
Islamabad had another shot on Sunday at casting itself as the sober, statesmanlike party in the Kargil conflict when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif got on the hotline to Atal Behari Vajpayee to propose quot;mutually acceptablequot; approaches to preserve peace and promptly released his message to the international Press.
No one in India will be impressed by this posturing and Sharif certainly knows that. He is playing to an international audience which is sceptical just now about Pakistan8217;s role in Kargil but not so concerned about the justness of the cause India is fighting for. It is more concerned about an escalation of tensions between two new nuclear neighbours. So Sharif knows that is the fear he must play on. Indian policy-makers should make no mistake here. The Western powers, by and large, would like to see this conflict wound down in any way and even if it means a ceasefire which leaves a stretch of Indian territory in the hands of the Pakistani army.
So Sharif talks of 8220;peaceful negotiations8221; and Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan8217;s foreign minister, complains India is over-reacting and of a 8220;war-like hysteria8221; in India which gets in the way of restoring the Lahore spirit. They count on the possibility that a generally ignorant international audience is liable to take Aziz8217;s reported proposal in New Delhi on setting up a joint working group on the Line of Control LoC as a rational means of resolving a festering dispute. Against this India is made to appear intractable for refusing to discuss the LoC at all. Hence the phone calls from Islamabad and the pretence at taking responsibility for calming the situation. This being the Pakistani calculation, it can be expected that the invitation to Jaswant Singh will be renewed and other diplomatic noises will be made even as propaganda about Indian military intentions increases. These attempts to distort the real picture will have to be vigorously countered. Exposing the duplicity and savagery ofthe other side is part of the effort. India has shown it is resolute about regaining its territory by military means, if necessary. Similar determination should be shown on the diplomatic front.