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Neighbours Coming Closer

Security perceptions are the main gridlock. Vested interests have been built around it.

By Santosh Kumar | May 2021

Neighbours

Let me begin with acknowledging the affection that I, as an Indian, have received from Pakistanis. There is much that is similar in our ethnicity, history, language, and culture that makes me feel at home with them. My heart being in the right place, I hope I can speak my mind without being misconstrued.

A road map for closer Indo-Pak relations presumes that they are a low hanging fruit, ripe for plucking if only we follow the correct route. Nothing can be farther from the truth. Let us look at some formidable road blocks.

An overarching problem is the security syndromes of the two countries. Pakistan’s security concerns about India revolve around several themes. Firstly, that India is not reconciled to the partition and is out to undo Pakistan. Actually, Indian leaders not only came around to accepting the British proposal but realized its benefits. India currently has enough problems of its own for it to take on new ones. Its interests lie in the status quo on the territorial identity of the two countries.

It is Pakistan which wants a change. A constant refrain is that there can be no peace without settling the ‘core’ Kashmir issue. Having failed to force a military solution, it now pins hopes on subversion combined with assertive diplomacy. This strategy only hardens the Indian government’s position. And it fears political harakiri,should it be seen as having given in. It is hard to imagine how talks can arrive at a solution that will satisfy both.

Another popular narrative holds India responsible for creating Bangladesh. The fact of the matter is that Bangladesh was created by the excesses of the Pakistan military in what was then East Pakistan, though India, under severe stress from a massive refugee influx, did intervene militarily in support of Bengali resistance. India’s protection and return of Pakistani POWs and its generosity in the Simla Agreement notwithstanding, Pakistan was soon fed on revanchist sentiment, especially the Pakistan military. Scars from that episode have yet to be fully healed.

Terrorism is perhaps the biggest security concern. India’s view is that the Pakistan ‘deep state’ sponsors terrorists not only in Jammu and Kashmir but also in other parts of India. That is why Pakistan drags its feet on punishing those responsible or handing them over for trial in India. Pakistan’s allegations on Indian involvement in Balochistan are seen as an obfuscation. Linkages between the issues of terrorism and Kashmir, hinted at by Pakistan’s leaders from time to time, have confirmed Indian suspicions.

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Santosh-Kumar

Santosh Kumar has served as Indian Ambassador to South Africa, South Korea and Yemen. He also held ambassadorial rank as DCM in the Indian Mission to the European Union. He has worked as Consul General in Frankfurt and has held senior diplomatic assignments in China, Pakistan, Belgium and Hong Kong.

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