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This is an archive article published on April 14, 2006

Dialogue needs a common language

India has put its cards on the table but Pakistani officials, in the absence of realism, have been unable to formulate a response

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When Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh spoke recently of a 8220;treaty of peace, security and friendship8221; with Pakistan, he inadvertently highlighted the different visions of India-Pakistan relations prevailing in Delhi and Islamabad. India sees normalization as a means of addressing disputes and issues that have proved intractable over more than five decades. Pakistan, on the other hand, continues to insist that normalization would be the end result, rather than the means, of resolving disputes, especially the Kashmir question.

Manmohan Singh accorded priority to normalization of relations between the two nuclear armed South Asian neighbors, hoping that their dispute over Jammu and Kashmir would be resolved as a result of normalization. Singh envisaged 8216;8216;a situation where the two parts of Jammu and Kashmir can, with the active encouragement of the Governments of India and Pakistan, work out cooperative, consultative mechanisms.8217;8217;

The Pakistani response, articulated by a glib but not brilliant foreign office spokeswoman, was predictable. She said that it would be 8216;8216;unrealistic8217;8217; to expect Pakistan to move forward without progress on the Kashmir issue. 8216;8216;The ground reality from Pakistan8217;s point of view8217;8217;, she explained, 8216;8216;is that status quo meaning LOC was not acceptable to Pakistanis or Kashmiris so a viable solution has to be found.8217;8217;

Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri welcomed the 8216;8216;positive tone8217;8217; of Prime Minister Singh8217;s statement. But he, too, emphasized the need to resolve outstanding issues, including Kashmir, as a precondition to normalization of relations.

This exchange, with India calling for normalization and Pakistan insisting on 8216;8216;resolving8217;8217; Kashmir first, miniaturizes the dilemma of India-Pakistan negotiations. The international community, and sensible people within both countries, wants the India-Pakistan dialogue to continue. But once dialogue gets under way, it sooner or later ends with both sides sticking to stated positions, with little scope for a substantive breakthrough.

Negotiations usually involve reconciling maximum demands 8212; what one side says it desires 8212; with its minimal expectation, what it will settle for. Most observers agree that India8217;s maximum demand is that Pakistan gives up its claim on all of Jammu and Kashmir, and its minimal expectation would probably be that Pakistan accepts the status quo without further violence and a de facto partition of Kashmir along the Line of Control. An Indian negotiating team would try to secure more than the minimum and would probably settle for less than the maximum.

In recent public pronouncements, Indian officials have made more or less official their preference for settling the Kashmir issue on the basis of legitimizing the status quo, a de facto 8220;take it or leave it8221; offer albeit with minor sweeteners. But in Pakistan8217;s case, there has never been much discussion of a 8216;bottom line8217; national position on the Kashmir conflict.

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It is true that an overwhelming majority of Pakistanis feel strongly that they were cheated at the time of partition, when a contiguous Muslim majority state was not allowed to become part of Pakistan. But now, given the price Pakistan has paid in military setbacks and internal crises for trying to secure Kashmir, realism must dictate Pakistan8217;s foreign policy priorities.

Normalization of relations with India, an emerging global power that is also the strategic partner of the world8217;s sole superpower, is far more important for Pakistan today than it was in the early years of its life as an independent state. Pakistan no longer has the strategic options of playing one cold war rival against the other to help compensate for its military and economic disparity with India. Pakistan has tried, and failed, to change the territorial status quo in Jammu and Kashmir through both conventional and sub-conventional warfare. Efforts to secure international support against India by emphasizing India8217;s violations of human rights in Jammu and Kashmir have also yielded little result.

The problem for Pakistan8217;s ruling elite is that after 58 years of describing Kashmir as Pakistan8217;s primary national 8216;cause8217; it is not easy, especially for an unelected military regime, to effectively manage a major shift in national priorities. A feeling of insecurity against a much larger and hostile neighbour was the original source of Pakistani apprehensions about its nationhood. But over the years, structures of conflict have evolved, with the Pakistani establishment the major beneficiary of maintaining hostility.

It is clearly in India8217;s interest to help Pakistan gain sufficient confidence as a nation to overcome the need for conflict or regional rivalry for nation building. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh8217;s vision of a comprehensive treaty of peace, friendship and security is a step in helping bolster the confidence of Pakistanis in normal ties between India and Pakistan. It is important for Pakistani civil society to acknowledge that normal relations with India are the key to normalization of politics and policy in Pakistan as well.

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Husain Haqqani is Director of Boston University8217;s Center for International Relations, and author of the book 8217;Pakistan between Mosque and Military8217;. Carnegie Endowment, 2005

 

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