By Sant Kumar Sharma
Jammu, December 10: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has said that Jammu and Kashmir “dispute’’ can be solved only through a dialogue. The statement was made on Thursday at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad. It seems like an admission on his part that Pakistan has failed to wrest away J&K from India by force despite 1947-48, 1965 and 1999 Kargil wars. To that extent, a dialogue that leads to territories of J&K illegally in possession of Pakistan being vacated is welcome.
He also said that any meaningful engagement with the current government in Delhi headed by BJP’s Narendra Modi “was not possible because of its religious nationalism’’. That is an absurd statement, to say the least, as India is a secular democracy unlike Pakistan which is an Islamic Republic, meant to have dominance of Islam in every facet of society.
Leading Pakistan newspaper Dawn quoted Imran Khan as saying that South Asia has been held back by political differences and conflicts and listed the Kashmir dispute as the “biggest problem” holding the region back. Again, for that, Pakistan itself is to blame as it has done nothing to stop terrorism emanating from its soil against India. South Asia earlier had an effective forum like South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) which is now defunct as Pakistan had reduced it to a forum meant for scoring browny points against India.
Instead of allowing it to function like a multi-lateral forum, Pakistan had reduced it as an international forum for heaping abuse on India. This had led to an unfortunate scenario where India almost stopped participating in any SAARC deliberations. Today, SAARC, for all practical purposes, is a dead horse, which Pakistan keeps on flogging every now and then.
Imran needs to look within and realise that it is Financial Action Task Force which has put it on the greylist for past over three years. Time and again, FATF has asked Pakistan to improve its record pertaining to terror financing, money laundering and such other pernicious activities. Its patronage of groups like Lashkar e Taiyyeba (LeT) and Jaish e Mohammad (JeM) is responsible for the FATF action and not some partisan report.
Incidentally, LeT was responsible for orchestrating the 26/11/2008 Mumbai terrorist attack and till date, those responsible for it have not been put behind bars. JeM led by Maulana Masood Azhar is responsible for the current state of India-Pakistan relations as it was responsible for February 2019 Pulwama killings. Imran knows well that no dialogue with India is possible as long as it continues to treat men like LeT’s Hafiz Saeed, JeM’s Masood and Hizbul Majahideen’s Syed Salahuddin as its proxy terror assets.
It was amusing to watch Imran delivering sermons on peace and say that progress in relations between Pakistan and India had been halted because his government had to deal with RSS’s extremist ideology currently dominating Delhi. “Meaningful negotiations with India are impossible as long as the government there is inspired by this ideology,” he said, hoping that one day India could have a rational government with which resolution of disputes could be sought through logical and sane discussions.
The party in power, the BJP, was chosen by the people of India in 2014 as also in 2019. Imran speaking loosely about the BJP amounts to interfering with the internal politics of India which is totally uncalled for. India has no such intentions to influence the interal politics of Pakistan. It does not have any preference for PPP led by Bilawal Bhutto, or PML-N led by Nawaz Sharif and his daughter, or Imran’s PTI.
On the brink of economic ruin, Pakistan wants better ties with India. In turn, India has no reason to pursue hostility towards Pakistan if it stops using terror proxies to keep us off-balance. For long, India has pursued a fairly transparent policy when it declared that terror and talks can’t go together. Of course, there are talks between the two sides behind the curtains but they can start openly only after Pakistan abjures all terror against India. That is a tall task for Imran.