Modi gave the right signal by inviting neighbouring heads of state and government to his swearing-in, yet I don’t buy into this theory. Does history bear this out? Atal Behari Vajpayee was the first BJP prime minister of India. What was the track record of peace-making from 1998 to 2004?
One of the first things the Vajpayee government did was to conduct nuclear tests. As the world reprimanded India, Pakistan followed up with tests of its own. Is getting nuclear weapons a sign of moderation and peace-making? There seems to be a consensus that nuclear weapons act as mutual deterrent and thus prevent war. The Kargil war — not officially called a war by either country but that is what it was — was the first and only direct conventional war between countries possessing nuclear warheads. (Indians, of course, argue that Pakistan had nuclear weapons even before.)
Vajpayee took a bus to Lahore, signed the Lahore Declaration with Nawaz Sharif. Like every Indian and Pakistani premier ever, Vajpayee dreamt of making peace with Pakistan. A lot of people thought he wants to win the Nobel peace prize. Yet, to take a bus to Lahore (February 1999) and not anticipate Kargil (May 1999), is bad peace-making. It was criticised heavily as an ‘intelligence failure’ but it was also a political failure, one that the Congress would have got a lot of flak for if it had been committed by them.
Then there was the militant attack on the Indian parliament in 2001, which India blamed on Pakistan. The BJP-led government’s response was to move forces to the border, keep them there, not go to war, not talk to Pakistan — a strange kind of logjam. Hundreds of Indian soldiers died laying mines. Vajpayee’s policy on Pakistan oscillated between extremes.
The point here is not to undermine Vajpayee’s legacy, because his heart was in the right place, but just to say that there is no given causation between a right-wing government and solving international conflicts. If a right-wing government is capable of moderation, it is also capable of going to the other extreme — after all, there’s always the next election to be contested.
Vajpayee reportedly wanted Narendra Modi to step down as Gujarat chief minister after the violence there in 2002. General (retd) Musharraf raised the Gujarat violence at the United Nations, thus helping make Pakistan an issue in the Gujarat legislative assembly elections. Modi kept talking about ‘Mian Musharraf’. Internal events of either country, regardless of who is in power, also impact the state of bilateral relations.
What is clear, however, is that solving conflict requires a stable and powerful government on both sides. A weak government, one whose own decision-making abilities are blocked by the opposition, media, coalition allies, judiciary or army, will not be able to take bold leaps for conflict-resolution. In both countries, a popular, independent and strong leader would need to be in power for two to tango. To that extent, it does not matter whether the government in power is leftist or rightist — since both want to make peace with neighbours anyway. Perhaps, what is more important than who is in power is the internal political dynamic within either country.
A large chunk of the opposition to Manmohan Singh’s ambitions to make peace with Pakistan came from his own party, internally, and yet he did a lot. The best and only workable road map for peace was evolved by Manmohan Singh and General Musharraf, known as the four-point formula. Dr Singh’s special envoy for Pakistan, Satinder K Lambah, recently said in Srinagar that whenever India and Pakistan resolve their conflict, it will have to be the four-point formula. There is no other way.
The idea that there needs to be a right-wing government in power in Delhi to resolve neighbourhood conflicts irritates me just the way many Pakistanis are irritated to hear from Indians how General Musharraf was a great guy. If a military ruler was such a good idea, Pakistani liberals respond, why doesn’t India also get a military ruler?
Musharraf did Kargil and slighted Vajpayee and snubbed India many times. Why, then, were so many in India fond of him? It was the same argument: the military needs to be directly in power for India to resolve the conflict. Did that happen? It did not happen for the simple reason that even a military ruler faces internal political dynamics, as Musharraf did, leading to his exit.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 6th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (32)
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@Dr Priyanka: "@@Syed Jala Kashmiri: so when are you leaving Kashmir. We have an nice farewell party planned for you in Srinagar!" The man is already in Pakistan! And, when he left, he was fearing for his life. He is talking from across the Neelum.
Kashmiri land belongs to Kashmiri people, not to India or any other foreigner. If Kashmiri people wish to join with Pakistan, it is our own choice. Why should we give our forefather's land to foreign Indians who have no claim to this land? How can you say Kashmir is a part of India but try to force Kashmiri people to flee?
This is why Indians' position on Kashmir is untenable, unjust, and tyrannical, and as long is Kashmiris are under occupation, we will fight back. 66 years, we Kashmiris can resist for far longer against any occupiers.
British ruled and oppressed India, and Indians claim they fought for their freedom, but just like the tyrants like the British they oppress and occupy Kashmiri land and fight against Pakistan. All tyrants are cut from the same cloth, and they will never achieve victory. Truth will always prevail. Kashmir Zindabad, Pakistan Zindabad.
@Lunatic-to-Lunatic:
Sorry buddy your nuclear blackmail will no longer work. India will not initiate an attack on Pakistan ever but if you imply that even a conventional retaliation by India to acts of war by Pakistan can result in Pakistan pulling the nuclear trigger, then you will find your bluff called. Believe me, your army people prefer series 7 BMWs to Suclear cloud.
@Lunatic-to-Lunatic:
Sorry buddy your nuclear blackmail will no longer work. India will not initiate an attack on Pakistan ever but if you imply that even a conventional retaliation by India to acts of war by Pakistan can result in Pakistan pulling the nuclear trigger, then you will find your bluff called. Believe me, your army people prefer series 7 BMWs to Suclear cloud.
@@Syed Jala Kashmiri: so when are you leaving Kashmir. We have an nice farewell party planned for you in Srinagar!
@Strategic Asset:
"Modi might not be content just showing the stick (2001 standoff), there is a likelihood that he may very well use it."
you are most welcome to try, and provide us the opportunity to test some of our fireworks.
"did was to conduct nuclear tests" - By forcing Pakistan to come out in the open re their nuclear status, Vajpayee exposed them to the rest of the world - even though India had been saying this for some time, nobody believed or wanted to believe this - after this event, the rest of the world could not turn a blind eye to Pakistan's nuclear status. India was in a better position to handle the sanctions that followed, not so much Pakistan - it was a masterstroke on Vajpayee's part!
"...not anticipate Kargil (May 1999), is bad peace-making" - A govt relies on its military and intelligence machinery to keep it abreast of such issues - on which the military and intelligence agencies failed - it was a colossal intelligence failure - but how does that translate to 'political failure' And yet you choose to fault Vajpayee - not the military & govt of Pakistan, who launched the misadventure?
And I am not sure which 'India' you live in to think that 'Indians like Musharraf'?
Instead of the "Four-Point Formula", I unconditionally and irrevocably support the "Tibet Formula" for Kashmir.
Surely since this is the policy of "sweeter than honey" friend China, Pakistan will support it, No?
@Syed Jalal Kashmiri: According to the UN Resolution its Pakistan who should withdraw from Kashmir and then conduct the plebiscite
@Hamdani: Gujarat 2002 did not inolve a single Pakistani death. Kargill which happened on Nawaz's watch led to death of many Indians. If Nawaz starts talking about minorities in India that too something hat happened over 12 year s back, you have no idea about how long a list India can speak about treatment of minorities in Pakistan.
Modi and Pakistan, Modi and Muslims, Modi and China, all slowly getting on peoples nerves now. Let Modi do what what he wants to do which is quite a lot, and let Pakistan do what it has to do which is no less. Both countries have so many problems peculiar to them they would be better off tackling those rather than talking for the sake of talking. In course of time common interests may evolve and matters could be sorted out. Raising false hopes and having them dashed is not the best course of action.
@Syed Jalal Kashmiri: " If Kashmiris wish to merge with Pakistan, that is no business of India." Sure! It is no business of India. So, go ahead and merge. This is called immigration, in common parlance. No one has stopped Kashmiris from merging with Pakistanis or with any other people. But, you cannot take away the land of Kashmir with you because it just does not belong to you. Territories belong only to sovereigns. Maharaja Gulab Singh was a sovereign who bought the territory of Kashmir from the British. If it had belonged to Kashmiris, why weren't you consulted then? Why would India want to consult you now? Get rid of the notion that India can be pushed around.
Since Hindu presence on the subcontinent predates the religion of Islam, lets have a plebiscite for the entire subcontinent.
That will be fun indeed.
India should stick by its promise to Kashmiris and withdraw from Kashmiri land and allow UN plebiscite vote in Kashmir. After 66 years, the solution is still this obvious. If Kashmiris wish to merge with Pakistan, that is no business of India.
*Typo in my previous post. Wrong year for Kargil.
Yes, internal dynamics play a critical role. Unfortunately there is another major difficulty the writer failed to mention : India wants normalization of relations with Pakistan on its own terms. So, let's be realistic. There isn't going to be any serious effort to break the logjam. If it still happens, I will tender apology on this website.
@Jahangir Chauhan:
BJP won 3 seats out of 6 in the state of J&K.
Thats because there are Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and even Shias and Ahmadis, who prefer the BJP.
BJP is for unification of J&K with India and the removal of Article 370. Can you plain why BJP is so popular?
I think most of the anti-Modi brigade have lost the slender moorings that kept them connected with the real world. This one is so desperately illogical and factually incorrect that I actually enjoyed it.
ET: 2nd try.
It is disingenuous by the author to blame Vajpayee for Kargil (1991). The event actually amply demonstrates that there is a many a slip between the cup and the lip as far as Pakistan is concerned.
Secondly, rather than characterizing Vajpayee's policy on Pakistani as oscillating between extremes, the correct assessment would be that Vajpayee followed a carrot-and-stick policy. He was ready to match every act of conciliation by Pakistan, but he was also ready to show the stick in case Pakistan behaved in an unruly manner. Under Modi, one can anticipate more of the same. The only change may very well be that Modi might not be content just showing the stick (2001 standoff), there is a likelihood that he may very well use it.
The alternative to the four-point formula is status-quo coupled with abrogation of article 370. Read the BJP manifesto and you will know exactly where Modi stands. Don't forget that BJP has won 3 of the 6 seats in Kashmir.
@Jahangir Chauhan: And Pakistan primised million times in front of the world that it would stop terrorism. Read Shimla agreement and then we'll talk about promises. India has more than 90,000 Pakistani soldiers as POWs and then Pakistan made all the promises which were utter lies indeed.
@Jahangir Chauhan: Dear Sir before commenting on UN resolution please study the UN Resolution 47 which is very much available on the net and just google and then comment because there many conditions which are reuired to be fulfilled before implementation of the same.
Jahangir Chauhan,
The only solution is that Hindus of India get a plebiscite to decide on getting back land in Pakistan which is rightfully theirs. Since Hindus are the majority of the Indian subcontinent, I'm sure you won't have a problem since you believe in majoritarian politics and plebiscite.
@ Jahangir Chauhan, Which you and all Pakistanis know, will never ever happen ... because there is nothing more left that Pakistan can do to make this happen ... !!
...One of the first things the Vajpayee government did was to conduct nuclear tests (to intimidate/threaten pakistan as you have the readers believe )... Are you serious? The test wasn't pakistan specific, it was to declare to the world and country club of 5 other nuclear power that india is in the club like it or not. What was the result. Now all the countries that matter, including super duper USA have pretty much accepted that fact.
Pakistan conducted the tit-for-tat tests. What was the result? pakistan is nuclear pariah state, still trying to get into the nuclear country club.
No sir ... only stable Govt. on both sides is not enough ... solving conflicts and disputes require sincerity of purpose and the genuine desire ... !! ... and who ever says, that the Musharraf's four point formula is the only way, may take a hike ... every solution depends on the situation ... and situations never remain the same for ever ...
Why does every Indian writer acts of amnesia or deletion from memory of the Gujrat riots. How was it not an imp enough issue to be raised infront of Modi by the ppl around hinm
Are you insane? Who in India likes/liked Musharraf? I haven't ever come across Indians praising Musharraf and 'Pakistani liberals' responding to it by saying something like "Why doesn't then India get a military ruler?". Do you simply make up stuff in every article you write for no apparent reason?