What's new

Normalizing ties with India

By Touqir Hussain

November 08, 2023



Pakistani (R) and Indian border security personnel hold flags of their country at the border. — AFP/File
Pakistani (R) and Indian border security personnel hold flags of their country at the border. — AFP/File
The question often comes up, especially among the young generation, why Pakistan has to remain on bad terms with India. This would have been a perfectly legitimate question a decade or so back when both sides were invested in the status quo. But now Pakistan seems open to change, India is not.
Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif has returned to Pakistan after six years of self-imposed exile and in his very public speech he promised to reach out to the country’s neighbours. He tried to do this during his last tenure but it cost him his job. The powers that be without whose blessing he could not have returned from exile may be more open to Nawaz Sharif’s foreign policy this time.
Former COAS Gen Bajwa recognized this reality though he may have expressed it poorly. His remarks “let us forget the past” at the Islamabad Security Dialogue in February 2021 were taken by India as a sign of weakness. Unsurprisingly, Indian Foreign Minister Jaishankar has since been calling Pakistan “irrelevant”.
India was not always dismissive like that. Surely it has come a long way from its embarrassing status as an unconvincing regional power to which Pakistan had the pretensions to speak as an ‘equal’, enabling it to attract US and Western attention to itself, and to the Kashmir dispute. With its economic rise, nuclear capability (enhanced by the US-India nuclear deal), rising status in IT (worth $250 billion), Pakistan ‘s precipitous decline due to internal failures and erosion in its ability to challenge India , and the US, Japan and Australia’s obsession to contain China, a whole new door has opened for India to being a global player. Prime Minister Modi’s ruthlessness has also played a part in leaving behind, what Raja Mohan calls, India’s hesitations of the past, enabling India to fully grab global attention.
While India is now a global player, the geopolitical environment on which Pakistan had banked all these decades to define its value for big powers is no more. No wonder the world’s attention has deserted Pakistan. As Pakistan loses, so does Kashmir.
By his Aug 5, 2019 action, Prime Minister Modi has stripped Pakistan of its locus standi on the Kashmir dispute, having earlier brought internal and external pressure on it to back away from supporting the Kashmiris. He has put the dispute beyond Pakistan’s diplomatic reach. In fact he does not even want to talk to Pakistan on Kashmir or any other issue unless the dialogue is on his terms.
There is an opinion in Pakistan that India might return to dialogue after the 2024 elections. This prospect would have been realistic if electoral politics were the only reason India did not want to talk. The fact is that when it comes to Pakistan, New Delhi has an exceptional policy not dependent on a single factor.
The India-Pakistan relationship is like none other and it remains marred by lingering tensions rooted in religion, culture and identity, and conflicting versions of history and war. History, ideology, and domestic politics have fostered divisiveness. Hostility towards Pakistan reflects the core tenet of the RSS towards Muslims, Kashmir and Pakistan, and is central to Hindutva.
Modi has played up the alleged militant attacks from across the border to harden the traditional public attitudes towards Pakistan and enhance domestic support for his agenda. The attacks in Pathankot in January 2016 and Uri in September 2016 blamed by India on extremists had triggered an enormous emotional response of the Indian citizenry and changed everything.
Marketing-savvy and skilled in the use of digital tools, Modi tapped into the traditional nationalist ideology of his party and exploited the issue of terrorism to his political advantage. The issue also helped Modi gain his military’s support. India has risen and so has its military’s ambitions. The overblown threat of terrorism has broadened the scope of conflict and enlarged the concept of national security elevating the military’s national profile.
Enmity with Pakistan thus serves many purposes, interests, and stakeholders domestically for India. As for foreign policy, Modi’s negativity towards Pakistan adds to India’s value in the containment of China and is thus an asset in his relations with the US. And, finally, challenging Pakistan especially on CPEC gives him leverage against both China and Pakistan. There is a logic to India’s Pakistan policy.
This is a moment for reflection by Pakistan. The reality is that Prime Minister Modi has changed the India-Pakistan equation. On Kashmir, Pakistan has been reduced to the status of a bystander. The opportunities that a conflicted relationship with India had provided to help the Kashmir cause, such as a diplomatic campaign against India, and the military option have all but vanished. Nor is Pakistan – that was once a factor in the resolution of the dispute – the same.
Pakistan has to recognize that India is not going to talk till such time that Pakistan takes the lead in giving concessions on issues of interest to India, principally Kashmir. These concessions no longer relate to the solution of the dispute since India feels it has already solved it without Pakistan’s help. India would now like Pakistan to accept the new reality.
Pakistan does not have any leverage on Kashmir now. It will have to create one. That will come with, not without, relations. If India rejects Pakistan’s overtures, Pakistan should leave it at that, rather than beseeching India for a dialogue. If a country is not even willing to talk, you can hardly expect it to give any concessions.
Assuming that the dialogue does take place and leads to some basic normalization, we need to be clear what this normalization will and will not do. It is said that it would be beneficial to Pakistan’s economy, especially if economic relations resume. But the fact is that the real benefit to Pakistan’s economy can only come from an integrated South Asia market linked to Central Asia through a peaceful and stable Afghanistan and a globally engaged Iran providing an environment for pipelines and transit trade. That is nowhere in sight.
That leaves only bilateral trade as the only viable economic relationship for now. If our economic experts feel it would be beneficial then Pakistan should not hesitate. To an ordinary observer, however, it seems the lack of an economic relationship with India is only a small part of the problems of Pakistan’s economy that has deep structural issues. Opening up the economy to India may likewise play only a small part in its revival. Yet the move might be necessary to entice India into normalization.
Once initial normalization through trade takes place then Pakistan can start calibrating the level of engagement like upgrading of economic ties to transit etc – not only to exert some influence on India in regard to Kashmir but also other issues. India has its complaints, Pakistan its own. The first step may not bring benefits but without it further steps that might bring benefits will not take place.
The bottom-line is: what purpose is the conflicted relationship serving anyway? Pakistan is secure enough to take chances with change.
The writer, a former ambassador, is adjunct professor at Georgetown University and visiting senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore.

Hussain sir, yeh kaam apse nahi honey wala!
 
.
The assessment of the writer is bang on correct. Pakistan has a lot to gain from this trade compared to India.

However, they have to do a climb down on the issue repeal of 370 in Kashmir. India wouldn’t back off hence the ball in their court. If they back off on this demand then India has no issues.
 
. .
These articles are STUPID

Their is mass hatred amongst the people of South Asia

These are not common people who live in different nations, these are enemies stuck in the same land mass

Partition ultimately was a simple plan
Separate the populations, so they have space to glorify their own faith, culture and identity

Hindus can glorify their shitty Hindu rastra
Sikhs can have a khalistan
Muslims can have Islamic states
Etc etc

Then the COMMONALITY amongst south Asians would bring us together, common languages, cultures etc

So Jinnah envisioned something similar to a South Asian E.U or what SAARC was really supposed to be

Lax border control, easy trade and movement BUT everyone has their own space and areas




Then India came a long with stick up it's ***, and peddled some shit about one united India for all where everyone gets stuck together
Their plenty of warnings not to go down this path
Now inside India you have MAJORITY extremism because they can't make their Hindu rastra because of hundreds of millions of minorities
You have minorities anger, frustration and suffering because they are stuck and their own culturea and faiths are under attack and pressure and you have mass hatred and enmity


In these circumstances trade etc is the last thing you need because partition is incomplete


We don't like hindus,
We don't want to be their friends
We don't want to reminisce about the old times
We are enemies
What we need is more separation and space away from each other

And ultimately a better partition of India so we can separate our populations away from hindus



So these bullshit articles are as stupid as the regular 6 months articles of should we recognize Israel, the answer being FCUK NO
BS.
Jinna envisaged nothing more than creating a state where he can be boss. Muslim card was just too easy to ignore, he used it and you guys fell for it.

Now you've started paying for it.
 
.
BS.
Jinna envisaged nothing more than creating a state where he can be boss. Muslim card was just too easy to ignore, he used it and you guys fell for it.

Now you've started paying for it.

For the majority of the last 75 years in most indexes Pakistan has been ahead of India

Economy and politics goes up and down but freedom and independence is everything

Partition was essential and separation of the populations was essential, otherwise everyone would be stuck to together I a massive COMMUNAL SHITHOLE of a state like India is today, but even more worse
 
.
Thank god for Quaid-E-Azam, thank god for PAKISTAN.
 
.
For the majority of the last 75 years in most indexes Pakistan has been ahead of India

Economy and politics goes up and down but freedom and independence is everything

Partition was essential and separation of the populations was essential, otherwise everyone would be stuck to together I a massive COMMUNAL SHITHOLE of a state like India is today, but even more worse
That figures. Pakistan was given a disproportionate share of resources to start with, so obviously they were better off.
Then as Indians developed gradually Pakistan degenerated, ate through its surplus, then borrowed etc on its way to bankruptcy.

In your frustrated mouth foaming rant you forget that Indians are quite happy and thankful that Jinna, though for different reason, took you lot away
 
.
No
Never
Absolutely not
If Jernails are tired and become fat lazy pigs then move and let someone with balls handle the men stuff.....
 
. . .
😂 we know these beghairats cant fight india, so now sucking up to them, unilateral ceasefires, secret visits, chamchageeri. And now saying we opened our legs to india but still india not normalizing relations lolz. What coward pathetic scumbags, do we pay so much tax for u to normalize relations or fight u stupid cowards.
Where are the low iq morons here who pretend to be indian enemies and defend boots all the time. These dallay know they r no match for india so now doing this n lowering expectations of blind nationalist goats. And instead portraying Afghanistan as the new main enemy. What if tomorrow Afghanistan becomes stronger then? Maybe then make Somalia as enemy 😂.
 
.
That figures. Pakistan was given a disproportionate share of resources to start with, so obviously they were better off.
Then as Indians developed gradually Pakistan degenerated, ate through its surplus, then borrowed etc on its way to bankruptcy.

In your frustrated mouth foaming rant you forget that Indians are quite happy and thankful that Jinna, though for different reason, took you lot away


On the contrary, Pakistan got very little

The situation in Pakistan has tended to be better and will most likely continue to be better then India in general,

Everyone is happy that Partition happened, it's you Indian pricks that are tryin to mix the populations up

If indians are so happy that JINNAH forced partition, then complete the process and finish partition of India so enemy populations can separate
 
.
On the contrary, Pakistan got very little

The situation in Pakistan has tended to be better and will most likely continue to be better then India in general,

Everyone is happy that Partition happened, it's you Indian pricks that are tryin to mix the populations up

If indians are so happy that JINNAH forced partition, then complete the process and finish partition of India so enemy populations can separate
you are all over yourself. And if you think Pakistan has gotten better almost none of your fellow Paks agree with you.
Partition finished in 1947. You geniuses have managed to finish Pakistan
 
.
India Pakistan relationship is just fine for now & it's unlikely to improve anytime soon. 70 years of investment in hostility won't go away in 4 years even if some leader had a change of heart. Relationship with Pakistan has some limited advantage, not not enough for any leader to invest considerable political capital. It's a risky endeavour and it could back fire Just like it backfired on Vajpayee, Manmohan Singh & Modi.
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom