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Getting Ready for ‘Bus Diplomacy’

Beena Sarwar February 19, 1999

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listing 16-32   1 2 3

#19 Posted by RanaRansher on March 2, 1999 12:10:23 pm
re: Ras regarding India`s problem and India`s royal mess (alone !!!!)

There you go again double-speak a la the politicians.

-You claim Kashmir is India`s problem alone. A mess created by India alone. yet all your past, present and future politicians (read recent Newsline) have Kashmir on top of their agenda. THey `officially` vehemontly oppose India`s `official` stance on Kashmir being an integral part of India. Something I realise too, since I can`t even visit Kashmir because of ground reality.
- Pakistan occupied part of Kashmir after war. What about POK ?
- Pak has sent in all kinds of militants, mercenaries, terrorists, murderers for the last 20 years. Now even Pak politicians don`t deny this. Are you still denying this ? Just go over the groups operating in Kashmir and see how many Pakistan is responsible for ?
Your answer to this is Pakistan is not capable of controlling them ?????? Whose problem is that ?
- Pakistan `officially` shells parts of Kashmir. Villages like Kargil have been reduced to rubble. They are bombing Kashmiri Muslim civilians.
Can Pakistan control this ? It is their army.

Oh yeah the army doesn`t really listen if THEY don`t feel like.

Ras you are not making coherent arguments. They Don`t even merit a discussion. That BTW has been the problem so far. Both sides have made ridiculous arguments which do not even merit discussion.

You obviously have a problem with the LOC (evident from your other replies). IT has nothing to do with Kashmiris (Hindu/Sikh or Muslim)

I detest ethnic cleansing on the basis of religion. I refuse to inherit a dirty ideology of religious separatism that has guided Indo-Pak affairs so far.
In this regard you should really read up on Dr. Farooq Abdullah. He has consistently been the lone champion of the Kashmiri self-determination cause. And had also made a lot of headway in this regard, up until militancy in the `80s took on a distinct Islamist flavour (killing of Kashmiri non-Muslims was not always the trend ). Till then they were asking for and getting more autonomy. Read up on this regard also. he realizes that to be an independant country he needs to have diplomatic ties with India and Pakistan.

We should start by being a little more honest and candid in our replies.

regards


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#18 Posted by Ras Siddiqui on March 2, 1999 2:24:24 am

RE: Mohajir

No mention of the LOC appears to have been made
in any of the newspaper reports that I have read
thus far on Moynihan views. Could you let us
know where you read this?

Ras

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#17 Posted by mohajir on March 1, 1999 5:25:29 pm


WASHINGTON, Feb 28: A leading US senator has suggested the division of Kashmir at LOC (Line of Control) into Pakistan and India as the end solution to the dispute between the two nuclear neighbours.

Democratic Senator Daniel P. Moynihan, a one time ambassador to India and who will be retiring from Senate in 2000 possibly to be replaced by first lady Hillary Clinton, was quoted by the Washington Post on Sunday saying: ``May be now at last they (India and Pakistan) will look at Kashmir and say; Divide it up at LOC and be done with it.``

Many think tanks and scholars here believe this is the only way to end the 50-year old problem as none of the two countries was in a position to militarily force a solution.

Moynihan was quoted as saying: ``Now that this conflict (Kashmir) can escalate and it`s not confined to the hills anymore, it could

lead to nuclear war, which is a different thing altogether --

annihilation. May be now at last they will look at Kashmir and say;

Divide it up and be done with it.``

The Post article made a comparison of the US role in Kosovo and

Kashmir and said: ``Just as high and mighty diplomacy was taking a

fall at an ancient castle in France (over Kosovo), a humbler peace

offensive was opening at a bus terminal in India. There is a world of

differences between the fiasco over Kosovo and the modest move

toward new relations between India and Pakistan...``

It said the US government has no such high visibility in the bus

diplomacy that took Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee over

the border and into the welcoming embrace of Pakistani Prime

Minister Nawaz Sharif.

``But we are there, behind the scenes. Our concerns about

one-sixth of the

world`s population have intensified since both countries exploded

nuclear bombs

in May 1998. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott has had

eight rounds of

talks with the two sides, urging them to sign the Comprehensive

Test Ban Treaty

and show other signs of nuclear responsibility.``

It said Democratic congressman Jim McDermott was in New Delhi

talking with

Vajpayee just before the historic bus ride. McDermott thinks that

Indians and

Pakistanis are, at long last, talking about their differences because

their entrance

into the world`s nuclear club ``frightened them as much as it

frightened the rest of

the world.``

``Peace would mean doing something about the disputed territory of

Kashmir ...

Pakistan points to an enormous Indian army presence as the

stumbling block to

peace. India charges Pakistan with covertly financing terrorist and

separatist

organizations that make daily life a hell in the area`s beautiful

mountains. On the

weekend that Vajpayee took the bus, violent protests in Kashmir

left two dozen dead.``

Indians and Pakistanis make no bones about their mutual contempt.

Indians think

their neighbours are mad Muslim militarists; Pakistanis see Indians

as haughty Hindu hypocrites.

Senator Chuck Hagel, who serves on the Committee on Foreign

Relations, has a

rule in his office: He will not permit the two ambassadors to talk

about each

others` countries. ``They go on forever,`` he says.

All times are CT (US)

ne



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#16 Posted by ferozk on February 26, 1999 4:25:13 pm
Re: Rana Ransher # 15

Before I begin, I must offer my apolgises to you Rana. That reference about Truman-MacArthur was just a tangent...that is different story for another day!

As to your point about Kasmmir being a part of India, I wrote a reply on that issue under Rohan`s article. I agree that both sides have an acute case of tunnel myopia on this issue. Right now both India and Pakistan have to decide whether to transform the Line of Control into a fixed border or to grant Kashmir independence. It is highly unlikely that Kashmir will be returned to its pre-partition status in either nation`s favor.

As an aside to Ras, I think the ball is neither in India`s court nor Pakistan`s for that matter. I think that we both have dropped and lost the ball and now no one knows the hell it is! :)

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#15 Posted by Ras Siddiqui on February 25, 1999 11:16:39 pm

Re: Rana Reply # 13

I do claim to be naive but I believe
that the following comment shows an uncalled for
knee jerk reaction:

``You said, ``let Indians be rest assured that this visit by the Indian PM would NOT have taken place
WITHOUT the approval and SUPPORT of the people in uniform in Pakistan.`` What is that supposed to mean ? Is that a threat ?``

What I meant was quite the opposite in fact.
I believe that the Pakistan army also wants to
give this Peace Bus a chance.
As you wrote, there are several groups operating
in Kashmir and what I was hinting at was that
I doubt that Pakistan can fully control any of them.
An finally on my comment that the ball is in India`s court, there is absolutely nothing new
there. Kashmir is India`s problem and a Pakistani
aspiration at best. And in the end, besides the
additional suffering caused to the Indian and Pakistani masses due to the wasteful spending
on arms, the Kashmiris want this nightmare to end
(one cannot ignore the Hindu Pandits in our discussion here). India needs to settle this issue
with either the Kashmiris and/or the Pakistanis.
What a royal mess you have created there (Pakistanis are great in that department too).
Army occupation does not an ``integral part`` make.
Autonomy, Independence or LOC adjustment, the
problem is not going away.

Ras

PS: My naive vested interest is to see an end to this problem in a peaceful manner, because from
this distance it appears that India, Pakistan and
the Kashmiris are not the only party in this miserable picture.

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#14 Posted by RanaRansher on February 24, 1999 9:59:00 pm
re: Ferozek
Bhraa ji tussi thaand raakho. I mean to cause no trouble or heart ache.

I consider you a Gyaani in these matters and hence solicited your opinion. I raised the military issue (among others) to point out, that to say `Indo-Pak relations hinge on Kashmir and Kashmir`s solution lies fairly in India`s court` is being tunnel visioned. This, in my opinion, has been Paks official stand for a while. Mind you, I am not even maintaining India`s official stand of `Kashmir is an integral part of India`. Simply because I believe ground reality prevents me (an Indian) from even visiting Kashmir.
I am surely not trying to get into an Indo-Pak penis contest comparing the relative democratization (that would make another interesting debate )

Regarding the pomp and show in most state sposored stuff. India is still nauseatingly Angrez. All the ceremonies (Republic Day Parade and stuff) are left overs of the Angrez and now the kala Angrez touts it.

regards

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#13 Posted by ferozk on February 24, 1999 6:09:43 pm
Re: Rana Ransher # 13

My friend, way are you causing me a heart ache?

I still to this day think Harry Truman, whom I admire as a president, was wrong in firing General Douglas MacArthur, my one of favorite battlefield commanders, but then again that is another story....

I agree with you, those remarks and the actions of the military brass were in poor taste and as military men, they should have respected the chain of command. My friend, what is done is done. Do not let that one incident distract you from what actually happened. Rana, my friend, the unquestioning obedience of the military towards the democratically elected leadership is crucial, as you point out, but as I have repeatedly pointed out, Pakistan is not a democracy! The ancien regime of yesterday still lingers in the mindsets of many of key political participants.

Indian military has a half a century`s worth of democratic tradition behind it and ours, the Pakistani military, has a mere ten years of democracy behind it. This would explain my attitude, which you refered to as ``lightly``, but I assure you it is far from that! Rana, do not be too hasty to judge us against a standard which even we do not claim to have attained!

Re: Kant Patel # 12

Interesting points and well taken!

To return the compliment, I was bemused that we, Pakistanis and Indians, still attache a great deal of importance to ceremonies and pomp and circumtance. I grant you the argument that this was an offical visit. Could it not be an offical visit without the color guard or the 21 gun salute? It is time we moved beyond symbolism and gestures in our mutual relations.

As to your concerns about the Pakistani military`s response to Nawaz Sharif, you raised some critical concerns which need to addressed. I have friends who are in the military and I can tell you personally that compared to our Pakistani politicans, they are a lot more wiser and saner! Now, if you want to discuss their tact or subtlety, that is a different story.... :)

Pakistan is like Alice in the Wonderland...things do have not to make sense! It is like that Budweiser beer commerical, ``why ask why?``

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#12 Posted by RanaRansher on February 24, 1999 3:55:32 pm
re: Ferozk

Your points are well taken. However, I was trying to point out that NO DEMOCRACY in the world should take this kind of flagrant violation of authority lightly. Ultimately, it comes back to haunt you. You seem to take it rather lightly, though.
Your point about ``sources`` for comments is also well taken.

re: Ras
I am sorry, but your whole view on Indo-Pak issues is, at best, naive.
With regards to the massacres in Kashmir, I am not trying to blame anything on Pakistan. However, I would like to point out that you need to take your blinkers off and look at the big picture. Stands like yours, on either side of the border (Ooops LOC !, I love doing that) are what has led to the current situation.

You say the ball is in India`s court. You offer no explanation for that. Yet you completely chose to ignore the following facts:
- There are people on either side who would rather see every person from across the border dead than talk to them. (Bal Thakre who violently tried to prevent the Cricket team from playing, Jamaat violently protesting against Vajpayees visit)

- Within Kashmir there is no united front. There are:
1. groups that want more autonomy within India (Sheikh Abdullah`s National Front which holds democratic elections)
2. groups that want to secede to Pakistan
3. groups that want an independant Kashmir (not Islamic)
4. groups that want an independant Islamic Kashmir (all infidels out !)
5. groups that want an end to militancy at ALL COSTS
6. Pan-Islamic mercenaries (foriegners from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sudan, Bosnia, Jordan, etc.) that just want to wage JIHAD and kill infidels, with no real idea of what the future of Kashmir should be.

FOrget the fronts within Kashmir. I was just trying to point out that even within Pakistan there doesn`t seem to be one opinion of what should happen to Kashmir, or for that matter POK.
Within India there isn`t one either. However, Vajpayee was trying to answer that on behalf of India by thumbing his nose at his own co-alition members (Shiv Sena, RSS) and proceeding to Pakistan for this trip.
What disturbed me about Pakistan was not the Jamaatis (I expected that ) but the reaction from the Armed Forces. What amazed me even more was your support (almost admiration really) for their blatant disregard of authority and institutions.

You said, ``let Indians be rest assured that this visit by the Indian PM would NOT have taken place WITHOUT the approval and SUPPORT of the people in uniform in Pakistan.``
What is that supposed to mean ? Is that a threat ?
back to the same question ``is it an army with a state or a state with an army``. Little wonder that the army has taken over so many times.

To say the ball is in Indias court is trivializing the whole issue. What about the voice of Kashmiris ? DO they matter at all ?
I would be all ears if you could actually explain how the ball is in India`s court sans the rhetoric.

regards

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#11 Posted by Ras Siddiqui on February 23, 1999 10:26:48 pm

RE: Reply #: 7 RanaRansher

Rana Sahib,
first of all it is difficult to say that Pakistanis are somehow responsible for the murder of the 22 Hindus in Jammu. I would like to remind you that the Pakistan cannot even control such killings of a sectarian nature in Pakistani Punjab. How can Pakistanis stop these killings across the LOC?

On the issue of the Service Chiefs not meeting
Vajpayee Ji at the border, let Indians be rest
assured that this visit by the Indian PM would
NOT have taken place WITHOUT the approval and
SUPPORT of the people in uniform in
Pakistan.

I still say that ``The ball to peace is firmly in India`s court (and has been for a while).``
But what the final shape of this peace will be
is anyone`s guess. Lets give ourselves some time
(at least 6 months)to think this over. If
Tendulkar can be clean bowled for a duck on the
first ball of a cricket match, miracles are
possible even when they may appear impossible.

Ras

PS: I strongly condemn the killings of the 22
fellow human beings.

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#10 Posted by ferozk on February 23, 1999 7:19:09 pm
Re: Rana Ransher #9

First of all, please accept my sincere apologises for the unfortuneate incident in Kashmir.

If you would have read the TheNews articles, the service chiefs did attend the ceremony at the Lahore Governor`s residence and were formally presented to the Indian Prime Minister. Their refusal to attend the border ceremonies was not, and should not, be taken as a rebuke of Vajaypee`s visit. Yes, their comments were regretable and should not have been uttered.

There was a slight misunderstanding on the nature of the Vajaypee`s visit. Was it a formal visit or an informal one? Protocol dictates that if the visit is informal, the service chiefs do not have to be present and even in formal situations, the presense of the military brass is highly unusual. In such cases, the military is represented through the proper cabinet minister. Even in the United States, an arriving head of state government is not greeted by the Joint Chiefs, but later in a formal setting such as the White House reception etc.

As to the rest of your queries, I would have to say NS is in charge, but the military is too tradition bound. Besides, do you really know if a flag officer said those words, or someone was ``attributed`` as saying those words. In politics, if I were you, I would not pay too much attention to what some ``unidentified source`` said. Unless you have the name of the officer responsible for saying those words, this just heresay.

The military is not interested in taking over the country. It has the common sense to stay away from the present mess.

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#9 Posted by RanaRansher on February 23, 1999 12:56:41 pm
re: Ferozk
I am referring to a new report (News International) which said that the heads of the 3 armed forces refused to abide by Nawaz Sharif`s order that they join him in welcoming the Indian PM at Wagah Border. THe report said that they refused to salute a PM from an ENEMY country and instead attended a banquet given by Sartaj Aziz for the Chinese Defense Minister. The fact that Vajpayee was coming on a `peace` mission was irrelevant.
The fact that they may be wagging a finger at Nawaz Sharif for whatever reasons is besides the point. There message is loud and clear for the takers. NS is the C-in-C isn`t he ? You may not like him, but can you defy authority like that ? Who is in-charge afterall ? Is there anybody in-charge ? Why doesn`t the army just take over ?
And why does Vajpayee even bother wasting his time with someone who is obviously not in-charge.

Meanwhile in Kashmir. Terrorists go on a killing spree in protest to Nawaz`s `betrayal` by talking to Vajpayee. Sheikh Abdullah is busy trying to stop this so talks can go on.

Daaaacter saab ab aap bataayen whose court the ball is in.

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#8 Posted by ferozk on February 22, 1999 6:07:38 pm
Re: Rana Ransher Post # 7

Just who is the CinC of Pakistani armed forces?
Are you talking about Nawaz Sharif or the Chief of Army Staff?

If it is the former, the military might be giving him the proverbial finger for getting it involved in the extra-judical military court crisis in Sind. The Supereme Court of Pakistan just invalidated that idea and the army did not like being caught with its dicks hanging in the wind. That high court decison was a slap in the face of the military and the military in Pakistan rarely admits that it was wrong. This was a public rebuke and there are lot of rankled people in khaki at the present time.

Other than that, I agree with you: keep the numbnuts in check and lets hear what the moderates have to say!

Did you read the latest pronouncements from the meeting: same old words, different day and a different time! Do not pay any attention to the western media either, because these idiots have no idea what they are talking about either!

For a comprehensive understanding into Indo-Pak relations, I would suggest a classic: Alice in Wonderland. Read the chapter on Mad Hatter`s Party and you`ll see the absurdity of this coeur-a-coeur. While you are reading that, I would suggest listening to Jefferson Airplane`s White Rabbit in the background!

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#7 Posted by RanaRansher on February 22, 1999 4:28:58 pm
re: RAS
You say,``The ball to peace is firmly in India`s court (and has been for a while).``

yet, when Vajpayee makes a friendly move towards peace who protests the loudest and most violently.
Hindus gunned down in Jammu. Pak Armed forces chiefs refuse to come to welcome Vajpayee inspite of their C-in-C ORDERING them to do so. I wonder who controls the Nuclear bombs.
Come on, please....you need a more honest and candid picture of your own nation. The above is the same old story which nobody believes anyway. Sounds more like an army with a nation rather than the other way around.
Little wonder that the Bal Thackreys of the world reach where they do.
If you keep letting the extreme right wings marginalize the politics, the moderates will have no choices left. Deja VU.

I still think a `Death match` is the only way out. Will please everybody.


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#6 Posted by RanaRansher on February 22, 1999 12:21:32 pm
Did you guys check out the NYTImes summarizing India-Pakistan relations for the last 50 years. Depressing, but true.
Moves like these (bus diplomacy) CAN ONLY be GOOD for Indo-Pak relations. They don`t necessazrily have to be effective in fixing real problems but they can never be detrimental.
However, on either side of the border (ooops LOC !) there are a lot of extremists who would rather see a war of the last-man-standing nature.

I think we should start an Indo-Pak `Death Match Contest` a la MTV. people from either side can volunteer to participate in a no-holds-barred all out Death Match. You can sell tickets for this. The passion extremists and right wingers waste on the streets while getting pummeled by their own policeman can be channelled to become a big revenue generator.
FOrget slimy proxy wars and all out Nuclear wars. Lets start this Death Match contest. It will be a positive step. If anybody has an axe to grind they can volunteer for this contest.


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#5 Posted by OMAR1974 on February 22, 1999 2:58:37 am
Diplomacy GOOD

War BAAAD

4 Legs GOOD

2 Legs BAAD

Baaaaa!

OMAR1974



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#4 Posted by Ras Siddiqui on February 21, 1999 1:28:09 am

A well written background of the current style
of diplomacy. Loved the ``Basant`` backdrop.
One can only hope that something concrete
comes out of all this and that its not all
just for the sake of appearences.
The ball to peace is firmly in India`s court
(and has been for a while). Once Kashmir is
settled, the future can be much brighter for
all parties including the Indians.

It was great how Beena concluded this piece
with a parting shot at the fundos..
Since I`m not writing this note for national
publication in Pakistan I`d go further to
state that if Benazir had tried this move,
``Ghaddar``(Traitor) is the least that many people
including some posters on CHOWK would have called
her.
Any comments?


Ras

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listing 16-32   1 2 3

Interact Index

    #35 Gideon
    #34 RanaRansher
    #33 temporal
    #32 RanaRansher
    #31 Aasif
    #30 temporal
    #29 RanaRansher
    #28 ferozk
    #27 RanaRansher
    #26 RanaRansher
    #25 faraz
    #24 Ras Siddiqui
    #23 afrasiyab
    #22 faraz
    #21 RanaRansher
    #20 RanaRansher
    #19 RanaRansher
    #18 Ras Siddiqui
    #17 mohajir
    #16 ferozk
    #15 Ras Siddiqui
    #14 RanaRansher
    #13 ferozk
    #12 RanaRansher
    #11 Ras Siddiqui
    #10 ferozk
    #9 RanaRansher
    #8 ferozk
    #7 RanaRansher
    #6 RanaRansher
    #5 OMAR1974
    #4 Ras Siddiqui
    #3 ferozk
    #2 temporal
    #1 roshni

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