an
Indian concession on Siachen will strengthen the hands of Pakistan’s
civilian government in its peace efforts is dubious as we are being
asked to appease the Pakistan army for failing to dislodge us from
Saltoro. How will placating it strengthen the army’s disposition towards
India and the civilian authority in Pakistan itself?
If prior to Kargil India was disposed to end the Saltoro stand-off by
experimenting with Pakistan’s trustworthiness, with reducing the human
cost of occupying such forbidding heights as additional reason, after
Kargil India has strong reason to be deeply distrustful of Pakistani
intentions.
Context
What is the guarantee that safeguards built into any agreement will
not be violated by Pakistan at an opportune time, as happened at Kargil?
Meanwhile, with technical and infrasrtuctural improvements the human
cost has come down drastically. What is the compulsion to place faith in
an adversary that still fails to address India’s key concerns?
The jihadi groups in Pakistan still exist; Hafiz Saeed is not being
curbed; those responsible for Mumbai have not been tried even after four
years and to Kashmir has now been added the emotive issue of water.
Pakistani defiance of the US on the issue of terrorism and truck with
Islamic extremists has a lesson for India. Pakistan’s Afghan ambitions
remain problematic for the region. Any concession on Saltoro should has
to be assessed in this larger, unsettled context.
Course
Pakistan’s movement on the trade issue is to be welcomed. In
response, even without receiving MFN status yet, India has already
commmitted itself to MFN plus treatment for Pakistan and permitting
Pakistani investment in India without reciprocal action by Pakistan.
There is no case for rewarding Pakistan also on military-security issues
in addition
What happens if just before PM’s visit to Pakistan to sign the
Saltoro agreement there is a major terror attack in India? Will we
postpone the visit? If this happens just after the visit and the
agreement, will we freeze its implementation? What will that say of our
political judgment? Terrorism remains the most critical issue.
Ideally, Saltoro should be part of an overall settlement of the
J&K issue. As a first step, before any evenly balanced
demilitarization eventually takes place as a CBM, the LOC should be
jointly demarcated beyond NJ9842 along the Actual Ground Position Line,
which we now seem to be demanding in what General Kayani sees as a
hardening of our posture.
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