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The Next Steps

The ceasefire should be seen by Pakistan as an opportunity to set its own house in order and to give top priority to tapping its considerable economic potential.

By Najmuddin A. Shaikh | May 2021

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In many ways the ceasefire agreement announced on 25th February could be seen as being a replication of the ceasefire agreement between India and Pakistan of 2003 but there was a big difference. In 2003, both sides had separately, repeat separately, said that they would cease fire. These were unilateral declarations and did not therefore constitute a bilateral agreement. The present announcement says that “In the interest of achieving mutually beneficial and sustainable peace along the borders, the two [Directors General of Military Operations of India and Pakistan] agreed to address each other’s core issues and concerns which have the propensity to disturb peace and lead to violence,”. It is an agreement between DGMOs, but it is in legal terms an agreement between the two states.

On both sides, there have been statements, either official or in briefings to the media, that the agreement was reached after protracted secret negotiations, conducted by emissaries meeting in various locations outside the reach of the media but with assistance from “friends”. The UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, is mentioned most often as the intermediary who facilitated the meetings.

In the approximately 15 months - i.e. from 1st January, 2020 - preceding the agreement, there were some 6000 ceasefire violations and in each case compelled kinetic activity that brought loss of life and property on the LoC and the working boundary. This was in addition to the expense incurred on exchanges of artillery fire or other military activity. Given the large disparity between the defence budgets of the two states, the burden was disproportionately higher for Pakistan.

As part of the background, it is necessary to look at both the disinformation campaign India has been waging over the last 15 years and details of which were revealed some time ago. These created a furor in Pakistan and invited unfavourable media attention for India but died down with little adverse effect on Narendra Modi’s standing in India or with his “friends” in the West and East.

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