The unfinished agenda
AT the time of partition of the Indian sub-continent in August 1947, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Mahatama Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru and the entire leadership on both sides had not visualised that the new states of India and Pakistan will be perennially engaged in hostility and antagonism. Jinnah after the partition expressed the hope that relations between India and Pakistan will be like the United States and Canada.
Post-partition, Jinnah stated: “I sincerely hope that they (relations between India and Pakistan) will be friendly and cordial. We have a great deal to do… and think that we can be of use to each other and to the world.” Unfortunately, India and Pakistan since their inception as new states 72 years ago till today miserably failed to live like normal neighbours and got engaged in periodic acts of armed conflicts. The legacy of partition of the Indian sub-continent and the wars of 1948, 1965 and 1971 still shape dynamics of Indo-Pak relations to the extent that even after 72 years, the two countries are unable to mend fences and detach themselves from the bitterness of the past.
Why Jinnah’s vision for normal, friendly and peaceful ties with India couldn’t be transformed into a reality and how the 1965 Indo-Pak war can be termed a major destabilising factor in deepening cleavages between the two neighbours? How and why the daunting task of dealing with India is an existential challenge for Pakistan? Why since the last two decades India pursues a policy of indifference with Pakistan and how the present Indian leadership under Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to isolate Pakistan regionally and internationally? These are the questions which are raised in the context of Indo-Pakistan relations and the prevailing abnormal ties between the two major countries of South Asia.
All the regimes governing Pakistan since August 1947 have been grappling with challenges emanating from India and to a large extent their foreign policy has been India centric. Host of issues ranging from the occupied Jammu & Kashmir to conflict over water resources, Siachen, Sir Creek and cross-border infiltration shape Pakistan’s approach and policy vis-a-vis India. Henceforth, the daunting task of dealing with India needs to be analysed from four angles.
First, the legacy of partition and post-partition events which deepened Pakistan’s sense of insecurity with India. From Pakistan’s point of view, shared by almost all the regimes since 1947 till today, India pursued a consistent policy to weaken and destabilise the nascent state of Pakistan by not providing its share of financial and military assets following the partition of the Indian sub-continent. India also tried to starve Pakistan of water resources by stopping the flow of water immediately after the partition. India’s policy of reneging from the UN Security Council resolutions of 1948 and 1949 for holding plebiscite in Jammu & Kashmir and its well documented policy to support various nationalist movements compelled Pakistan to perceive India as a ‘enemy state.’
There are reasons why Pakistan is facing the challenges that it does from across the border. Economic disparity lies at the heart of it all.
The 1965 Indo-Pak war was a watershed in re-shaping relations between the two erstwhile neighbours. From August 1947 till September 1965, the people-to-people interaction was free of hassle as travel and trade were normal. But, following the 1965 war, border controls, which were strictly enforced by Pakistan, restricted the movement of people which was earlier allowed with minimum curbs. Although the Tashkent Declaration, arranged with the Soviet mediation in January 1966, paved the way for the restoration of diplomatic ties between India and Pakistan, the two sides agreed to release prisoners of war, return territories captured during the course of war and normalise trade relations, the downward trend in their ties was not reversed.
Second, India’s policy of non-reciprocation of resuming the comprehensive dialogue (earlier named as composite dialogue) which got suspended following the attack on an Indian airbase in Pathankot in April 2016 is another evidence of sustained Indo-Pak standoff. Comprehensive dialogue comes under track-1 diplomacy whereby India and Pakistan discuss a variety of issues ranging from Jammu & Kashmir to Siachen, Sir Creek, water resources, nuclear, terrorism and trade relations. Following the attack at Uri in the Indian held Kashmir in September 2016, India hardened its stance by not holding any sort of bilateral talks unless what New Delhi argued an end of cross border terrorism from Pakistan.
The foremost challenge which Pakistan is facing for dealing with India is the Indian Prime Minister Modi’s threat to isolate Pakistan regionally and internationally. Responding to the Uri attack of September 2016 in the Indian held Kashmir, Modi vowed to retaliate by isolating Pakistan particularly in the region. As a sequel to his threat, India along with Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Bhutan refused to participate in the 19th SAARC summit which was scheduled to be held in Islamabad in November 2016.
Since then, SAARC is in limbo as its summit must be attended by all the SAARC members but four out of eight SAARC countries refused to participate. Pakistan has repeatedly called for the holding of SAARC summit but without any positive response from those who have boycotted the summit giving an illogical argument of worsening security situation. SAARC, which was launched in Dhaka in December 1985, is the only regional organisation to promote cooperation among South Asian countries in vital areas of trade, commerce, environment, combating terrorism, rural development and disaster management but has been a hostage of Indo-Pakistan conflicts and is almost non-functional. For India, by isolating Pakistan in the SAARC region it hopes to exert pressure on Islamabad to acquiesce to New Delhi’s pre-eminence in the region.
Third, Pakistan is facing a serious challenge from India’s Kashmir policy particularly the age-old ambition of BJP to absorb Jammu & Kashmir in the Indian union. BJP’s election manifesto clearly calls for the abrogation of article 370 and 35-A in the Indian Constitution which gives a special status to India’s only Muslim-majority state. Although original article 370 which was inducted in the Indian constitution in 1950 pledged to maintain the identity of Jammu & Kashmir by creating the offices of President and Prime Minister of J&K and restricting India’s influence only to defence and foreign affairs was severely eroded by withdrawing the offices of President and Prime Minister and expanding New Delhi’s hold over occupied J&K in other areas like currency, finance and communications. Article 35-A guarantees special status to the occupied J&K by disallowing any Indian national buying property, seeking permanent residency and casting vote in state elections. BJP’s argument is that both these articles are an impediment to absorb the occupied territories in the Indian Union and also prevent substantial development and investment in that territory by Indian nationals.
On August 5, the Indian Home Minister Amit Shah while addressing Rajiya Saba (upper house) of the Indian parliament announced the annulment of article 370 and 35-A through a presidential order. For Pakistan, revocation of articles 370 and 35-A means altering territorial status of occupied J&K and unleashing another wave of violence particularly in the Muslim-majority held valley of Kashmir. The deployment of extra 40,000 Indian forces is meant to cope with the backlash from Kashmiri nationalists in the wake of the annulment of article 370 and 35-A.