Rediff Navigator News

Ignore Pak sabre-rattling, focus on peace says J N Dixit

India should remain firm in its commitment to peace and normalisation, negative activities and statements from Pakistan notwithstanding, according to former foreign secretary J N Dixit.

''It is for Pakistan to decide how long it can ensure its stability and development with an adversary relationship with India,'' Dixit, who also served as a former Indian high commissioner to Pakistan, said.

Pointing out that this was both a ''practical and logical'' approach to deal with the present predicament in Indo-Pak relations, he cautioned that India must remain alert about Pakistan's attempts to weaken or fragment it.''

Providing ''an overview of Indo-Pak relations,'' Dixit says: ''In the long run the elemental fact of geography cannot be wished away. Even if it takes time and even if there are negative activities and statements from Pakistan, india's commitment to peace and normalisation should remain firm.''

Dixit's observations assume additional significance as they come on the eve of the resumption of the stalled foreign secretary-level talks between the two countries in New Delhi. Pakistan Foreign Secretary Shamshad Ahmed will arrive on March 27 for talks with his Indian counterpart Salman Haider.

The foreign secretary talks will prepare the groundwork for the foreign ministers's encounter on April 7 during the NonAligned Movement ministerial meeting. External Affairs Minister Inder Kumar Gujral and his Pakistani counterpart Gohar Ayub Khan are expected to discuss the entire gamut of bilateral relations at their meeting.

For the present, Dixit says the inevitable choice is that India should remain firm in maintaining its cohesion, unity and territorial integrity while managing the adversary relationship in a rational manner to the extent possible, ensuring that Pakistan does not cross the threshold which might lead to war.

The former foreign secretary has rejected:

  • decisive and controlled military action against Pakistan

    reacting with a reprisal mindset initiating subversive activities against Pakistan of the type which it has been indulging in against India and

  • accepting Pakistan's demands on Kashmir and other issues, as the approaches to be adopted vis-a-vis Pakistan.

    Dixit also notes that there were subordinate strains of suggestions like amending the Constitution, abolishing the special status of Kashmir, changing the demography of Kashmir, and so on.

    He says, to the world at large, after the experiences in Bosnia and Somalia, drastic and violence-tinged solutions would not be acceptable nor would they conform to the basic principles of India's foreign policy or its political and developmental interests.

    Dixit also notes that important Western powers by their policies based on their own interest have affected Indo-Pak relations adversely. The sub-continent, specially the Indian part, puzzles the West.

    Meanwhile, the two foreign secretaries will have talks lasting four days, in a changed political atmosphere in both countries. Expectations are high among people on both sides of the border that the dialogue will lead to normalisation of relations between the two neighbours.

    It was in January 1994 that the foreign secretaries of the two countries met last. Since then, there have been no official level talks between the two countries with tension mounting between them on a number of issues.

    The resumption of talks comes close on the heels of this week's extraordinary summit of the Organisation of Islamic Conference in Islamabad and Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda's visit to Russia.

    At the OIC summit, Pakistan President Farooq Leghari promised his country's support to the Kashmiri separatists. The OIC also passed a resolution, condemning India and appreciating Pakistan's efforts to resolve the Kashmir issue.

    Though the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress have reacted sharply to Leghari's remarks, coming as they do on the eve of the Indo-Pak dialogue, New Delhi has officially chosen to ignore the statement and the OIC resolution.

    Deve Gowda, who is at present in Moscow, has secured a categorical assurance from Russian President Boris Yeltsin that his country would not supply arms to Pakistan.

    While Pakistan has been insisting that the foreign secretary- level talks should cover all issues, including what it calls the core issue of Kashmir, India feels that differences on one single issue should not be allowed to come in the way of normalisation of relations.

    Indian diplomats are of the view that there is a tremendous scope for co-operation between the two countries in the field of trade and culture.

    The Indian viewpoint is that it would be in the interest of both India and Pakistan not to get bogged down on the Kashmir issue and try to make progress in other areas.

    The foreign secretary talks are being resumed just about two months after Sharief came to power in Pakistan with a landslide victory. The Pakistani premier, during his election rallies, promised to make efforts to improve relations with India.

    Pakistani watchers believe the new Pak government's policy on India appears to be more pragmatic and cohesive compared to the one pursued by former prime minister Benazir Bhutto when relations between the two countries touched their lowest ebb.

    In the past few days, both India and Pakistan have made some friendly gestures in order to create a congenial atmosphere for the talks.

    Pakistan released 38 Indian children who were detained in Karachi for three years for straying in Pak waters while fishing.

    India, on its part, announced unilateral concessions to Pakistan in visa-related matters in keeping with New Delhi's policy of encouraging people-to-people contact.

  • Tell us what you think of this report
    E-mail


    Home | News | Business | Sports | Movies | Chat
    Travel | Planet X | Freedom | Computers
    Feedback

    Copyright 1997 Rediff On The Net
    All rights reserved