President Zardari---Forward &
Backward
By B. Raman
An ability for fresh thinking on
Pakistan's relations with India and an inability to
initiate a change of policy in line with the new thinking
have been the defining characteristics of Asif Ali Zardari
ever since he took over the leadership of the Pakistan
People's Party (PPP) after the assassination of Benazir
Bhutto on December 27, 2007.
2. The first sign of his ability for
fresh thinking came in an interview given by him to Karan
Thapar, the TV journalist, (reported on March 1, 2008), in
which he spoke of the need to break with Pakistan's past
policy of linking the issue of bilateral trade with India
with the Kashmir issue so that the continuing deadlock over
the Kashmir issue did not come in the way of the
normalisation of the trade relations between the two
countries. The business class in Pakistan has long been in
favour of delinking the trade issue from the Kashmir issue.
During the second tenure of Benazir as the Prime Minister
(1993-96), this had also been recommended by a committee of
officials of Pakistan's Ministry of Commerce, but it
recommendations remained a non-starter due to strong
opposition not only from the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) of
Nawaz Sharif, but also from the Pakistan Foreign Office.
3. Zardari's interview was followed by
the usual criticism from the political class. An attempt was
made to create an impression as if he was planning to dilute
the traditional Pakistani stand on the Kashmir issue. As a
result, his remarks on the subject were portrayed by his own
party as misinterpreted and any intention to break with the
past policy was vehemently denied.
4. The second sign of his ability for
fresh thinking came with regard to any role for India on the
Afghanistan issue. The policy till now has been to question
the legitimacy of any Indian interests in Afghanistan, to
project the growing Indian economic and other non-military
assistance to Afghanistan as directed against Pakistan, to
oppose India's request for rights of transit trade with
Afghanistan through Pakistan and to rule out any role for
India in any multilateral talks on Afghanistan.
5. In comments made by him before his
election as the President, he spoke of the desirability of a
regional conference on Afghanistan to restore peace in that
country and, in that context, mentioned India as one of the
possible participants in such a conference if it
materialises. His references to Afghanistan came in the
context of what he projects as the need for a multi-pronged
policy in the fight against jihadi terrorism of the
Taliban-Al Qaeda kind emanating from this region.
6. A careful study of his statements
and remarks on Afghanistan and the fight against terrorism
would indicate the following nuances:
- He agrees on the need for close
counter-terrorism co-operation with the US, but wants
this co-operation to be recrafted and re-projected in
such a manner as not to aggravate the growing wave of
jihadi terrorism in Pakistani territory---whether by
Pakistani or foreign groups.
- He understands the need for
effective action against jihadi terrorism in Pakistani
territory, but wants such action to be seen by his
people as the outcome of Pakistani initiatives through
Pakistani forces and capabilities and not as at the
behest of the US with the help of US assistance and with
US operational co-operation. He does not want Pakistani
action against its own terrorists to be perceived by its
people as influenced by the US and as part of any
regional initiative. In his perception, the jihadi
terrorism in Pakistani territory is a Pakistani problem
and not a regional or international problem.
- At the same time, he views the
continuing terrorism of the Taliban and Al Qaeda against
the US and other NATO forces in Afghan territory as not
just an Afghan problem, but as also a regional and even
an international problem. It is also his view that
without the restoration of peace in Afghanistan,
Pakistan's own counter-terrorism efforts in its
territory will not succeed. It is in that context that
he talks of a regional conference on Afghanistan to
discuss various options and is prepared to consider the
participation of India in such a conference.
7. Surprisingly, his remarks on
possible Indian participation in a regional conference on
Afghanistan did not create in Pakistan the kind of criticism
that his remarks on Kashmir did. At the same time, they were
not welcomed either. His ideas have remained without a
follow-up---either positive or negative.
8. The latest sign of his ability for
fresh thinking was seen in a report carried by the "Wall
Street Journal" (October 5, 2008) on a discussion which he
had with one of its journalists. He made a number of
positive observations on relations with India during the
discussion. To quote from the report carried by the paper:
- "India has never been a threat to
Pakistan. I, for one, and our democratic government is
not scared of Indian influence abroad."
- "He spoke of the militant groups
operating in Kashmir as 'terrorists'."
- "Replying to a question, Zardari
said he had no objection to the India-US nuclear
cooperation pact so long as Pakistan is treated 'at
par'.'Why would we begrudge the largest democracy in the
world getting friendly with one of the oldest
democracies,' he asked."
- "While seeking better ties with
New Delhi he noted, 'There is no other economic survival
for nations like us. We have to trade with our
neighbours first.'He imagines Pakistani cement factories
being constructed to provide for India's huge
infrastructure needs, Pakistani textile mills meeting
Indian demand for blue jeans, Pakistani ports being used
to relieve the congestion at Indian ones."
9. In response to criticism from the
PML and some sections of the ruling coalition, the Ministry
of Information, apparently with his approval, stepped in the
next day and ruled out any change in Pakistan's policy
towards India on the Kashmir issue. A statement issued by
Sherry Rehman, the Minister For Information, said: "Pakistan
is committed to the Kashmiri people's right for
self-determination. The President had made it very clear
that the just cause of Kashmir and its struggle for
self-determination has been a consistent central position of
the (ruling) Pakistan People's Party for the last 40 years.
There has been no change in this policy. The President has
never called the legitimate struggle of Kashmiris an
expression of terrorism, nor has he downplayed the
sufferings of the Kashmiris. All his statements on India
should be viewed in the context of Pakistan's current
bilateral relations with that country. The Government is
firmly committed to extending moral and diplomatic support
to the just cause of Kashmiris for their right of
self-determination".
10. What to make of this flip-flop? It
would be incorrect to interpret it as indicative of his
insincerity. What it does indicate is that while his
instincts in relation to India seem to be refreshingly
different from those of his predecessors----even from those
of Benazir who instigated terrorism in Kashmir when she was
the Prime Minister---- his grasp of the ground realities in
Pakistan is weak. The ground realities are determined by
four entrenched mindsets, which have always been opposing
any fresh thinking on the relations with India. These
entrenched mindsets are those of the Army, the intelligence
community, the Foreign Office and sections of the political
class with a close nexus to the Army and the intelligence
community.
11. Unless these entrenched mindsets
are made to change, new thinking alone, however welcome,
will remain just loud-thinking without any follow-up action.
To be able to translate any new thinking into action,
Zardari has tro stabilise his position as the President,
acquire a popular image and acquire the ability to enforce
his will on these entrenched mindsets. No previous political
leader of Pakistan was able to acquire such an ability and
had to ultimately bow to pressure from the Army, the
intelligence community and the Foreign Office.
12. In India too, we have had such
entrenched mindsets in the Army, the intelligence community
and the Foreign Office. It goes to the credit of Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh that he has gradually been able to
bring about a change in these mindsets whether in relation
to India's ties with Pakistan or the US----though not yet in
relation to China.
13. Zardari has been the President
hardly for a month and it is too early to say whether he
would be able to bring about such a change in the mindsets.
India has to keep patience with him without expecting quick
policy changes. At the same time, it should not lower its
guard till the ultimate reality emerges---- is it
refreshingly new or more of the same as seen in the past?
14. The current position in Pakistan is
complicated by the emergence of a fourth important power
---- Al Qaeda. The future of Pakistan is going to be
determined by a configuration of four As---Allah, the Army,
America and Al Qaeda. The outcome of the fight between the
Army and America on the one side and Al Qaeda on the other
will determine whether Zardari's tenure will see a change
for the better or the worse in Pakistan.
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat,
Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)