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This is an archive article published on September 14, 2010

Don8217;t push us too far on Kashmir,it is ours: Pak to US

US had asked Pakistan in 2002 to end infiltration across the Line of Control in J-K.

US had asked Pakistan in 2002 to end infiltration across the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir but was instead told not to 8220;push it too far8221; on the issue with an assertion that 8220;Kashmir should have been ours8221;,according to declassified documents.

This communication forms part of a meeting Richard Haass,the then Director of Policy Planning Staff at the US State Department,had with an unnamed Pakistani military official on October 31,2002 to discuss US-Pak cooperation a year after the deadly 9/11 attacks in the US.

8220;On Kashmir,Hass stressed the importance of ending infiltration,but the Pak official warned the US not to push Pakistan too far on Kashmir,8221; classified documents released on Monday said.

According to the document,Hass told the top official that he was pleased about the Indian announcement of troop pullback from the border as de-escalation would free resources to be devoted to sealing the Afghan border and counter-terrorism.

8220;It appeared that India wanted to renew contacts but continued infiltration was a barrier to progress,8221; Hass said.

8220;The US believed that infiltration was continuing. Stopping it would help Pakistan8217;s cause with the US and India. Infiltration hurts Pakistan8217;s friends efforts to help it,8221; he said,according to the documents.

The Pak official agreed that Kashmir was the issue 8220;bedevilling our relations8221;. But Pakistan8217;s Kashmir position was 8220;based on justice8221;,he argued.

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8220;Kashmir should have been ours. The Pakistani people would not agree to make the LOC Line of Control the international border. Kashmir had cost Musharraf a lot,as had his decision to help the CT coalition.

8220;Musharraf8217;s detractors had hit him on both Kashmir and Afghanistan. India had tried to exploit the political atmosphere after 9/11,8221; the Pak official said.

8220;Hass relied that he perceived an opportunity to improve the situation in and surrounding Kashmir. India seemed to realize that lack of political and economic opportunity and abuse of human rights created support for insurgency and a better context for diplomacy was now being created.

8220;Haas said that both improved governance and diplomacy were key to moving forward on Kashmir,8221; the documents said.

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At the same meeting,Pakistan pleaded with the US to provide it with an aerial surveillance capability.

Pakistan would have no objection to the same capability being provided to India,the Pakistani official said and proposed that it might be an excellent confidence building measure,as if the two sides could see what was happening across the border to reduce the possibility of misconstruing what the other side was doing,the documents said.

 

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