India Pakistan Talks
India Pakistan Talks
India Pakistan Talks
United States Institute of Peace www.usip.org Tel. 202.457.1700 Fax. 202.429.6063 July 15, 2011
Stephanie Flamenbaum
E-mail: [email protected]
megan neville
E-mail: [email protected]
relations will fundamentally alter Pakistans strategic outlook, dismiss the relevance of militant proxies and allow India and Pakistan to work jointly in tackling terrorism.
Improved India-Pakistan
After a prolonged hiatus following the November 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, India and Pakistan have reinitiated bilateral dialogue. Both have been candid in their admission that peaceful coexistence is critical to their interests. Though these new rounds of secretary level talks present a moment of optimism not seen since the collapse of bilateral talks in 2008, questions remain over the feasibility of successful outcomes, particularly in light of continual sticking points such as the territorial dispute over Jammu and Kashmir and terrorism. Answers to these questions are crucial not only for India and Pakistan, but also for the U.S.s interest in ensuring stability in South Asia.
and Pakistan to intensify their efforts to resolve all issues.1 Three months after Indian Prime Minister Vajpayees symbolic ride on the inaugural bus trip from New Delhi to Lahore, however, the promises of the declaration were abandoned when Pakistani-backed infiltrators triggered a limited war in the Kargil region of Kashmir. When tensions peaked again in 2001-02 following a terrorist attack on the Indian parliament, prospects for resuming talks seemed unattainable. Nonetheless, the potential for a stalemate in the protracted crisis and international pressure for resolution once again led the two sides to the negotiating table in 2004. The resulting Composite Dialogue lasted five years, during which the public diplomatic gestures of Indian and Pakistani leadership facilitated discussion and softened attitudes among civil society and the media on both sides. More importantly, closeddoor dialogues made substantial progress in drafting the conditions for peace. In addition to confidence building measures (CBMs), including the resumption of New Delhi-Lahore bus service and a number of concessions on the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir, comprehensive backchannel negotiations launched in February 2004 brought India and Pakistan close to agreement on Kashmir, the Siachen Glacier, and Sir Creek, the key outstanding issues. In the New Yorker article, The Back Channel, journalist Steve Coll argues that these talks signified an end to covert wars and suspicion which could have established a transformational peace.2 True to the oscillatory nature of the India-Pakistan relationship, the progress of the Composite Dialogue was derailed after the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks. It was not until the emergence of cricket diplomacy between the Pakistani Prime Minister Gilani and Indian Prime Minister Singh at the March 2011 Cricket World Cup semifinal between India and Pakistan that the two sides agreed to resume negotiations. Currently, secretary level talks suggest that the driving forces may once again favor a settlement between the two long time rivals.
Second, developments that assuage tensions will allow the U.S. to forge more substantive and advantageous partnerships with India and Pakistan. As a result of India and Pakistans deeply rooted mutual suspicion, U.S. diplomatic, economic and political outreach attempts are inhibited by South Asias zero sum framework. The onset of the U.S.-India strategic alliance which has included expanded economic cooperation, a civil nuclear deal, and defense contracts has left Pakistan discontented. Pakistan sees the U.S. as having tilted in favor of India and in the process having upset the regional India-Pakistan balance. India, on the other hand, continues to see Pakistans importance in Afghanistan as dissuading the U.S. from pressing Pakistan sufficiently to tackle anti-India militants on its soil. In essence, even though the U.S. has consciously moved away from a zero sum approach towards these two countries, India and Pakistan have not. As long as the rivalry dominates Indian and Pakistani mindsets, the U.S. will never be accepted as a neutral party and any outreach attempt will be interpreted negatively in the South Asian context.
In more recent years, efforts to unite Indian and Pakistani Kashmir through cross LoC bus service, partial liberalization of visa regimes and the creation of intra-Kashmir business entities, such as the Federation of Jammu and Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, have symbolized an attempt to approach the problem of Kashmir, emblematic of larger bilateral challenges, through less conventional means.4 Despite limitations on the timeframe for exchanges, and inability of businesses to easily communicate, transfer money, or establish economies of scale, willingness on both sides of the LoC to seek economic avenues of mutual benefit suggest a broader willingness to look beyond the nationalistic and religious rhetoric of the conflict to find common ground capable of improving livelihoods. Beyond Kashmir, trade ties between India and Pakistan have great potential. In the words of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, If there is cooperation between Pakistan and India and not conflict, vast opportunities will open up for trade, and travel and development that will create prosperity in both countries.6 Figures vary, but the most optimistic put the trade potential at more than $20 billion. In 2008, trade between India and Pakistan amounted to a mere $2 billion, representing approximately one percent of each countrys overall trade.5 If Pakistan reciprocated Indias granting Pakistan most favored nation (MFN) status in 1996, and India reduced its current nontariff barriers, major impediments to the potential twenty-fold increase in trade between India and Pakistan could be lifted.7 This increase in trade could sow the seeds for economic interdependence, establishing through person-to-person interactions a strong constituency in support of peaceful coexistence. Pakistans position that trade cooperation follow progress on Kashmir has been the major hurdle in improving economic relations. As Pakistan weighs future options, the politicization of its stance on trade should be forgotten, with commercial progress seen as leading to political reconciliation rather than the other way round. While the mutual 2008 goal to reach $10 billion in trade by 2010 has been missed, Pakistans disengagement of commerce issues from the question of Kashmir could bring the two countries significantly closer to a relationship of productive cooperation on a longer path to peace.
Endnotes
1. Islamic Republic of Pakistan and Republic of India, The Lahore Declaration, February 21, 1999, Lahore, Pakistan. 2. Steve Coll, The Back Channel, The New Yorker, March 2, 2009. 3. Moeed Yusuf, Banking on an Outsider: Implications for Escalation Control in South Asia, Arms Control, June 2011.
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4. Moeed Yusuf, Progress on Cross LoC Trade: an Analysis of the Joint Chamber USIP Special Report, August 2009. 5. Mohsin S. Khan, Improving India Pakistan Relations Through Trade, East Asia Forum, April 19, 2010, http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2010/04/19/improving-india-pakistan-relationsthrough-trade/. 6. India ready to walk extra mile if Pak acts against terror: PM, The Times of India, March 1, 2010. 7. On July 11, 2011 Pakistan indicated that it would begin the process of granting most favored nation status to India. If this comes to fruition, the symbolic and tangible benefits to India-Pakistan trade relations stand to have substantial impact on the overall relationship. See Iftikhar Gilani, Pak to give India MFN status, calls for South Asian Paliament, Tehelka, July 11, 201, http://www. tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ws110711pak.asp.
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