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India not a threat to Pakistan - Analysis

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TWO EVENTS in the last three months have radically changed the course of Indo-Pak relations, and have the potential to radically alter the future direction of South Asian history.

The first of these events took place on November 24, 2007. On this day, a suicide bomber detonated himself beside a bus at the entrance of Camp Hamza, the ISI’s Islamabad headquarters. Around twenty people died in what is the first known attack by an Islamist cell against the Pakistan intelligence services. Many of the dead were ISI staffers. This event, coming as it did after three assassination attempts on General Musharraf, several other bomb attacks on army barracks, and the murder of many captured army personnel in Waziristan, is credited with persuading even the most pro-Islamist elements in the Pakistan army, and the agencies, that the jehadi Frankenstein’s monster they have created now has to be dispatched with a stake in its heart, and as soon possible.

The long debate in the army over what was Pakistan’s real enemy ended that day: India was now no longer perceived as the biggest threat facing the nation, and the army’s principal adversary; instead it has finally and belatedly been accepted that a far more immediate threat comes from the jehadis the army has reared. In such a struggle it is rapidly becoming clear that India, far from being an enemy, could potentially become a future ally.

Pakistan analysts, especially those who deal with the shadowy and ambiguous world of the intelligence agencies, rarely agree on much; but on this radical shift of attitudes there is a growing consensus. Shuja Nawaz is a Washingtonbased specialist on the Pakistani army who comes from a prominent and well-connected military family and who has recently completed an important book on the army, Crossed Swords, based on extensive interviews. According to Nawaz “the direct attacks on the army has shaken up the military at all levels. I spoke with one of Musharraf’s senior colleagues this weekend and he said he was changing his cars daily to avoid being identified when he hits the roads of Rawalpindi. The army brass has been told not to go out in uniforms. Soon, they may stop using their staff cars with flags and star plates.” This is obviously a radically new situation, and one that changes all previous calculations on the part of the Pak military.

Shuja Nawaz, like many other commentators, is clear that Musharraf’s senior military brass were convinced until relatively recently that they could control the militants who they had armed, trained and nurtured first for Afghanistan, and then for Kashmir. In the taped conversation between Musharraf and Muhammad Aziz Khan, his Chief of General Staff, that India released around the time of Kargil, Aziz said that the army had the jehadis by their tooti (privates). “That,” says Nawaz, is clearly “no longer true,” and the army now realises it must break its ties with its old proxies, and do all it can to destroy them. This week the news came that the army has rounded up an important Lashkar-i-Jhangvi cell in Lahore; many more such arrests are expected soon.

Veteran Pakistan watcher Stephen P. Cohen of the Brookings Institution agrees with this assessment: “The senior leadership of the army under Musharraf now regards the threat from Islamic radicals as being far greater than the threat posed by India. That conviction has been hugely increased since the suicide bomb attacks on army staff and the intelligence agencies this past December.”

Cohen thinks that Musharraf and his men had anyway long been wishing to soothe the principal irritant between the two countries, the dispute in Kashmir. Musharraf, says Cohen, is convinced that India would never relinquish the Valley, and now supports a process that will allow the Kashmiris a greater say in their own future. As a result of this assessment, cross-border infiltration into Indian Kashmir and border incidents are at their lowest level for years, and in response to this both countries have recently been quietly reducing troops numbers around the Line of Control: the Indian army has withdrawn at least one division and sent it to the border with China; the Pakistanis have likewise withdrawn a division of their own, and sent it to deal with counterinsurgency duties on the North West Frontier.

The fact that both India and Pakistan now possess nuclear weapons is also credited with perchanging strategic thinking in the Pakistani army. According to Cohen, the generals understand that no one can be a winner in a nuclear exchange, and that all-out war between the two countries is increasingly improbable, giving an increased incentive to the Pakistanis to improve relations with their potential nuclear nemesis.

Finally, the army, like everyone else in Pakistan, has been both shocked and impressed by India’s economic growth. Together, all these factors have made the military more open to making peace with India than at any other point in Pakistan’s recent history.

THE SECOND event likely to change South Asian history took place on the 18th of February, 2008. On that day, Pakistan’s new urban middle class for the first time showed their new political muscle at the ballot box, voting en masse for moderate, liberal, secular and centrist parties. The Pakistanis showed that they wanted the ability to choose their own rulers, and to determine their own future. To ensure this they voted for a major change that would send the military back to their barracks and the mullahs back to their mosques.

For Pakistani liberals, 2007 was a disaster. Musharraf started the year by sacking the Chief Justice, accusing him of using his position for personal gain. Any optimism felt at the lawyers’ striking display of peaceful, pro-democratic protest was quickly dimmed by the simultaneous growth of Islamist radicalism in the heart of Islamabad — the black-clad “chicks with sticks” — and the subsequent bloody storming of Red Mosque in June. This was followed by an unprecedented wave of suicide bombings and Islamist revenge attacks against the army.

By autumn it had become even worse, with a series of crushing military defeats inflicted on the Pakistan army by the pro-Taliban rebels in Waziristan, the “extraordinary rendition” of Nawaz Sharif to Saudi Arabia after his brief return from exile, and the subsequent declaration of Emergency by President Musharraf. The crises reached a climax in December with the assassination of Benazir Bhutto. All this led many to predict that Pakistan was looking more and more like a failed State stumbling towards full scale civil war and, possibly, even disintegration. The cruel contrast with India, then widely being celebrated as a future democratic superpower on its 60th birthday, was not lost on the Pakistani middle class.

Yet the widespread publicity given to Pakistan’s 2007 crisis has obscured the important changes which had quietly taken place during Musharraf’s rule in the years preceding the collapse of his authority. The Pakistani economy may currently be in difficulties, with fast rising inflation and shortages of gas, electricity and flour; but between 2002 and 2006, it had been growing almost as strongly as that of India. For five years, until the beginning of 2007, Pakistan enjoyed a construction and consumer boom, with growth approaching 8 percent and what was briefly the fastest-rising stock market in Asia.

The country I saw last week on a long road trip from Lahore down through rural Sindh to Karachi was very far from a failed State. Nor was it anything even approaching “the most dangerous country in the world… almost beyond repair” as the Spectator (among many others) recently suggested. Instead, as you travel around Pakistan today you can see the effects of the recent economic boom everywhere: in new shopping malls and restaurant complexes, on hoardings for the latest laptops and ipods, in the cranes and buildings sites, in the smart roadside filling stations and the smokestacks of the factories; in the new 4x4s jamming the roads and in the endless stores selling mobile phones. In 2003, the country had fewer than three million cell-phone users; today apparently there are almost 50 million, while car ownership has been increasing at roughly 40 percent per year since 2001. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has risen from $322 million in 2002 to $3.5 billion in 2006.

It is true that on my trip there were pockets of great poverty and frequent shortages of electricity. At one point, I was told that I shouldn’t continue along certain roads near the Bhutto stronghold of Larkana as there were dakus ambushing people after dark. But by and large, the countryside I passed through was calm and beautiful, and not obviously less prosperous-looking than rural India. Indeed, the transport infrastructure of the country is in many ways better than India’s: Pakistan still has the best airports, motorway and road network in the region. Driving last week along the dual carriageways of Sindh, a week after bumping through rural Rajasthan, there was no comparison between the roads on either side of the border.

The cities of Pakistan, in particular, are fast changing beyond recognition. As in India, there is a burgeoning Pakistani fashion scene full of ambitious gay designers and some amazingly beautiful models. There are also remarkable things happening in the world of books: as well as a fine crop of major non-fiction writers — Ahmed Rashid, Zahid Hussain and Ayesha Siddiqa at the front of the pack — there has been an amazing renaissance in English-language fiction, with fine writers like Kamila Shamsie, Nadeem Aslam, Daniyal Mueenuddin, Moni Mohsin, Ali Sethi and especially this year’s Booker short-listee, Mohsin Hamid, all for the first time giving their Indian counterparts a run for their money.

Recently, Hamid, author of the bestseller The Reluctant Fundamentalist, wrote about this. Having lived abroad as a banker in New York and London, he returned home to Lahore to find the country unrecognisable. He was particularly struck by “the incredible new world of media that had sprung up, a world of music videos, fashion programs, independent news networks, cross-dressing talk-show hosts, religious debates, and stock-market analysis.

I knew, of course, that Musharraf’s government had opened the media to private operators. But I had not until then realised how profoundly things had changed. Not just television, but also private radio stations and newspapers have flourished in Pakistan over the past few years. The result is an unprecedented openness. Young people are speaking and dressing differently. The Vagina Monologues was recently performed on stage in Pakistan to standing ovations.

Little of this has been reported in the Indian press, and Indians generally seem remarkably ill informed about the changes which have been quietly but profoundly changing Pakistani society beneath the media image of military stagnation and jehadi horrorism.

IT WAS this newly enriched and empowered urban middle class that showed its political muscle and will for the first time with the lawyers movement — the Men in Black. This represented a huge shift in Pakistani civil society’s participation in politics. The Pakistani middle class were at last moving from their drawing rooms onto the streets and into politics.

The election dramatically confirmed this shift. The biggest electoral surprise of all was the remarkable success of Nawaz Sharif’s Punjabbased faction of the Muslim League, the PML-N. This is a solidly urban party, popular among exactly the sort of middle class voters in the Punjab who have benefited most from the economic success of the last decade, and who have since found that status threatened by the recent economic slowdown and the sudden steep price rise in food, fuel and electricity. The same is true of the success of the Mohajir Qaumi Movement (MQM), the Karachi-based Mohajir party, which also did unexpectedly well: like the PML-N, it is an urban-based regional party attractive to middle class voters.

This seems to be the pattern of the future: Pakistan now has almost a 50 percent urban population, and the centre of gravity is shifting from the countryside to the large cities, leaving the rural and feudal-dominated Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) looking increasingly like the party of the past. For all that the PPP won the largest number of seats in the election, its performance was well below expectation, which is one reason why feudals such as Zardari remain frightened by the growing clout of middle class urban figures in its own ranks such as Aitzaz Ahsan. Ahsan commands a large following in the cities following his work with the lawyers’ movement — a movement Bhutto and Zardari kept a telling distance from.

This rise of the middle class was most clear in the number of winning candidates who came for the first time largely from middle class backgrounds. In Jhang district of the rural Punjab, for example, as many as 10 of the 11 elected are from middle class backgrounds: sons of revenue officers, senior policemen, functionaries in the civil bureaucracy and so on, rather than the usual feudal zamindars. This would have been unthinkable ten years ago.

The Punjab is the most developed part of rural Pakistan; but even in backward Sindh there are signs of change. Khairpur, on the banks of the Indus, is the heartland of exactly the sort of unreformed landowners who epitomise the stereotype painted by Pakistani sophisticates when they roll their eyes and talk about “the feudals”. Yet even here, members of the local middle class have just stood successfully for election against the local zamindars.

Nafisa Shah is the impeccably middle class daughter of a lawyer promoted in the PPP by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto in the 1970’s; she is currently doing a PhD on honour killings at Oxford. She is standing in the same constituency as Sadruddin Shah who is often held up as the archetype of feudal excess, and who goes electioneering with five pick-up trucks full of his private militia armed with pump-action shotguns.

As you drive along the bypass, his face, complete with Dick Dastardly moustache, sneers down from hoardings placed every fifty yards along the road. Last week, the local Sindhi press was full of stories of his men shooting at crowds of little boys shouting pro-Benazir slogans. Shah was standing as usual for no less than three different seats; this time however, the Oxford PhD student and her other PPP allies have all but wiped out Shah and his fellow candidates of the PML-Functional, so that Shah himself won only in his own hometown.

Even the most benign feudal lords suffered astonishing reverses last week. Mian Najibuddin Owaisi was not just the popular feudal lord of the village of Khanqah Sharif in the southern Punjab, he was also the sajada nasheen, the descendant of the local Sufi saint, and so regarded as a holy man as well as the local landowner. But recently Najibuddin made the ill-timed switch from supporting Nawaz Sharif’s PML-N to the pro-Musharraf Q-league. Talking to the people in the bazaar before the election, his followers announced that that they did not like Musharraf, but they would still vote for their landlord:

“Prices are rising,” said Hajji Sadiq, the cloth salesman, sitting amid bolts of textiles. “There is less and less electricity and gas.”

“And what was done to Benazir was quite wrong,” agreed his friend Salman.

“But Najjib sahib is our protector,” said the Hajji. “Whatever party he chooses, we will vote for him. Even the Q-league.”

“Why?” I asked.

“Because, with him in power we have someone we can call if we are in trouble with the police, or need someone to speak to the adminstration.”

“When we really need him, he looks after us.” “We vote according to local issues only. Who cares about parties?”

Because of Najjibuddin’s personal popularity, his vote stood up better than many other pro-Musharraf feudals and he polled 46,000 votes. But he still lost, to an independent candidate from a non-feudal middle-class background named Amir Varan, who took 57,000 votes and ousted the Owaisi family from control of the constituency for the first time since they entered politics in the elections of 1975.

AS WELL as a middle-class victory over a feudal past, in the west of the country, the election also saw an important vote for secularism over the religious parties. In the last election of October 2002, thanks partly to their closeness to the ruling military government, the Islamist Muttehida Majlis Amal (or MMA) alliance succeeded in more than doubling its representation from 4 to 11.6 percent, and sweeping the polls in Baluchistan and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP). They went on to form ultra-conservative and pro-Islamist provincial governments.

This time however, the MMA has been comprehensively defeated by the Awami National Party: the remnant of the secular and non-violent Gandhian Pashtun Red Shirt movement. This was originally led by Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, an important ally of Gandhi during the 1920s and 30s. Locked up by a succession of Pakistani generals after Independence, thanks to his opposition to the creation of Pakistan — he spent in all 52 years behind bars — Ghaffar Khan’s political movement has survived both the generals and a recent succession of bomb blasts aimed at their rallies, and has now — after nearly fifty years in opposition — made a dramatic comeback under the leadership of Ghaffar Khan’s grandson, Afsandyar Wali. The party’s slogan — “peace, democracy and development” — makes Wali’s priorities clear.

“The Frontier used to be a very liberal area,” he told me in Islamabad. “No one can force us to give up that culture — even the suicide bombers. There is a clear polarisation taking place in the Pakhtun belt — on one side those striving for peace, non-violence and cooperation with the international community, and on the other those who stand for confrontation and hatred. They are men of violence, but we are fighting back. We may lose, but we will make a stand.”

The election results showed that far from losing in this fight, Wali’s ANP has routed the Islamists, demonstrating that contrary to their stereotype as bearded bastions of Islamist orthodoxy, the Pashtuns are in fact as wary as anyone else of violence, extremism and instability, and want their politicians to deliver competent and honest government. The ANP is arguably the single party in Pakistan that has done most to speak out for peace and good relations with India — Ghaffar Khan’s sympathy with India has not been forgotten; nor has the fact that Rajiv Gandhi made the effort to attend Ghaffar Khan’s funeral. Now, the ANP is talking of extending its reach further into the tribal belt: “If I am prepared to take on the maulvis in the tribal areas, why should the government stop me?” asked Afsandiyar. “At the moment the tribal areas are just left to fester. We have to end that isolation and bring them forward.”

Amid all the euphoric celebration across Pakistan over this election result, three big question marks still remain. The first is the power of the jehadis. Though the religious parties were routed in the election, their gunwielding brothers in Waziristan are not obviously in retreat. In recent months these militants have won a series of notable military victories over the Pakistani army, and spread their revolt within the settled areas of Pakistan proper. The two assassination attempts on Benazir — the second horribly successful — and the three recent attacks on Musharraf are just the tip of the iceberg. Every bit as alarming is the degree to which the jehadis move freely through much of the North West region of Pakistan. The Swat Valley in particular is still smouldering following the assault by government troops on jehadis loyal to the insurgent leader, Maulana Fazllullah — aka “Mullah Radio”. At the moment, the government has won back the area, and the Islamist parties received a particularly humiliating vote there as a result of Mullah Radio’s abuses while in power; but the insurgent leaders have all escaped and it remains to be seen how far the new government can stem this growing rebellion.

THE SECOND force that has shown a remarkable ability to ignore or even reverse the democratic decisions of the Pakistani people is of course the army. Even though Musharraf’s political ally, the PML-Q, has been heavily defeated at the polls, leaving him vulnerable to impeachment by the new parliament, the Pakistani army is still formidably powerful. Normally countries have an army; in Pakistan, as in Burma, the army has a country. In her recent book, Military, Inc., the political scientist Ayesha Siddiqa attempted to put figures on the degree to which the army controls Pakistan irrespective of who is in power.

Siddiqa estimated, for example, that the Army now controls business assets of around 20 billion dollars and a third of all the manufacturing in the country; it also owns 12 million acres of public land and up to 7 percent of Pakistan’s private assets. Five giant conglomerates, known as “welfare foundations”, run thousands of businesses, ranging from streetcorner petrol pumps to sprawling industrial plants, from cement and dredging to the manufacture of corn flakes. The army has administrative assets too. According to Siddiqa, military personnel have “taken over all and every department in the bureaucracy — even the civil service academy is now headed by a Major General, while the National School of Public Policy is run by a Lieutenant General. The military has completely taken over not just the bureaucracy but every arm of the Executive.”

Yet for all this potential power, the army has now comprehensively lost the support of its people — a dramatic change from the situation even three years ago when a surprisingly wide cross-section of the country seemed prepared to tolerate military rule. The new army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, who took over when Musharraf stepped down from his military role last year, seems to recognise this. He has issued statements about his wish to pull the army back from civilian life, ordering his soldiers to stay out of politics and give up jobs in the bureaucracy. He has also ordered that no army officer may meet with President Musharraf without his personal sanction.

The third major issue facing the country is its desperate educational crisis. This is something that has festered as much under military rule as that of the democrats. No problem in Pakistan casts such a long shadow over its future than the abject failure of the government to educate more than a fraction of its own people: at the moment a mere 1.8 percent of Pakistan’s GDP is spent on government schools. The statistics are dire: 15 percent of these government schools are without a proper building; 52 percent without a boundary wall; 71 percent without electricity. This was graphically confirmed by a survey conducted two years ago by Imran Khan, in his own constituency of Mianwalli. His research showed that 20 percent of government schools supposed to be functioning in his constituency did not exist at all, a quarter had no teachers, and 70 percent were closed. No school had more than half of the teachers it was meant to have. This education gap is the single most striking way in which Pakistan is lagging behind India: in India 65 percent of the population is literate, and the number rises every year. But in Pakistan the literacy figure is under half (it is currently 49 percent) and falling.

The virtual collapse of government schooling has meant that many of the country’s poorest people who wish to enhance their children’s hope of advancing themselves have no option but to place the children in the madarsa system where they are guaranteed an ultra-conservative but nonetheless free education, often subsidised by religious endowments provided by the Saudis. Altogether, there are now an estimated 8,00,000 to one million students enrolled in Pakistan’s madarsas. Though the link between the madrasas and Al Qaeda is often exaggerated — the overwhelming majority of international Salafi jehadis are educated in Western-style colleges — it is true that madarsa students have been closely involved in the rise of the Taliban and the growth of sectarian violence; it is also true that the education provided by many madarsas is often wholly inadequate to equip children for modern life in a civil society.

YET, FOR all these problems, there is real room for optimism, both for the future of civil society in Pakistan and for its relations with India.

Pakistan will not change overnight. Much violence and unrest no doubt lie ahead. The current wrangling between Asif Zardari and Nawaz Sharif show that Pakistani politicians have lost none of their ability to shoot the democratic project in the foot; it has taken consistent political incompetence on the part of the democrats to give the generals the opportunity to intervene decade after decade. But it is clear Pakistan is not about to fall apart, nor implode, nor break out into civil war, nor succumb to an Islamist insurgency, nor become a Taliban state with truckfulls of mullahs pouring down on Islamabad from the Khyber Pass, as some of the more alarmist media predicted on the death of Benazir. Instead, it is now a country with an increasingly powerful middle class that badly wants to do business and to make peace with India.

Contrary to the general impression in India, in my experience Pakistanis do not harbour any ill will to Indians — something that invariably surprises Indian visitors to Pakistan. Certainly, it is possible to meet the odd mullah or general for whom India is an inherently evil place, but for most Pakistanis, India is a complicated country that they admire as much they fear. Pakistanis love Bollywood films, fantasise over Indian actors and actresses, and watch Indian satellite TV. Posters of Indian cricketers and actresses are on sale in every bazaar. India is, in short, more a source of feelings of envy than an object of hatred, although its enormous military superiority and its domination of the Kashmir Valley are genuine sources of anxiety. In all the 20 years I have covered Pakistan, I have almost never sat at a Pakistani dinner party without being asked about the differences between the two countries: Is there any way in which Pakistan is preferable? Aren’t our women prettier? Aren’t our mangoes tastier? As a Scot, the small and often forgotten neighbour to the north of onetime superpower England, I recognise the anxieties well.

Recently, as Pakistan had gone through one of the worst periods in its history, admiration for India has become more pronounced and far more openly expressed. People now talk about India with growing respect, admiring both the maturity of India’s democracy and the success of India’s economy. Pakistanis hope that India’s success in both fields could be infectious, and for this to happen they understand that there must be peace and good relations between the two.

Taken together with the seismic shift in strategic thinking in the Pakistani army, the new scenario offers the best hope for improved Indo-Pak relations in a generation. It is surely time for India, as well as Pakistan, to reach out and seize this new opportunity for peace, and end 60 years of pointless, expensive, unnecessary and entirely damaging conflict.
 
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I hope we see some follow up to the new thinking and the current obsession becomes a thing of the past.

It is not doing any good to anyone and Pakistan because of it's smaller relative size is bound to get more benefits from a thaw.
 
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India was never a threat to any country.

SInce ancient period,india has faced the invaders from central asia and afganistan..

In 2008,india is not threat to any of its neighbours coz we are a 1.1 billion secular democratic country who is responsible to its people.indias priority is to pursue a long term development and leave peacefully with its neighbours.
 
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India was never a threat to any country.

SInce ancient period,india has faced the invaders from central asia and afganistan..

In 2008,india is not threat to any of its neighbours coz we are a 1.1 billion secular democratic country who is responsible to its people.indias priority is to pursue a long term development and leave peacefully with its neighbours.

But problem is what one consider as threat differs to another....

If India and Pakistan becomes friendly nations then I expect a much powerful South Asia in the years to come. But the world around will always try to prevent such a friendship as that will mean the end of many a arm twistings and power plays.

If and only if the people of both nation try to understand the need of the situation that we can overcome all the hurdles....At least its nice to see some discussion on this scenario here...

I wish people from Pakistan too comment on this topic
 
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India was never a threat to any country.

SInce ancient period,india has faced the invaders from central asia and afganistan..

In 2008,india is not threat to any of its neighbours coz we are a 1.1 billion secular democratic country who is responsible to its people.indias priority is to pursue a long term development and leave peacefully with its neighbours.

yes of course the 3 wars were fought with phantoms & zombies were killed in Kashmir.
 
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yes of course the 3 wars were fought with phantoms & zombies were killed in Kashmir.

No wonder, the pakistani media has hidden the truth from you. We are not a threat, but when someone intrudes, we give them back. This is the defensive right of any country.

Kashmir is an integral part of india and will remain so, the sooner pakistani govt realises this facts and stops their military misadventures, its safe for them.

Because the Pakistani govt cannot fight us directly, they keep the pot boiling using proxy war and terrorism, I am sure you know this. ISI and CIA employed the same strategy, successfully against the Soviets. However, the US has misused you guys. They have fought soviets with Afgan blood, away from their country. This is a area where pakistan commited a blunder, by harbouring terrorists in their own country.

Till the jihadis were fighting Indian Army, Pakistan was happy, US was not worried and it was all good. But when the jihadis stuck US, the big daddy awoke to the threat to himself. Now pakistani is under pressure to fight the jihadis, President Mushraf and Pakistani Army has reallized this and are now fighting bravely to rout out terrorism from Pakistan. It will take time and blood will be shed- but now Pakistan is going in the right direction and I am sure that there will be peace in Pakistan in future.

This is now only good for you, but also good for us and Asia and the world Peace.
 
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Cohen thinks that Musharraf and his men had anyway long been wishing to soothe the principal irritant between the two countries, the dispute in Kashmir. Musharraf, says Cohen, is convinced that India would never relinquish the Valley, and now supports a process that will allow the Kashmiris a greater say in their own future. As a result of this assessment, cross-border infiltration into Indian Kashmir and border incidents are at their lowest level for years,

I think the changes on the ground have been evident for quite some time - infiltration levels started dropping after 2002, and the guns on the LOC have been silent.
 
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No wonder, the pakistani media has hidden the truth from you. We are not a threat, but when someone intrudes, we give them back. This is the defensive right of any country.

One could equally well argue that the "Indian media has hidden the truth from you", amd that leads nowhere.

ARahman was responding to a legitimately false statement- that India has been nothing but a benevolent peace loving nation - Pakistan hasn't either.

Lets move off of nonsensical hyperbole.
 
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I think the changes on the ground have been evident for quite some time - infiltration levels started dropping after 2002, and the guns on the LOC have been silent.

It took an Operation Parakram to drag Musharaf to the TV station for a televised statement about why the Lashkar were bad and why he was going to ban them all. The American pressure is very much there as well.
 
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It took an Operation Parakram to drag Musharaf to the TV station for a televised statement about why the Lashkar were bad and why he was going to ban them all. The American pressure is very much there as well.

If i am not wrong your operation Parakram was a failure and your strategist have openly accepted that besides keeping army on the border for a whole year they could not achieve their objectives. So dont flatter yourself about draging Musharraf out to a TV station.
 
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If i am not wrong your operation Parakram was a failure and your strategist have openly accepted that besides keeping army on the border for a whole year they could not achieve their objectives. So dont flatter yourself about draging Musharraf out to a TV station.

And what was the objective?
 
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If i am not wrong your operation Parakram was a failure and your strategist have openly accepted that besides keeping army on the border for a whole year they could not achieve their objectives. So dont flatter yourself about draging Musharraf out to a TV station.

Then what is it that took him to the TV station?

He always gave that kind of address under external pressure. Its a shame that many of the good things that he did had to be under external pressure. I saw that address and I remember him discussing the indian demands one by one. Isn't that proof enough of what took hime there?
 
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Then what is it that took him to the TV station?

He always gave that kind of address under external pressure. Its a shame that many of the good things that he did had to be under external pressure. I saw that address and I remember him discussing the indian demands one by one. Isn't that proof enough of what took hime there?

Actually your analysists have a different opinion about it. They think Musharraf was able to out perform them and the primary reason was that india wasnt able to pressurize pakistan as they had initially anticipated.
 
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Actually your analysists have a different opinion about it. They think Musharraf was able to out perform them and the primary reason was that india wasnt able to pressurize pakistan as they had initially anticipated.

If you are saying that he is a slippery customer, I agree with you. :)

He has been able to manipulate even the US for such a long time. He promises things when pressured with no intention to keep the promises after things cool down.

Even you will remember the start of a new crackdown after any big terror event happened that implicated pakistan in some way, be that Indian parliament attack (and Op. Parakram), the 7/7 UK attacks and I don't remember how many more.

After every such event, some noise was made about Madaressa reform, some peopel were arrested and things got back to normal before you know it, as soon as things cooled down.
 
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