South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no.281

19. 07. 2001

  

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Agra Summit : failure dissected

by Dr. Subhash Kapila

This paper may be read in conjunction with the following papers of the author:

1. India’s Invitation to Gen. Musharraf: A policy blunder  Paper No. 247

2. India Pakistan Agra Summit: The Imponderables Paper No. 267

3. Pakistan’s one point agenda for Agra summit  Paper No. 270

The Agra Summit between Prime minister Vajpayee and President Musharraf has come and gone.  It was a summit meeting which had been over analysed in the run up to the event and over hyped by the Indian electronic media with wild over exaggeration.

The Agra summit has been a failure despite whatever spin officially put forward by India and Pakistan, the day after.  Whether it is termed as inconclusive or as the beginning of a process of negotiations as both Foreign ministers indulged in damage control, the significant point that stands out is that the differences between India and Pakistan remain irreconcilable on fundamental issues.

The aim of this paper is not to dwell and highlight what already stands stated in the Indian and Pak media but to address some basic points in a perspective mode.

Jammu & Kashmir Issue Reconcilable? : The J&K issue in terms of declared principled stand of India and Pakistan are irreconcilable.  Pakistan relentlessly exhibited its one point agenda on J&K at the Agra summit.  That it did so was no surprise (See paper 247 referred to in the beginning) and that is why India’s unconditional invitation to President Musharraf was analysed as a policy blunder.  Pakistan in any future summit meetings or official level talks is highly unlikely to budge from this stance.  Its obduracy to any change will be further strengthened by what it demonstrated and achieved at Agra.  Similarly, it will be suicidal for any Indian political leader to maintain that the J&K issue is negotiable.  The J&K issue is therefore irreconcilable, more so, when Pakistan is adamant that other contentious issues including CBMs are peripheral and that the J&K must be discussed first.

Pakistan’s Obduracy Sustained by India’s Chimerical Stands on J&K Issue -India Needs to be Unambiguous: Pakistan’s obduracy on the issue to a great extent has been fuelled and sustained by India’s chimerical attitude and approach on the J&K issue. India’s political leaders, officials and particularly India’s drawing room liberals and Indian media elite through their utterances and discussions in seminars and policy analyses in the media have given a sense to Pakistan that India is ready to negotiate and discuss the J&K issue.  India’s Track II diplomacy, especially through Pakistani Americans by the PMO, has been a major culprit.  India has to come out politically and officially that J&K question is unambiguously non negotiable.  The unanimous special resolution of the Parliament in 1993 declared it so.  It is ironic that the ruling party i.e. The Bharathiya Janata Party should have allowed its government to even negotiate on this subject.  India’s resolve should be shown upfront on this issue and not behind the scenes.  India’s liberal fraternity does not represent the feelings of the masses and recollect the 1998 nuclear test and its aftermath.

Proxy War and Cross Border Terrorism: India failed to convince Pakistan on this issue and elicit responses that logically should have come from a government claiming itself as moderate Islamic and responsible.  The Pakistan President claimed that the proxy war sponsored by Pakistan and the Islamic Jehadi terrorists activity in J&K is that of "freedom fighters." The Pakistani Foreign minister made the absurd claim that there was no "cross border terrorism" and that India has not raised the issue of "cross LAC terrorism" and in any case the LOC is not the international border between Pakistan and India.  Pakistan has thus made it abundantly clear that it will not discuss the issue.

Conclusion: The Agra summit has been a failure and on that score there should be no doubt.  That it was inconclusive is borne by the fact that both sides could not arrive at a joint declaration with their irreconcilable positions.

The summit can neither be realistically termed as the beginning of a process of negotiation as the stand of both the countries was non negotiable.

The major concern of the international community related to both countries arriving at some "Nuclear risk reduction" initiatives to pre-empt South Asia featuring as a nuclear flash point.  Pakistan peremptorily dismissed this subject at the Agra summit as a peripheral issue.  In any case it is wrong for the international community to assess Kashmir as a nuclear flash point.

The Agra summit sees Pakistan’s President Musharraf in Pakistan’s perceptions as a victor.  He stood up to India and maintained its stand on J&K and proxy war as non negotiable.  His standing (as a Mohajir) in Pakistan’s army is reinforced and his image as a political leader in the context of the expected General elections has soared.

The summit should be a soul-searching experience for India’s political leaders and policy makers.  India needs to come out unambiguously and forcefully that Kashmir is non negotiable and that it is neither a "dispute" nor an "issue"  India should desist from a semantic exercise on this topic.  It should assert that any future meetings can only concentrate on issues that can contribute to peace and stability in south Asia.

Lastly, India has to make it clear to the international community that 1. Jammu & Kashmir topic is non negotiable  2. India can withstand Pakistani blackmail of proxy war in J&K and Islamic Jihad all over India.  3. India is strong enough to Call the Pakistani bluff of nuclear blackmail.

The international community and particularly the United States has created the "Pakistani Tiger" and they should know what it is to ride a tiger.

(Dr. Subhash Kapila is an International Relations and Strategic Affairs analyst.  He can be reached on e-mail for discussion at esdecom@vsnl.com)

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