Modi’s invitation to the Saarc leaders to attend his inauguration ceremony was nothing but a patronising gesture from someone who had been speaking of other countries in the region and their leaders with contempt. As chief minister of Gujarat, Modi had noticeably been spiteful of Pakistan. He had not even laid out the basic contours of his Pakistan policy. We should have waited for him to step into office and lay out his plans on how he wants to deal with the long-standing problems with Pakistan before embarking on an illusory peace journey. In any case, ceremonies are non-events. Relations are not built on the sidelines of oath-taking ceremonies or through exchange of gifts.
Nobody questions Nawaz Sharif’s sincerity in seeking peace with India. But the question to reckon with in the first instance should have been whether Modi with his dreary past and junky baggage would respond with the same sincerity. His past record certainly inspired no hope especially on issues of vital importance to Pakistan. Speaking of peace, there can be no two opinions on the need for peace between India and Pakistan — the only nuclear-capable countries in the world with a legacy of outstanding disputes and a history of conflictual situations. Their problems are real and will not disappear or work out on their own as some people in Pakistan have lately started believing.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif should have understood this reality as he did during his previous term in the late 1990s. He then was conducting himself with some dignity and did receive in return the dividends that only honourable initiatives bring. I remember his very first directive to me after nominating me as his foreign secretary in February 1997 was to improve relations with India. His three-point policy direction was succinctly clear: resume dialogue; improve relations; no compromise on Kashmir. He wanted peace with honour. I delivered what he wanted.
Within months, I was able to co-author with my Indian counterpart a sustainable peace process called ‘Composite Dialogue’. For the first time in their 50-year history, India and Pakistan agreed in black and white on pursuing a structured, agenda-based dialogue to address their issues and improve their relations. The period from 1997 to 1999 saw significant developments culminating into the historic Lahore Summit in February 1999, which indeed was a high watermark in India-Pakistan relations. This peace process was, unfortunately, derailed by the Kargil crisis and even after Kargil, the region remained under dark war clouds.
While the post-9/11 world was focused on the US military campaign in Afghanistan, India thought it could also take advantage of the global anti-terror sentiment. It quickly moved all its armed forces to Pakistan’s borders as well as along the Line of Control in Kashmir after blaming Pakistan for ‘terrorist’ attacks in Srinagar and New Delhi without any investigations or evidence. South Asia was dragged into a confrontational mode that served no one’s interests, not even India’s. Intense diplomatic pressure by G-8 countries averted what could have been a catastrophic clash between the two nuclear neighbours.
It was again under pressure from the same influential powers that the stalled India-Pakistan dialogue was resumed in January 2004 on the basis of the ‘January 6, 2004 Islamabad Joint Statement’, which was not only an implicit acceptance by General Musharraf of India’s allegations of Pakistan’s involvement in cross-border activities but also a solemn undertaking not to allow any cross-border terrorist activity in future. No wonder, since then, India has spared no opportunity to implicate Pakistan in every act of terrorism on its soil, including the Mumbai attacks in November 2008 and has kept the dialogue process hostage to its policy of keeping Pakistan under constant pressure.
And that’s where we are stuck today. Meanwhile, taking full advantage of our domestic weaknesses, India has come to realise that there could be no better opportunity to redefine India-Pakistan issues by obfuscating them into the issues of terrorism and LoC violations. Nawaz Sharif will be mistaken if he thinks he can restart from where he left at Lahore in 1999. The world has changed since then; so have India and Pakistan. It is not the same Pakistan that he ruled in 1999 when he hosted BJP’s Atal Bihar Vajpayee at the Lahore Summit.
It is also not the same India that he settled scores with after responding in kind to its nuclear tests in May 1998. The only starting point for him now will be from where General Musharraf left his shady back-channel Kashmir deal in 2007. There couldn’t be greater betrayal of the Kashmir cause by an ‘elected’ leader. What must be clear to him is that peace in South Asia will remain elusive as long as Kashmir remains under Indian occupation. There can be no compromise on this issue.
There is only one fair, just, legal and moral solution to Kashmir, which was provided by the United Nations, and which both India and Pakistan mutually accepted in UN Security Council resolutions. Likewise, we cannot also ignore India’s illegality in Siachen, its ongoing water terrorism in Occupied Kashmir in violation of the Indus Waters Treaty.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s passion for peace is understandable. But as long as India doesn’t come out of its nay bind, there is no point in begging for dialogue. A dignified pause is what he needs. Instead of pursuing an illusory peace with India, he should be focusing more on his domestic perils, including the curse of terrorism.
To negotiate an honourable peace with India, our own country must first be at peace with itself. Only then, can we sit at the negotiating table with some dignity and honour. ‘Aman Ki Asha’ farce with motivated commercial interests will lead us nowhere.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 7th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (41)
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@Bob: But we are 1.25 billion people nah, we can comment on Indian, Pakistani or any newspaper we like. Your pesky Hindu neighbours are annoying i know, but that is how freedom of speech works though.
@author,
The same old, the same old, the same old Pakistani Establishment parroted script that totally misses the reality of today.
India has left Pakistan far behind in all areas- economic, military, global respect, democracy etc. Establishment spooks like the author seem to be caught in a time warp and live in delusion that Pakistan can dictate terms to India. Little that they realize that all that Pakistan can do is carry out a few terror bombings in India but it is Pakistan that has been paying a bigger price in terms of radicalization of the society and growing terrorism that has destabilized Pakistan and driven away foreign investment.
Pakistan's aggressive geopolitical games of using terrorist proxies against the neighbors and the habit of punching above its weight class have bankrupted the state. Pakistan is free to continue on this self-destructive path if it continues to live in denial and delusion.
If the writers attitude is symptomatic of Pakistan's leadership there can be no peace between India and Pakistan. It is just part of the same old mantra being perpetually churned out, albeit written well. I will not go into the terrorism issue. That just increases the problems exponentially.
Is this an Indian paper or Pakistani? Why are the comments here mainly from Indian trolls: don't you have any papers to comment on in India? Tribune Pakistan seems to censor out comments from Pakistan ! Shocker !
Great article that captures the situation with INTEGRITY and without any sugar coating.
Pakistanis should wake up and realize that Indians are full of hatred for Pakistan and Pakistanis. There will be no peace ever. Pakistan needs to stand ready to do defend itself resolutely against a cunning and devious enemy in a 360 degree war not just on the battlefield but across all fields: media, international fora, sports etc. etc.
Nawaz Sharif did the right thing to attend Modi's coronation.If he turned the invitation down the world opinion would have been critical of refusing gesture from the newly elected leader. Now the ball is in the court of Modi. He has to formulate and articulate his policy towards Pakistan. Your suggestion to Sharif to focus on eliminating terrorism and, may I add, energy crisis would contribute more to the economic development of Pakistan than efforts to make peace with India. If the conditions are right and Modi is open to peaceful relations it will take several years. It is not something that will payoff quickly. It seems Sharif's priorities are misplaced.
@Raja: ex Minor The first article of the Indian constitution refers ty of India; whereas the first article og the German republic that, the dignity of a human is not violable! India is at war both with Pakistan and China, currently with ceasefire:Not a peace treaty! The next encounter will be very hard.,
Rex Minor
Excellent article Mr Shamshad. In the early 1980s, India’s preventive strikes, as contemplated during Brasstacks, were feasible. Today, Pakistani arsenals have not only expanded but there is a robust security regime. It would be very counterproductive for any country to contemplate strikes — any such notion would result in a nuclear holocaust.I hope sanity prevails on both sides.
I thought PM Sharif after arriving in Pakistan categorized his meeting with Modi was better than expected. Looks like deep state in pakistan since than has been trying hard to discredit this meeting.
recent ill-advised Delhi yatra to be one of the seven Saarc leaders attending the oath-taking ceremony of India’s newly-elected Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. . Maybe it's time for the author to contemplate the consequences of refusing to attend the ceremony after he was invited? I suggest that India would have looked like a country trying to extend the hand of friendship with Pakistan refusing to shake --- another victory for India and another black mark damaging an already tarnished Pakistan image.
@Author: Substituting opinions for facts may work in Pakistan - not elsewhere. I cannot imagine you accomplished much as a foreign secretary.
@Imtiaz:
Who is pushing Muslims out from India? Are Indian Muslims lining up or asylum in Pakistan? Do not make stuff up? Do you really think Indian Muslims would consider Pakstan safer than India?
It is amply clear that Pakistan committed to the policy of exporting terrorism will not buzz an inch backward which it considers as legitimate despite the fact it has backfired both at home and its neighborhood. The Nawaz Sharif government is too weak to ask the establishment to unwind the terror machinery which has proved to be self destructive but still being continued. India under Modi started well by inviting NS but it so appears that Pakistan is not interested in normalizing relations with India. This is a bad omen as any new adventure on LoC will invite a major response from India which may be prove to be the last nail in the Pakistan's coffin.
Mr. Author: Intellectual honesty is generally considered to be a desirable trait of a human being's character. Try to cultivate a little bit of it, sir!
Pakistan has tried formal war(s) = 1947-48, 1965. Result : Zilch. It has tried semi formal wars - Kargil. Result : Zilch. Tried terrorism - Late 80s, 1990s, Mumbai. Result : Zilch.
Time for some out of the box stuff. It should proactively and unilaterally implement the first part of the UN resolution on Kashmir. Move its armed forces and non Kashmiris out of PAK. Imagine the immense moral pressure that it would apply on India
true indeed, very well written.
The author must be a widely-travelling and presumably an open-minded member of the Pakistani intelligentsia. His writings obviously reflect what he believes in.
Sadly, this thought process also defines the fault lines that inflict Pakistan and explain where Pakistan has gone wrong in the eyes of the civilized world.
I am extremely disappointed to read an ex-foreign secretary objecting to PM's visit to India. In my view Nawaz Sharif displayed the skills of a seasoned statesman and the Indian prime minister looked like a hoodlum from the streets of a large city. India, known for is diplomatic finesse, failed miserably in this encounter. This article reflects lack of training of our foreign service employees. How can someone with military mindset serve in the foreign service.
Mr Former Foreign Secretary, your type of advice has outlived its usefulness. There can be no compromise on Kashmir? Then how else will you find a solution? Force India out? Oh Yah? Violations of IWT? Please point to One. Kishan Ganga? Baglihar? Courts of arbitration have passed judgments on these. You must act as a responsible opinion maker and avoid selling misinformation.
sorry to say but a classical case of beggars trying to be choosers.....
Thank you for a wonderful article.
If you want to alter reality with fiction and refuse to take responsibility for adventures like Kargill and sponsorship of terror attacks, India may have nothing to discuss with you, today or anytime in future. However to believe that adventure will not carry costs, will be regretted. As long as you can keep your assets your side of the border, things should be fine.
From the article ,its obvious that Pakistan can do no wrong but yes its India which is incapable of making peace with Pakistan
It was only India that harboured the world's Nobel Peace Prize winner ,Osama Bin Laden
It is India that is responsible for making Pakistan the failed state that it is today.
According to this ex-Foreign secretary of Pakistan, quote - " What must be clear to him is that peace in South Asia will remain elusive as long as Kashmir remains under Indian occupation. There can be no compromise on this issue." - unquote.
This is an age old position of Pakistan, nothing new. However, if this continues to be Pakistani position and policy even today, then indeed there will be no peace between India and Pakistan ...!!
does it come as a big disappointment or shock to the people of India ... ?? ... the answer is, none what so ever ...If Pakistan has people like this author, who do not feel guilty for terror acts like Kargil and Mumbai and without any assurance from Pakistanfor preventing such future attacks, blame India for not taking steps for peace, I pity Pakistan. The only statement he said which is true is To negotiate an honourable peace with India, our own country must first be at peace with itself. Only then, can we sit at the negotiating table with some dignity and honour
If he truly believes in this, what is he complaining about MNS visit to Delhi for Mr Modi's installation as India's PM. Would this author care to think why Pakistan is not at peace within itself, My two cents are on religious bigotry and army's cultivation of nonstate actors. Take it or leave it.
Is it any wonder why peace cannot be attained as long as attitudes such as thus exist. What is with India is illegal - be it KASHMIR, SIR CREEK OR SIACHEN, and must be negotiated to Pakistan's content. However, its support and export of "strategic assets" to India is legitimate and not terrorism! Not satisfied, water is the new "dispute" manufactured by the establishment. Never mind the countless studies by experts within Pakistan who have conclusively demonstrated the waste by Pakistan. But even after 67 years of independence being "not India" at all costs is better than anything else. Peace, with such a mindset that is supported by a wide majority, is not possible. India cannot bring peace to Pakistan, only it can. It is not ready because it cannot and doesn't want to.
How come Pakistanis talk of "UN resolutions" on Kashmir and every time conveniently forget the part that Pakistan needs to carry out as per the resolution? Why (and HOW) can they expect India to go ahead with plebiscite as per UN resolutions if Pakistan itself is not willing to do the first part of the said resolutions without which India cannot hold a plebiscite in Kashmir? ALSO, what about the part of Kashmir which Pakistan shamelessly sold to China?
Seems like the views of security establishment! Like Sharif Vajpayee intiative in 1999, the security establishment's commando started the Kargil adventure I wonder what is planned next. Like North Korea, the writer would like Pakistan to stay isolated, show its nuclear muscle and hope China bails them out.
"To negotiate an honourable peace with India, our own country must first be at peace with itself. Only then, can we sit at the negotiating table with some dignity and honour."
Pakistan can only "be at peace with itself" if it offers its citizens a fair deal: that the state exists for them, not just for a privileged few. Now what would that entail?
After reading this I am more than convinced that India must take to the UN for demanding the independence of Balochistan - as the author says - "there is only one fair, just, legal and moral solution..."
Our option of unleashing jihadis on India to solve territorial & water problems have zero takers in the world. India have the option of replying in the same coin by supporting Afghans(burning for the just fight, tang amad ba jang amad), Baloch & Sindhi. They have the economic muscle to do it. That leave us with pure military muscle, which we don't have. So Nawaz & Shabaz are doing the right thing by having Indian yatras. The most they can get from this bad situation is a trade corridor for Lahore. Successive military Govts have put Pakistan in a corner, isolated & banking on jihadis.
The author, as recently as a few months ago, was extremely pro-Nawaz. He is now moving from sucking up to being very critical of the government as nobody has thrown a bone to him.
Sir, I am agree with the author completely. We should spend more on army and start war for freedom of kashmir. For Islam we should be ready to die and eat grass if we have to. For other development we can get as much aid as we want from the world because today we are big nuclear power and also have polio as biology weapon.
Author, Mercifully you are a former Foreign seceretary and not a current one.
You claim India is obfuscating, it looks like you are the one obfuscated from reality and live in a cuckoo land. You refer to "Kargil crisis" in passing as if referring to how your car tire got punctured. LoLzzz. Who created "Kargil crisis"? After several wild outbursts you claim "no compromise" and insist on "peace with honor". What makes you think Indians want peace and want to compromise with dishonor.?
I don't know why Modi should even discuss any issue with Pakistan. India has no issue with Pakistan except the terrorism stemming from Pakistan. There are no more issues for India to discuss. Now can NS handle that? Nope. He is not strong enough for that. If he needs Army's permission to simply say yes or no to an invitation, that pretty much sums up where does the power lies in Pakistan. Does author recall any other country head seeking his/her army's advice? Nope, there was none. So you see Mr. Author, NS had nothing to offer to India and therefore was treated accordingly which I would say was not bad given his status in his country.Also as far as the sincerity of NS is concerned, was he not the PM when Kargill happened? Why should Indian government trust on his words now?
Actually , the perils facing Pakistan is not akin to a Möbius strip but Pakistanis perils and peace with India are two sides of the same coin.
I would respectfully suggest, sir, that you effect "A dignified pause" to your fossilized and self defeating thinking and let this nation get out of the intellectual bankruptcy which had ensured all round misery for the last 67 years. Enough is an enough, have mercy on the wretched poor of this country.
“… implicate Pakistan in every act of terrorism on its soil, including the Mumbai attacks in November 2008 “ – India did not need to go out of the way to implicate Pakistan!
u and ur peace..... just go away..........!!!
"... implicate Pakistan in every act of terrorism on its soil, including the Mumbai attacks in November 2008 " - India did not need to go out of the way to implicate Pakistan! The evidence was there for all to see!
"... moral solution to Kashmir, which was provided by the United Nations" - Sir, the first pre condition is for Pakistan to withdraw its troops and non-indigenous populace to the pre 1947 boundaries (this includes getting the gifted area back from the higher than mountains friend)
"Instead of pursuing an illusory peace with India, he should be focusing more on his domestic perils, including the curse of terrorism. To negotiate an honourable peace with India, our own country must first be at peace with itself. " - Finally; something I can agree on with the author!
After reading this article twice I have come to the conclusion that the political machinery in PAK will never allow any normalization with India.
"India has spared no opportunity to implicate Pakistan in every act of terrorism on its soil, including the Mumbai attacks in November 2008"
This statement alone shows the maturity of the establishment. I would advise the author to read the US court transcripts of the Mumbai conspirators and several investigations on the matter.
Mr. Sharif and Mr. Modi are the two politicians from correct party politics can establish normalization that is acceptable to both sides. Modi did his gesture and Sharif reciprocated it. A good start and we all should leave it at that. Even after the Bangladesh Fiasco, Mr.Bhutto went to Simla and to Dacca as a statesman and was treated well. Well, those were the days of decorum in politics!
Even without any normal relations with PAK India moved on despite her security risks and problems across LOC. It is my understanding that Musharraf had a deal that he came close to signing it with India. Things have improved a lot on both sides since then and should make hay while the sun shines.
The opinion of this nature is not helpful to PAK. Indians are happy with the status quo and any miscalculations from PAK on the matter will only affect the PAK not India.
Whether PAK likes it or not Modi has a strong mandate and he will certainly use it to resolve some of his domestic issues on foreign policy such as Kashmir. He already stated that it is Jammu & Kashmir issue not Kashmir issue. That statement alone states his position.
Despite what may be said J&K is India's as Jerusalem is to Israel. That PAK has to understand. If Modi cracks down on hitherto tolerated and appeased Kashmir separatists, the whole of India will back him. If I were a policy maker in India that is what I would also advise Modi and I am sure PAK is also feeling that way, hence the resurrection of age old demon of PAK in the opinion column of this nature. South Asia is peaceful, only PAK is not at peace with herself and with her neighbors.
In foreign policies one should understand the timings to reap maximum benefit. The next 10+ years are in India's favor and will only get better.