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Egged On By U.S. & E.U., India & Pakistan Relations Thaw

Will India and Pakistan make it to the negotiation table?

By IOL South Asia Correspondent

NEW DELHI, October 29 (IslamOnline) - Egged on by the U.S. and E.U., India and Pakistan have begun to tone down their fierce rhetoric and are trying to establish official and unofficial contacts.

The thaw has come following mutual withdrawal of troops from forward positions by India and Pakistan. The thaw is also visible at the SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) meeting in Kathmandu that began Monday, October 28. The atmosphere there is quite relaxed.

The level of acrimony between India and Pakistan has come down considerably, although it is yet to die down completely. Till last week there was some doubt about India’s participation in the SAARC summit scheduled for January next year in Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

Recently the Indian Foreign Ministry announced that Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee would participate in the SAARC summit but would not talk to President Musharraf. Pakistan complained on Monday, October 28, that it had not received any confirmation from New Delhi about the dates of the summit.

In the newly revived peace initiative, there is a considerable element of Track-II, i.e., unofficial, diplomacy. Within the next few days important government officials and policy pundits from Pakistan, India and the United States would gather in Geneva to participate in a workshop called “South Asian Security.”

The Geneva meeting, organized by Pugwash Peace Foundation, would concentrate on confidence-building measures and preventing a possible nuclear conflict.

The Kathmandu and Geneva conferences come following elections in the Indian-administered Kashmir as well as in Pakistan. Although the two sides cling to their old, clichéd positions, there are possibilities of fruitful exchanges at a later stage.

The Pakistani team for Geneva is already in place: Brigadier Naeem Salik, additional secretary Aziz Khan from foreign office, Abdul Basit, Pakistani representative to the UN, former chief of staff Jehangir Karamat, former ambassador to Washington, Maliha Lodhi, former foreign minister Abudus Sattar and former director of military intelligence, Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani.

The Indian team consists of former foreign secretary MK Rasgotra, former principal secretary NN Vohra, Gen. Satish Nambiar, former director of Institute of Strategic and Defense Analyses, Commodore Jasjit Singh.

It seems India has, for a while, dropped its insistence on stopping Pakistani “cross-border” terrorism before initiating some sort of a dialogue with Pakistan.

As America plans to move on to Iraq, it is leaving behind the unfinished job largely to Pakistan to watch over. That somehow denies India a larger role in the region, an aspiration about which India is not too modest.

The West, and willy-nilly the E.U., would like the India-Pakistan front is to be quiet while the action goes on in Iraq. However, India resents being pressured to accommodate Pakistan to suit Western interests.

Indian leaders did not like to be reminded earlier this week by the Danish Prime Minister during an India-E.U. summit to start a dialogue with Pakistan. Denmark is presently the president of E.U.

However, India may not mind such reminders coming from the United States.

 

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