
By contrast, the shriller end of the Indian nationalist political spectrum is having a hissy-fit and throwing its toys around the playpen — to the edification of nobody and the general hindrance of whatever positive developments might be in train. There are more measured and rational voices on the Indian side but they tend to get drowned out. If both sides are to ‘move on’ in the diplomatic vernacular, they are going to have to leave some cherished pieces of luggage beside the road. The Mumbai attack, demands for the heads of Muslim extremists on a plate, years-old violations of holy places on both sides and decades of atrocities, all of which remain as eternal impediments, exhumed and displayed every time the winds of peace begin to waft in. Sabre-rattling aside, in a conventional war, the uncomfortable reality is that Pakistan would eventually and at terrible cost, lose. The Sharif government provides what may be an extended window of opportunity in which traditional positions may be modified, but it will require restraint and statesmanship on both sides if real gains are to be made. The peace dividend for both is immeasurable, the consequences of extended conflict, unthinkable.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 4th, 2013.
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