Welcome

Website counter
website hit counter
website hit counters

Monday, March 11, 2013

RISKY BUSINESS IN KABUL - Limited reconciliation is not impossible for India Rudra Chaudhuri

RISKY BUSINESS IN KABUL

- Limited reconciliation is not impossible for India

Unrestrained "generosity," wrote Jawaharlal Nehru of Afghanistan "is a risky business in the long run." An approach shaped by the need for balance, the then vice-president of the interim cabinet argued, better suited India's interests. It was not that Nehru took a less than charitable view of a nation then beginning to invest in what Mohammad Zahir Shah called modernization, but that both the advantages and pitfalls associated with closer Indian engagement with Afghanistan were clear to India's future prime minister. At some level, and notwithstanding the six or so decades since Indian independence, the issues that most exercised India's early foreign policy bureaucracy were only somewhat different from those confronted by officials in the present day.

'Fruitful cooperation', as both Nehru and K.P.S. Menon — India's first foreign secretary — agreed, was to be designed in such a way as to institutionalize economic assistance whilst staying clear of military alliances with the Afghan state. The latter, the prime minister made plain, was "neither feasible nor desirable". Similarly, nothing in India's advance was to undermine Pakistani sovereignty. After all, and as is well documented, Afghanistan's approach to an independent Pakistan was anything but affable. Zahir Shah's government not only demanded the erasing of the Durand Line, the 1,500 mile-long border inked in 1893 that separates the two states, but also laid claim to the Pashtun majority regions in the frontier territories of northwestern Pakistan.

India's objective was to expand its presence within Afghanistan whilst making sure not to peeve Pakistani elites. Hence, and at various times, Indian leaders stressed that 'Pashtunistan' — a term apparently coined by All India Radio — or Zahir Shah's call in 1947 to extend Afghanistan's borders was misplaced. The imperial border, Nehru made clear, was sacrosanct. Aside from the few years of Taliban rule in the last decade of the last century, successive Indian governments did well to establish India's credentials as a donor nation in the imagination of ordinary Afghans. Likewise, such popularity expectedly riled Pakistan's military tsars.

In the present milieu, the test seems to lie in maintaining a sense of and intuition for balance, whilst remaining alive to the fresh challenges apparent in a less than predictable future. This is not to suggest that conciliation with Islamabad be placed at the centre of India's advance. Rather, that the changes and challenges faced by Pakistan could be creatively considered as New Delhi charts a course for itself. In this respect, and whilst admittedly less important than shoring up economic investments or working more closely with the Afghan army, the curious and unappealing questions around reconciliation — or the process of talking to the Taliban — is in need of desperate attention.

From the outset, it would seem that the preferred argument amongst New Delhi's security elite is to either shun the possibility of reconciliation or consider the same as a method sought by Pakistan to empower itself. Neither of these calculations is necessarily useful. No doubt, the matter of talking to the enemy — hardly an alien concept within India — is fraught with contradictions and bitter possibilities. In the case of Afghanistan, the many groups that straddle the Durand Line make it all that much harder to identify those worth engaging. The likes of the so-called Haqqanis (responsible for attacks against Indian personnel in Afghanistan) and associated groups are necessarily irreconcilable. Others, such as the Hizb-i-Islami, divisions within which are represented in the Afghan parliament, are said to have been in discussions with Indian representatives for some time.

With the view to shaping developments in the near future, political divisions in another organization, namely the Quetta Shura Taliban, merits further study. The QST is said to be made up of the political committee based in and around Quetta in Baluchistan and the military commission unofficially garrisoned in Peshawar. Individuals associated with the political committee are those currently involved in the murky business of negotiations in Doha. Allegedly, these actors are authorized to speak with British and American officials. The idea is to open a consulate of sorts. As bizarre as it sounds, an address in Qatar, insiders argue, is not as far-fetched as once thought. More recently, such representatives travelled to France to speak with Western interlocutors. Another set of discussions appear to be on the simmer in Istanbul. In sum, talks are on.

To be sure, dealing with the likes of the Taliban — however one may wish to categorize or divide this taxonomy — is hardly appealing, if not repulsive. Few in India can forget the role played by the QST in the hijacking of an Indian Airlines plane in 1999, which forced the then government to release terrorists lingering in Indian jails. Yet, in the present day, some of those once directly associated with the political commission promise to take part in mainstream Afghan politics. They live freely in Kabul, and are frequently visited by international diplomats and bureaucrats alike. Importantly, and as confirmed by a variety of academic sources, they are hardly averse to the suggestion of India. There is little value in pretending that they do not exist, or worse, leaving it solely to British or American negotiators to craft a plan of action beneficial to the interests of London and Washington. This is not to suggest that Western interests are necessarily divorced from those of India's, but that national interests — however defined — require national efforts neither shoved nor shaped by political demands produced elsewhere.

Reconciliation, at least at some minimal level, need not be a game in which India can't play, or one in which Pakistan, Britain and America are necessarily better positioned to take part. Similarly, the advantages embedded in engagement may not be immediately visible, but could go some way in re-socializing those who command popular support in the troubled areas in the south and east of the country. This is of course a part of Afghanistan where, till recently, the majority Pashtun population had little or no ties with India.

That an active attempt to speak with those whom Pakistan considers its own will further rankle uniformed elites in Rawalpindi need not take away from Nehru's dictum of balance. Given Pakistan's disquiet with regard to the Durand Line, which is still challenged by the Karzai-led regime in Kabul, India may unofficially and quietly lend support to the idea of recognizing this international border. Equally, and to be clear, undermining the ideational basis of 'Pashtunistan', which continues to remain one of Pakistan's central concerns, may do little for Pakistani elites, especially if India seeks out former political leaders of the QST. At best, it can help disenfranchise the all too common charge of aggression against India seemingly institutionalized amongst Pakistan's military leadership.

The initiatives outlined above with regard to limited reconciliation are not altogether riskier than following the preferred dogma of doing nothing. It merely opens small, maybe less significant, and perhaps less valuable, options for a country like India that already enjoys the support of a number of northern characters and legends within the Tajik, Uzbek, and Hazara political groups. Yet, given that the withdrawal of Western troops and assistance has begun, and is expected to consolidate sometime in 2014, India will need all the diplomatic cards it can get its hands on. Speaking with former QST leaders in the United Arab Emirates or somewhere in the Middle East is not bereft of risk, but can surely be managed if and when the politics underlying reconciliation are somewhat more settled on Raisina Hill.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130311/jsp/opinion/story_16639728.jsp#.UT3plKJQl4I

No comments:

मैं नास्तिक क्यों हूं# Necessity of Atheism#!Genetics Bharat Teertha

হে মোর চিত্ত, Prey for Humanity!

मनुस्मृति नस्ली राजकाज राजनीति में OBC Trump Card और जयभीम कामरेड

Gorkhaland again?আত্মঘাতী বাঙালি আবার বিভাজন বিপর্যয়ের মুখোমুখি!

हिंदुत्व की राजनीति का मुकाबला हिंदुत्व की राजनीति से नहीं किया जा सकता।

In conversation with Palash Biswas

Palash Biswas On Unique Identity No1.mpg

Save the Universities!

RSS might replace Gandhi with Ambedkar on currency notes!

जैसे जर्मनी में सिर्फ हिटलर को बोलने की आजादी थी,आज सिर्फ मंकी बातों की आजादी है।

#BEEFGATEঅন্ধকার বৃত্তান্তঃ হত্যার রাজনীতি

अलविदा पत्रकारिता,अब कोई प्रतिक्रिया नहीं! पलाश विश्वास

ভালোবাসার মুখ,প্রতিবাদের মুখ মন্দাক্রান্তার পাশে আছি,যে মেয়েটি আজও লিখতে পারছেঃ আমাক ধর্ষণ করবে?

Palash Biswas on BAMCEF UNIFICATION!

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS ON NEPALI SENTIMENT, GORKHALAND, KUMAON AND GARHWAL ETC.and BAMCEF UNIFICATION! Published on Mar 19, 2013 The Himalayan Voice Cambridge, Massachusetts United States of America

BAMCEF UNIFICATION CONFERENCE 7

Published on 10 Mar 2013 ALL INDIA BAMCEF UNIFICATION CONFERENCE HELD AT Dr.B. R. AMBEDKAR BHAVAN,DADAR,MUMBAI ON 2ND AND 3RD MARCH 2013. Mr.PALASH BISWAS (JOURNALIST -KOLKATA) DELIVERING HER SPEECH. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLL-n6MrcoM http://youtu.be/oLL-n6MrcoM

Imminent Massive earthquake in the Himalayas

Palash Biswas on Citizenship Amendment Act

Mr. PALASH BISWAS DELIVERING SPEECH AT BAMCEF PROGRAM AT NAGPUR ON 17 & 18 SEPTEMBER 2003 Sub:- CITIZENSHIP AMENDMENT ACT 2003 http://youtu.be/zGDfsLzxTXo

Tweet Please

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS BLASTS INDIANS THAT CLAIM BUDDHA WAS BORN IN INDIA

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: INDIAN GOVERNMENT FOOD SECURITY PROGRAM RISKIER

http://youtu.be/NrcmNEjaN8c The government of India has announced food security program ahead of elections in 2014. We discussed the issue with Palash Biswas in Kolkata today. http://youtu.be/NrcmNEjaN8c Ahead of Elections, India's Cabinet Approves Food Security Program ______________________________________________________ By JIM YARDLEY http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/indias-cabinet-passes-food-security-law/

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

THE HIMALAYAN VOICE: PALASH BISWAS DISCUSSES RAM MANDIR

Published on 10 Apr 2013 Palash Biswas spoke to us from Kolkota and shared his views on Visho Hindu Parashid's programme from tomorrow ( April 11, 2013) to build Ram Mandir in disputed Ayodhya. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77cZuBunAGk

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS LASHES OUT KATHMANDU INT'L 'MULVASI' CONFERENCE

अहिले भर्खर कोलकता भारतमा हामीले पलाश विश्वाससंग काठमाडौँमा आज भै रहेको अन्तर्राष्ट्रिय मूलवासी सम्मेलनको बारेमा कुराकानी गर्यौ । उहाले भन्नु भयो सो सम्मेलन 'नेपालको आदिवासी जनजातिहरुको आन्दोलनलाई कम्जोर बनाउने षडयन्त्र हो।' http://youtu.be/j8GXlmSBbbk

THE HIMALAYAN DISASTER: TRANSNATIONAL DISASTER MANAGEMENT MECHANISM A MUST

We talked with Palash Biswas, an editor for Indian Express in Kolkata today also. He urged that there must a transnational disaster management mechanism to avert such scale disaster in the Himalayas. http://youtu.be/7IzWUpRECJM

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS CRITICAL OF BAMCEF LEADERSHIP

[Palash Biswas, one of the BAMCEF leaders and editors for Indian Express spoke to us from Kolkata today and criticized BAMCEF leadership in New Delhi, which according to him, is messing up with Nepalese indigenous peoples also. He also flayed MP Jay Narayan Prasad Nishad, who recently offered a Puja in his New Delhi home for Narendra Modi's victory in 2014.]

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS CRITICIZES GOVT FOR WORLD`S BIGGEST BLACK OUT

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS CRITICIZES GOVT FOR WORLD`S BIGGEST BLACK OUT

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALSH BISWAS FLAYS SOUTH ASIAN GOVERNM

Palash Biswas, lashed out those 1% people in the government in New Delhi for failure of delivery and creating hosts of problems everywhere in South Asia. http://youtu.be/lD2_V7CB2Is

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS LASHES OUT KATHMANDU INT'L 'MULVASI' CONFERENCE

अहिले भर्खर कोलकता भारतमा हामीले पलाश विश्वाससंग काठमाडौँमा आज भै रहेको अन्तर्राष्ट्रिय मूलवासी सम्मेलनको बारेमा कुराकानी गर्यौ । उहाले भन्नु भयो सो सम्मेलन 'नेपालको आदिवासी जनजातिहरुको आन्दोलनलाई कम्जोर बनाउने षडयन्त्र हो।' http://youtu.be/j8GXlmSBbbk