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Imran Khan’s Over-Enthusiasm Killed Potential For Improvement In India-Pakistan Relations

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https://swarajyamag.com/world/imran...l-for-improvement-in-india-pakistan-relations

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Imran Khan’s Over-Enthusiasm Killed Potential For Improvement In India-Pakistan Relations
by Syed Ata Hasnain

Anyone who has even a semblance of understanding of India-Pakistan relations will agree that in this relationship there are simply no binaries; it’s not an either-or approach that can work. It’s important to understand that in this case grey is the dominant colour. Those who can work through this understanding in different situations can succeed in turning them around with a certain degree of hope.

Let’s apply this to Imran Khan’s situation. Given the immediate background from which he rose to become a prime minister-hopeful, it should have been obvious to him that his acceptance in India would have been fairly doubtful. He imagined, however, that his previous avatar as an educated and perceived liberal, projected during his playboy days, would return immediately to change that perception. Given India’s long suffering at the hands of Pakistan’s radicals and deep state, that was not going to happen. Newly elected leaders do try and espouse peace with neighbours, especially with those with whom their nation has been at odds. However, that is done to make a good beginning and not to establish the agenda on the first day.

Take the case of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He invited all South Asian leaders for his inauguration to create the right environment, but he did not jump into proposals for talks on day one. In fact, he waited almost 18 months studying the environment and then took steps for progress; of course, these came to naught because of the intransigence of Pakistan’s deep state.

What could Khan have done? Instead of a transformational, all-ends-up approach, he should have tried the creeping and calibrated one: testing waters and moving beyond, never fully closing the windows but opening new ones, perhaps only half-way, to get a view. He should have realised the sensitivities involved.

First, that he was not considered in India to be his own man, having taken a ride atop a campaign perceived to have the total support of the Pakistan Army. It was obvious that he was not in charge yet, and any proposals or gestures would not necessarily have the backing of the all-powerful army.


Second, that to draw any interest from India, he would have to offer something different. India’s sensitivity is captured in the often-repeated and well-understood notion that “talks and terror cannot go hand in hand”. With the national election due in less than eight months, any move by the Indian government to accept a proposal would have to have been based on something that would give it a sense of achievement – of having a Pakistan talking differently. The clichéd idea of simply proposing talks without an accompanying change in approach would obviously not work.

Unfortunately, Khan thought that his arrival on the scene would itself augur well for a changed Indian response. Perhaps he did not realise that he had been watched very carefully in the run up to the election. His links with the army and the radical elements appeared much more embedded in his persona, which overpowered any liberal inclinations he may have carried in the past. The cricket fan following in India from back in the day was diluted after an awkward political ideology got linked to his name. Perceptions on this aspect would not change very quickly; more ground work would be required to establish credibility so as to undertake initiatives in as complex an issue as India-Pakistan relations.

Khan drafted the services of Shah Mahmood Qureshi as his foreign minister. Qureshi is not inexperienced and no greenhorn. The current strategy that Pakistan is following appears to be his brainchild. He does know that there is a fair percentage among the elite in India who prefer to look positively towards talks, irrespective of any dilution by Pakistan in its stand on terror. In the environment in which Pakistan finds itself, having to prove to the international community that it is doing something more than just the ordinary to curb terror – and its financing, in particular – it’s always advantageous to make a few gestures of peace without any serious outcome in mind. It makes for good optics for the international community and with the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session underway, it will be spoken about quite positively in the corridors of the UN.

It is smart thinking. Qureshi knows that after India reversed its decision on External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj meeting him at the sidelines of the UNGA, all he has to do for some time is to maintain a disposition of innocence – that Pakistan’s new government had made a magnanimous offer to India, which India initially accepted but turned down within 24 hours. The Pakistan story will be told and retold all over the corridors there because Pakistan is adept at doing it. It won’t be said that even as the proposal for talks was being made there was action afoot by Pakistan Rangers at the Jammu IB to target a BSF jawan and a vicious campaign to target Kashmiri police personnel and their families. That is the Indian narrative and it won’t be spoken much. That Pakistan has taken no action to curb its support for terror by proxy against India won’t be spoken either. All that the world will hear is that India refused a magnanimous gesture by Pakistan’s new leader, who is attempting to give peace a chance.

If Qureshi is sincere, he will advise his Prime Minister that the coming eight-month period in the run up to the Indian general election is the time to create the right environment. During this period, internal deliberations with the Pakistan army chief must be carried out. General Qamar Bajwa is projected to be serious about seeking peace with India. If that is their common aim, they must remember that no Indian government can afford to even look in the direction of talks while continuing to be struck by terror. A groundswell of public opinion just won’t allow it.

So, it is Pakistan that has to demonstrate change, not India. Given the aftermath of the Wuhan summit and the very perceptible reset in relations between India and China, Pakistan, too, needs to look inwards and review the benefits of following its policy of fighting a proxy war. To remain in denial is not going to be helpful.

On India’s part, we may have been hasty in accepting the meeting at New York between the foreign ministers, but it is when work is in progress that such mistakes are made. What we really need to do is to start telling the Indian story to the world a little more effectively and a little more loudly.


The writer is a former GOC of India’s Srinagar based 15 Corps, now associated with Vivekanand International Foundation and the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.
 
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You cannot find common ground with someone like an ultranationalist i.e. Modi.

The problem in India is that it is hijacked by a political party that doesn't believe in negotiating. Killing, raping and pillaging are the only activities that BJP aspires. Also, when you have one side that remains stuck in the pre-partition era there is no point in trying to settle disputes. The Modi regime doesn't even want to hear Kashmir. Let alone settle the dispute. BJP has a very perverse outlook on things. It believes in superiority over others. Its entire belief system revolves around the medieval caste system. it is the holy grail of BJP. How can you possibly negotiate for peace with such a perverted mindset? These people discriminate between their own flesh and blood.

We need to overhaul our India thinking drastically. Imran Khan gave peace a shot. He got the response. Modi isn't interested. Let's change our policy vis a vis India. The current strategy simply won't work. BJP has a firm grip in India. Modi is the Trump of India, but only on steroids. He will win the next elections. BJP is going to rule for a long period of time in India. We need to realise this and change accordingly. Modi also has the full backing of the current US apparatus. The US needs India for reasons we all know. Modiland feels emboldened by US backing. The US has put India in the driving seat. The Kashmir dispute doesn't figure anywhere.

Stop wasting your time. Solidify your relationship in the neighborhood. Solidify relations with China and Russia. Don't compromise on sovereignty and national issues with anyone. Don't show any weakness. The India US nexus is dying to put Pakistan under its thumb.
 
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Ohh shutup. There was never a scope for improvement in bilateral relations between India and Pakistan. If IK was over enthusiasm about anything, it was his decision to invite India for talks. He should had remembered whom he is dealing with.
 
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This is a serious Right Wing (Hawkish) magazine with serious credibility.

Also the writer is from Vivekananda International FOundation which is Founded by the CURRENT NSA Mr. Ajit Doval. and is the premier Think Tank in India today.

So if you have even half a brain, you would want to listen to the view from the opposite side.
 
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India needs regime change before peace can happen.

To some extent i agree with you....But the problem is that India was in non BJP rule for 65 years...And due to Non BJP rules, we are in a situation where India Pakistan are not talking 2 each other rather BJP.
 
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https://swarajyamag.com/current-aff...stan-swaraj-leaves-saarc-meet-midway-and-more

In A Snub To Pakistan, Swaraj Leaves SAARC Meeting Midway

In a move that conveyed India’s stand on Pakistan’s continued support for terrorism and the future of the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC), External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj left the meeting of the grouping in New York on Thursday after making her initial comments. Swaraj, who spoke at the meeting of foreign ministers from SAARC countries, raised the issue of terrorism and left the venue before Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi started speaking. However, Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale remained at the venue.

Earlier, Swaraj was scheduled to meet Qureshi on the sidelines of the General Assembly meeting in New York. The government had agreed to talk after receiving a letter from Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan and called it off after the killing of three policemen by terrorists in Kashmir the next day. In his speech, Qureshi blamed India for "blocking the progress of SAARC" and said India's stand on issues is "defying" the spirit of SAARC. However, his claims fell flat as Foreign Ministers of Afghanistan and Bangladesh left the meeting. Officials told ANI that Swaraj left the meeting as she had other engagements.
 
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We should have a Sticky Thread with Name with " Imran Khan TOP blunders"
I don't care about Pakistan's internal blunder's, he is free to do that as a being outsider.

I only considering foreign affairs blunders...
 
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We should have a Sticky Thread with Name with " Imran Khan TOP blunders"
I don't care about Pakistan's internal blunder's, he is free to do that as a being outsider.

I only considering foreign affairs blunders...

That would be pointless.

Pretty much all pakistani PM's has been deposed by the pakistani army before their time by one means or the other.

NS was removed for "corruption" (as if there is no corruption in the PA) and put in jail. His daughter was jailed. Bhutto was assassinated.


IK will sit on that chair only as long as he does what he is told to do and say what he is told to say.

Any thread on him would be a waste of time since what he says is pretty irrelevant.
 
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That would be pointless.

Pretty much all pakistani PM's has been deposed by the pakistani army before their time by one means or the other.

NS was removed for "corruption" (as if there is no corruption in the PA) and put in jail. His daughter was jailed. Bhutto was assassinated.


IK will sit on that chair only as long as he does what he is told to do and say what he is told to say.

Any thread on him would be a waste of time since what he says is pretty irrelevant.

100%.

On Imran, he is a sophisticate Miandad.

Mark my words. I have a gut for these things.

Cheers, Doc
 
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