Pakistan’s Afghanistan policy has been a gift to India, wrote Ashraf Jehangir Qazi wrote in an opinion piece in the 'Dawn'
Dubbing the economic and political crisis now enveloping Pakistan as a “listless gloom”, a former senior Pakistani diplomat wants Islamabad to seek a rapprochement and sign a no-war treaty with India.
Ashraf Jehangir Qazi, who has also served in the United Nations, has also said that the hijacking of Pakistan’s foreign policy by the military had led to a disaster in Afghanistan and that “Pakistan’s Afghanistan policy has been a gift to India.”
“The reality of Pakistan, shaped by its wayward masters and bureaucrats, manifests itself each day,” Qazi wrote in an opinion piece in the Dawn, a widely circulated English language newspaper published from Islamabad.
Worse than 1971
“Not even December 1971 compares with the listless gloom that engulfs the country today,” said the former envoy to the US, India and China.
“Ever since the loss of our eastern wing and the judicial murder of our first elected prime minister, our story has degenerated from the tragic to the pathetic to the absurd,” he said.
He accused every major institution and influential group of people of failing Pakistan including the government, the army and intelligence apparatus, the judiciary, parliament, political leaders, the media, civil services and elites.
“Together, they have ensured a failed state,” he said.
Saying peace was a prerequisite, Qazi said that while Kashmir “is a matter of principle, it is also a human rights challenge”.
No-war pact
Further, he said, “Pakistan has a responsibility to seek a rapprochement with a very difficult India, in order to increase the prospects for justice in Kashmir and to render multifaceted cooperation with India politically feasible.”
“Principled compromise approaches can increase the probability of reciprocity, transform zero-sum confrontation into positive sum cooperation, reduce security expenditures, and with greater interactions allow less mutually hostile narratives to emerge,” he wrote.
“There is no reason why Pakistan should not be willing to negotiate a no-war agreement with India. Reaching a principled understanding on Kashmir could greatly help such an endeavour. Accordingly, playing to the gallery on Kashmir in these circumstances is of no help to the Kashmiris.”
Afghan policy
The diplomat also urged Islamabad to bring about major changes in Pakistan’s Afghan policy
“Respecting Afghanistan’s independence and gaining its confidence is the way towards developing the closest of ties with it and accessing the massive potential for regional cooperation with Central Asia and Iran,” he said.
Qazi said that no enemy of Pakistan today matches the enmity of its own rulers.
“They laugh all the way to their foreign banks and talk of national security and economic stability while the ruled sink below the poverty line to wither and die,” he added. He warned that Pakistan desperately needed “decent governance” now. “Without it, elections will only mimic and insult democracy and existential threats will end our existence,” he pointed out.
Pakistan must sign no-war pact with India: Former diplomat
%%title%% Dubbing the economic and political crisis now enveloping Pakistan as a “listless gloom”, a former senior Pakistani diplomat wants Islamabad to seek a rapprochement and sign a no-war treaty...thefederal.com
Typical excuse by Pakistan elites....The danger of India to Pakistan is oversold by Pakistan elites within their public. In reality, India does not have the ability nor even the real intent to attack Pakistan by messing up the entire economic success we have gained in the last 30 years...
Rather than India or anything related to Indian acts, Pakistan should simply allow democratic institutions to run the country and their army take the back seat. If Pakistan is governed by their true people's leaders for 20-25 year, Indo Pak relations will be just like another neighbor.
The only solution to Kashmir is military. For the sake of optics our establishment talks of diplomacy and all this other crap, but in reality there will never be a political settlement to Kashmir. If Pakistan wants Kashmir, it will have to take it militarily and our current military and political leadership feel we cannot do so, so will not even state it as a reality.
Pakistan does not have the global political capital, the financial capability and probably even the military strength required to conquer Kashmir - yet. If and when it does, if may try.
Until then the establishment will keep talking about diplomacy and talks, because it knows it cannot actually do anything about Kashmir and it needs to use the Kashmir brand, to keep itself relevant.
Spot on...Pakistan has to fight a war to take Kashmir...And again, this is the wish for Pakistan's elite and military to have relevance in front of their people...
So rather than asking for no war with India, it is more like Pakistan's military has to plan out for themselves not to get engaged in any war.