hard-won national domestic consensus on the need for improving relations with India is still intact, but not immune to reversals. Violence in 2014-2015 on the LoC was accompanied by a slew of steely cross-border messaging and terror boat accusations, all pointing to India’s hankering for a retention, rather than revision, of the bilateral status quo.
There is no reason why two majority-backed prime ministers cannot take a gamble on goodwill and rise above history. Modi’s foreign policy doctrine of ‘Panchamrit’ pivots on dignity, engagement and dialogue, shared prosperity, security, and cultural linkages, providing the leeway for a policy rethink on Pakistan. And the public appetite for militarised engagement, at least in Pakistan, has never been less.
With the Indian and Pakistani economies set to grow this year – albeit at different rates – one-fifth of the world’s population stands to lose out each day from the absence of cross-border commerce. Conservative figures estimate that there is $25 billion to be made in the way of bilateral trade over the course of the next decade, if tariff and non-tariff barriers can be stripped away.
The LoC, meanwhile, needs to graduate beyond contests of one upmanship. Notably, the condemnation that followed Parrikar’s bluster quickly overshadowed the rest of his speech. He went on to mention that the porosity along India’s borders had visibly reduced, and intelligence improved. And while 2015 offers few diplomatic footholds for an Indo-Pak Hail Mary, other than the UNGA meeting in September, that might be a good thing; unsaddled by the burden of expectation, and seven years since the last major terrorist attack derailed relations, Prime Minister Modi has both the licence and freedom to fashion and own a foreign policy initiative on Pakistan.
The only guarantee of headway, before bureaucracy hems Modi into an intractable position on Pakistan, is to seize the moment. Last year, infiltration by foreign insurgents also dropped to a historic low, and with elections in Jammu & Kashmir over, the calendar is clear for both sides to chart out a course for multi-modal conversations on trade, terrorism and border disputes.
So what’s next? In the immediate term, the ball is in India’s court. India must follow up on Secretary Jaishankar’s visit with a reciprocal invitation to Pakistani Foreign Secretary Aizaz Chaudhry, sooner rather than later. Multilateralism cannot, and should not, be the default parameter for Indo-Pak engagement. India will also have to appreciate the limited utility of conditionality dressed as overture in engaging any capital – least of all Islamabad.
India’s apparent indifference to Pakistan’s domestic and regional course-corrections, and the judicial and legal difficulties in prosecuting the perpetrators of 26/11, needs to be shelved in lieu of a broader rethink about an interconnected South Asia it wishes to lead into the next decade. And while Twitter and hashtag diplomacy makes for good optics, this is no substitute for deeper, institutionalised engagement.
Pakistan meanwhile, needs to bring trade back onto the bilateral radar even if this means going back to the September 2012 drawing board. Islamabad must also accept that, as far as economic compulsions go, trade liberalisation helps Pakistan more than it helps India.
While it may not be possible to pre-empt another summer of dust-ups and discontent on the LoC, the leaderships of both countries enjoy the political wherewithal to offset obstacles with creative engagement that goes beyond crisis management. A previous BJP prime minister demonstrated political courage by taking a bus to Lahore.
Towards the end of his tenure, Dr Singh – despite his predisposition towards peace – lamented that his failure to visit Pakistan was a function of being domestically boxed in at home. It would be a shame if Prime Minister Modi, given all his majorities and machismo, failed to take that leap of faith.
The writer works for Jinnah Institute. He tweets @fahdhumayun
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