http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107386662722510100,00.html (subscription required)
from Today's WSJ:
January 12, 2004
COMMENTARY
India's Man in Pakistan
By SWAPAN DASGUPTA
Three months ago, India's Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf used the U.N. General Assembly session in New York to launch tirades against each other. The normally restrained Mr. Vajpayee charged Gen. Musharraf with using terrorism as "blackmail" and the latter accused India of recklessly violating human rights in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. It speaks volumes about the shifting sands of diplomacy that the two shook hands and issued a joint statement in Islamabad last week, one that could see the countries talking to each other rather than arousing further international fears of nuclear adventurism.
The crucial sentence that facilitated the formal return to civility was
Gen. Musharraf's reassurance that "he will not permit any territory under Pakistan's control to be used to support terrorism in any manner." India has long insisted that the troubles in Jammu and Kashmir were the result of "cross-border terrorism" mounted by Islamist jihadis, recruited and trained in Pakistan. It maintained that no dialogue was possible until Pakistan disowned terrorism unequivocally. With Gen. Musharraf making that commitment, India expressed its willingness to negotiate the gamut of bilateral issues, including Kashmir.
For Mr. Vajpayee, the Islamabad statement is a personal triumph. Last April, he left his colleagues in the government stupefied by unilaterally extending his "hand of friendship" to Pakistan. Since then, despite many hiccups, he has persisted with a stream of confidence-building measures aimed at restoring normal relations between the two countries.
Mr. Vajpayee's dogged insistence on evolving a working relationship with Pakistan was
based on two premises. First, in the aftermath of Iraq, he became convinced that
unless India and Pakistan agreed to shun hostility it would prepare the ground for greater international involvement in South Asia. This, he felt, would not be in India's interests.
Secondly, with India in the midst of an economic boom and a surge in middle-class self-confidence, Mr. Vajpayee rightly perceived the tensions with neighbors to be a monumental distraction. Unlike some of his more pugnacious colleagues, he felt that the cause of Hindu nationalism would be better served through an explosion of pride in the country's economy than by raising the pitch of anti-Pakistan rhetoric.
The sticking point was Pakistan's unrelenting endorsement of the "liberation struggle" which involved gruesome acts of jihadi terror. With Gen. Musharraf finally yielding ground on this issue -- thanks in no small measure to sustained U.S. pressure on his government -- the stage may be set for a more wholesome phase in India-Pakistan relations.,...
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What remains to be seen is how much of Pakistan is under Musharraf's control. Musharraf has promised many things in the past...but has failed to deliver.