South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no. 291

10. 08. 2001

  

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UNITED STATES AND THE AGRA SUMMIT

by Dr. Subhash Kapila

The United States, despite its public disclaimers played an active and key facilitatory role in the holding of the Agra Summit in mid July 2001 between Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee and Pakistan’s military dictator, General Musharraf (the latter declared himself President for the Agra Summit). Prior to the Agra Summit, General Musharraf, publicly claimed that India was forced into a dialogue with Pakistan under pressure from United States . The Pakistani General was not far wrong.

Pointers on the Indian side seemed to substantiate the Pakistani General’s assertion. The sudden reversal of India’s declaratory policy in not entering into a dialogue with Pakistan until cessation of proxy war in J&K and cross-border terrorism was a strong pointer. The timing of Indian Prime Minister’s dialogue offer to Pakistan re-confirmed this suspicion. The Indian Army was re-gaining the upper hand over the Islamic Jehadis, despite the six months of unilateral cease fire imposed by the Indian Prime Minister. There were no domestic compulsions to force India to reverse its policies towards a dialogue with Pakistan. In fact, it was the Pakistani General, who was pleading internationally for a dialogue.

India was not under any international pressure to reverse its policies, at least apparently. Nor was the Indian Prime Minister’s offer for a dialogue i.e. the Agra Summit an act of individual statesmanship. It emerges that the Indian Prime Minister and his close advisers came under United States pressure on various counts to reverse their policy of ‘no-dialogue with Musharraf’.

US Pressures For Agra Summit - The Indicators: The first major indicator that the United States was actively getting involved now on the Kashmir issue was the initiation of a conference which was hosted around April 20, 2001 by the US Department of States, Bureau of Intelligence and Research with support from the Policy Planning Bureau. It was moderated by Walter Anderson, Head of South Asia Division of the Bureau along with Steve Ghitelman. The conference was not open to the media. The list of participants included Howard Schaffer (former US Ambassador to Bangladesh and now with Georgetown University), Teresita Schaffer (former US Ambassador to Sri Lanka and now head of South Asia Program, Center for International and Strategic Studies, Washington), Robert Wirsing (has written extensively on South Asia and on the Siachen issue particularly. Presently with Asia-Pacific Center), Sumit Ganguly (University of Texas, Austin). Suspect from the Indian point of view, were Paula Newberg (UN Foundation), Farooq Kathwari (CEO of Ethan Allen and sponsor of Kashmir Study Group) and Zafar Iqbal Cheema (Oxford University). While the sponsors claimed that it was just an exercise to probe if there was any new thinking on Kashmir, what it does indicate is that the new Bush Administration, under compulsions unknown was getting active on Kashmir. South Asia was not boiling and there were other bigger international challenges for the United States to attend to.

The second indicator centred around the movement of American interlocutors of Pakistani origin like Mansoor Ijaz and Farooq Kathiwari. Obviously both of them had the backing and official sanction of United States. Mansoor Ijaz has claimed in an interview that he was able to persuade the Indian Govt (read PM Vajpayee) to talk to Kashmiri political leaders (read Hurriyat), the Kashmiri militants and also to clear channel for PM Vajpayee and General Musharraf to talk. Both leaders would not have cared to talk to unknown entities, had it not been for the strong US backing of these entities.

The third indicator was the sudden emergence of a host of articles in US foreign policy journals by their noted think-tank professionals, stressing dialogue on Kashmir and advocating various options.

The fourth indicator which was parallel to the above was a sustained campaign in India through think tanks, conferences and mouthing of the US agenda through academia dons and media elite.

The fifth indicator was the flurry of US and Indian Officials to each others capital in the run-up to the Agra Summit. It was the same pattern for Pakistan too.

All the tell tale signs above, (though full material on them may surface later, since the Agra Summit has been a failure) suggest that the United States has played an active role in bringing about the Agra Summit.

United States Interests in Holding of the Agra Summit - Differing Assessments: The moot question is as to why did the new Bush Administration in the United States get so actively involved in the holding of an India-Pakistan dialogue at the commencement of its term. There was no imminent threat of war in South Asia which should have prompted United States to jump-start a process on which both India and Pakistan have irreconcilable fundamental differences.

The most common assessment revolves around the apprehension that Kashmir is a nuclear flash-point. This theory stood debunked by the Kargil War of 1999 where India showed tremendous restraint despite Pakistan’s attempts at nuclear blackmail. Ample space exists in a limited war scenario between a conventional war and its escalation into a nuclear conflict United States needs to recognise this.

A plausible assessment that can be made is that the United States is chary of Pakistan becoming a Talibanised state and it feels that General Musharraf is its best bet in arresting the downslide. To that extent the United States wanted to impart legitimacy to General Musharraf and there could have been no better way than to pressurise India to sit down and talk to him. United States therefore accorded proxy legitimacy to General Musharraf through India.

Another logical assessment is that oil-politics have come to the fore again, adding renewed strategic significance on Pakistan, in relation to Central-Asian oil and its pipelines through Afghanistan and Pakistan to the North Arabian Sea. This again would involve imparting legitimacy to the Pakistani General, who had actively associated with US intelligence agencies during the Afghanistan war against the USSR.

Agra Summit Failure - Lessons for the United States: The failure of the Agra Summit holds important lessons for the United States notwithstanding whether it was actively involved or not in the holding of the Agra Summit.

Conflict negotiation and conflict-resolution of the Western variety do not hold good in the Indo-Pak context. The Indo-Pak differences arising out of the two -nation theory are both historical and civilisational. To argue otherwise is a futile exercise in Western style liberalism.

Track II diplomacy has no place in the resolution of Indo-Pak conflicts. India has institutionalised mechanisms for conduct of its foreign policy and matters of national security. These cannot be by-passed like in Pakistan even by a politically popular leader.

United States may realise that in South Asia, India and Pakistan are two unequal entities politically, militarily and economically. Attempts by external balancing of the two only discredits the external balancer in the eyes of one billion Indians. A natural balance has to prevail in South Asia.

The Indian public opinion cannot be influenced through the media elite, academia dons or the pseudo-liberals of India’s capital. Nor can it be influenced by India’s electronic media with their superficial analyses of sensitive subjects of state. United States has to note that the Indian masses, despite Western projection of poverty and illiteracy are politically conscious and sensitive. They do have strong views on India’s security, Kashmir and Pakistan. No Prime Minister of India can ever disregard this even under external pressure.

Post-Agra Summit-The Road Ahead for the United States: While planning its road map forward of the failed Agra summit, United States needs to bear in mind the experiences of its past diplomacy on the Kashmir issue. United States history of involvement on this issue has been a sorry record . It was heavily tilted in favour of Pakistan due to Cold War strategic compulsions with adverse consequences for the United States in terms of the public opinion of the Indian masses.

The futility of the above stances  were recognised in the recent past by President Bush Sr and belatedly towards the fag end of his second tenure by President Clinton. President Bush Sr while laying down his office strongly maintained that Kashmir was a bi-lateral issue between India and Pakistan and could best be resolved bi-laterally under the Simla Agreement. President Clinton in his eighth year of office came to the same conclusion and went a step further to emphasise that the "Sanctity of the LOC" must be maintained, when forcing Pakistan to withdraw its forces from Kargil. This was a reiteration of one of the most important clauses of the Simla Agreement. Any United States pronouncements of mediation or third party involvement on the Kashmir issue amount to violation of the Simla Agreement i.e. bi-lateralism. To that extent the recent statements of US Secretary of States, General Colin Powell have been strongly condemned in the Indian media as" not only outrageous and unwanted but out of context". In the similar vein the statements of the doyen of American South Asia watchers Prof. Stephen Cohen have drawn ridicule, when he suggested that it is the time for the United States to step-in and that there is a requirement of international verifiers or enforcers.

The sign-posting so far for the United States in terms of the road ahead of the failed Agra Summit points that (1) United States should desist from facilitating any more of Agra style of Summits (2) United States should keep out of any mediatory roles in Indo-Pak conflicts; it will only singe and single out itself thereby have its image diluted in India (3) United States must unequivocally make a declaratory statement on South Asia re-affirming the relevance of Simla Agreement, the bi-lateral process and the imperatives of respecting the sanctity of LAC by Pakistan (what Clinton did) (4) Disabuse its strategic perceptions that Kashmir is a nuclear flash-point.

Conclusion: The history of the involvement of the United States in the conflict -resolution in South Asia, basically the Indo- Pak conflicts has been a poor one. It does not inspire confidence in India. It has failed to produce results because it had been one-sided in favour of Pakistan.

The Agra Summit, which would not have come about without United States involvement and pressure reinforces the above contention. It seems that all American efforts with Pakistan through its diplomats, senior military officials, head of CIA and Track II diplomats, failed to impress Pakistan on the basic issues -Simla Agreement, bilateralism and sanctity of LAC (i.e. cross boarder terrorism), All these stood endorsed by President Bush Sr and President Clinton.

President Bush Jr needs to impress on his Administration officials the imperatives of continuance of  policies that have already been  endorsed, in principle, by the United States. If for nothing else, the imperatives of a growing Indo-US strategic partnership moving from estrangement to engagement of the democracies does not permit disowning of endorsements of the past.

(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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