Alexander Evans
Reducing Tension
Is Not Enough
Copyright © 2001 by The Center for Strategic and International Studies and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The Washington Quarterly • 24:2 pp. 181–193.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY _ SPRING 2001 181
Alexander Evans is a research associate at the Centre for Defence Studies at King’s
College London. He is a regular commentator on Kashmir for BBC Television and Radio.
After 13 violent years, an air of change surrounds Kashmir. In Pakistan,
old truths are being reconsidered, even if Pakistan’s commitment to
Kashmir cannot be. In India, a newly acknowledged confidence has the potential
to encourage action. In the United States, a policy grounded in the realities
of the Cold War is being replaced by a new set of regional priorities.
Change, in this case, really could be for the better. A more realistic policy
from Pakistan, without missing the need to meet Kashmiri desires, could
mend a frayed relationship with the West and provide a basis for serious
talks with India. The question is, will India respond in kind?
President Bill Clinton’s visit in 2000 may have permanently altered the
language of U.S. engagement with South Asia, entrenching U.S. interest in a
region once branded a backwater. Kashmir will remain on the U.S. agenda,
primarily because analysts see it as a potential spark to an explosive wider
conflict in South Asia. A leading question for the administration of President
George W. Bush will be whether the friendship with India deepens or
fractures. New Delhi demands to be taken seriously, but must be treated
with care. Pakistan, meanwhile, may not have many friends, but it needs to
retain U.S. interest for regional security—and perhaps future access to energy
resources in Central Asia—to be assured. Kashmir also deserves attention,
not just because of geopolitics, but because all Kashmiris, whatever
their religion, politics, or language, deserve just and democratic rule.
Bush may run into difficulties if he attempts to strike a balance among
these three parties. Indian diplomats privately fear the possibility of revived
U.S. unilateralism under the Bush administration. Initiatives such as national
missile defense (NMD) raise more than a few eyebrows in New Delhi.
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THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY _ SPRING 2001 182
As one Indian defense analyst put it, forget North Korea or Iraq, NMD is
aimed at the emerging missile powers such as India. Perhaps this statement
reflects a mild form of Indian paranoia, but it harkens back to the simpler
days of the Cold War, during which India was constantly suspicious of U.S.
foreign policy. Regardless, sensitive South Asian politicians need to be
handled carefully or U.S. involvement could become counterproductive if
New Delhi suspects the motivation behind it.
A confident and trusting India, if well led, could seize opportunities to
enter into dialogue with moderate Kashmiri opposition leaders. Substantial
progress might not be possible, but any form of engagement would be better
than the constant irritations of the present distant and authoritarian rule
over Kashmir. Initial flirtations between Indian intelligence agencies and
Kashmiri militant leaders is one sign that the engagement process has already
begun. Simultaneously, an easing of previously stringent visa restrictions
has allowed a number of Kashmiri exiles, mostly critics of Indian rule,
to return to the Kashmir Valley. Some have been visiting their families, others
have been facilitating quiet contact between the Indian government and
some of its fiercest Kashmiri opponents.
The pressing questions in 2001 are whether another Indo-Pakistani war
will occur and can it be prevented. One more year may have passed in
peace, but some imaginative thinking is still urgently required to improve
Indo-Pakistani relations. In the past, more active effort has been poured
into regurgitating stock solutions to the Kashmir problem than into applying
imagination to tackle its various parts. This obsession with solutions is a
part of the problem, and perhaps in part explains why the Kashmir problem
has festered for so long.
Of course a solution to the Kashmir problem is needed, now more than
ever, and it should be pursued. Deeper comprehension of the Kashmir problem
is required, however, if the current low-level crisis in Kashmir is ever to be
resolved. Greater U.S. interest in the issue is welcome, therefore, and
thoughtful analysis coming from the likes of the Kashmir Study Group, operated
from New York, and other organizations could pave the way for a more
informed dialogue among India, Pakistan, and, it is hoped, the Kashmiris too.
A Heavy History
The Kashmir dispute has a long history, dating before the vagaries of partition
in 1947.1 As one of the princely states, Kashmir was ruled by a maharajah
who could choose to accede to either Pakistan or India as the British
withdrew from the subcontinent. After vacillating for several months, the
maharajah chose India in October 1947, and the then-prime minister of InTHE
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dia, Jawaharlal Nehru, promised that this decision would only be confirmed
after the Kashmiri people, mostly Muslim, had their say. The accession took
place as conflict erupted between Indian and Pakistani troops over Kashmir,
and the legacy of what became the first Kashmir war locked both countries
into historical positions that they find too difficult to grow out of today.
Early intervention by the United Nations (UN) led to a series of UN
resolutions calling for a three-stage approach to Kashmir: early withdrawal
of forces, a free and fair plebiscite, and interim government. Arguments
about how this plan might be realized continued until the early 1950s. Since
then, India has argued that the call for a plebiscite
has been overtaken by local democracy in
Kashmir.
In 1965 and 1971, India and Pakistan fought
two more wars, the first over Kashmir, the second
over what became Bangladesh. The 1965 war was
a stalemate, and the Tashkent Agreement that
followed simply reinforced this situation. The
1971 defeat of Pakistan led to the Simla Agreement,
which states that India and Pakistan will seek to resolve Kashmir bilaterally
(or through other mutually agreed peaceful means). For India, this
agreement turned Kashmir into a purely bilateral matter. For Pakistan, Simla
merely added another layer to an international dispute and by no means invalidated
existing UN resolutions.
Fifty-four years of rhetoric have reinforced two fundamentally incompatible
perspectives. India interprets the 1947 decision as final and Kashmir as
a symbol of Indian secularism. Pakistan considers the situation gravely unjust
and demands the implementation of a plebiscite in full compliance with
existing UN resolutions. Both the United States and United Kingdom view
Kashmir as a disputed territory and hope that India and Pakistan will one
day come to an agreement on its future.
Apart from the formal dispute between India and Pakistan over the piece
of real estate called Kashmir, what Kashmiris themselves want is a question.
Beginning in the 1930s, a popular political movement began fighting for democracy
in Kashmir, which the maharajah ran as a personal fiefdom. This
movement continued into the late 1940s and spawned the first popular
leader in Kashmir, Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah. Abdullah ruled Kashmir
from 1947 to 1953, when he was deposed by the Indian government after
suspicions that he might prefer independence to India emerged. Since then,
pro-Indian politicians have had to vie with others who would prefer Pakistan
or even independence for Kashmir. After a series of indifferent pro-Indian
chief ministers, an elderly Sheikh Abdullah was returned to power in
1975, and on his death in 1982 was succeeded by his son, Farooq Abdullah.
There is an air of
change around
Kashmir.
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THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY _ SPRING 2001 184
Dissonant voices increased throughout the 1980s in the face of unemployment,
greater media penetration, increasing Islamic assertion, and dubious
elections.2 In July 1988, this disaffection turned violent, as young
militants from the pro-independence Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front
(JKLF) launched an insurgency against Indian rule. It quickly grew, partly
because of covert support from Pakistan, partly because of exceptionally
heavy-handed Indian counterinsurgency. In 1989, the Hizbul Mujahadeen
(HM), a group fighting for Pakistani control over Kashmir, joined the fray.
By the mid-1990s, 250,000 Indian security forces were fighting 5,000
Kashmiri militants, and thousands of
Kashmiris had been killed in the process. India
was charged with serious human rights
abuses; New Delhi in turn accused Pakistan
of fostering a proxy war in Kashmir. Given
the fractured nature of politics in Kashmir,
political parties and militant groups proliferated,
and by 1995, two more fundamentalist
militant groups were playing a leading role—
the Lashkar-e-Toiba, and the Harkat-ul-
Ansar (now rebranded as the Harkatul-
Mujahadeen). Today these two groups,
alongside HM and other smaller bands, dominate a smaller, more brutal
militant campaign. The JKLF, although still a political force, today sticks to
a cease-fire declared in 1994 and has little military capacity. HM remains
significant because it draws much of its support and Kashmiri members from
the Islamist Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) party in Kashmir. The Jamaat provides continuity
and a support base that other groups find difficult to replicate.
In May 1999, the Kargil crisis destroyed a blossoming peace process between
then-Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif and Atul Behari
Vajpayee, his Indian counterpart. Pakistani infiltrators, whether militants
(as claimed by Islamabad) or soldiers (as claimed by New Delhi) seized several
barren peaks close to the strategic Srinagar-Kargil road and on the Indian
side of the line of control. After several weeks of fighting, U.S.
diplomatic intervention and Indian military gains forced a Pakistani retreat.
The damage to the region, and Pakistan’s credibility with Washington, was
substantial.
Constantly in the headlines, Kashmir remained an expensive headache
for India. The Indian commitment to Kashmir remained strong, however,
and although militant violence continued, those doing the fighting increasingly
came from outside Kashmir itself. Some terrorist incidents, ranging
from the murder of five Westerners in 1995 to the hijack of an Indian Airlines
plane in December 1999, gave weight to the Indian claim that this
India’s engagement
process with
Kashmiri militant
leaders has already
begun.
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Reducing Tension Is Not Enough l
185
conflict was a proxy war, not a popular uprising. Considering selected communal
massacres of minority Hindus, some suggest the movement is fundamentalist,
although this claim is not entirely accurate.3
Change in the Air
In July 2000, HM declared a surprise cease-fire. Within days, HM militants
were playing cricket with Indian security force units (and winning)—hardly
the sign of fighters eager to return underground—but other militant groups
were determined to continue to fight. More than 90 people were killed in a
series of attacks within the first 24 hours after the cease-fire was announced.
Making matters more complicated, Kashmiri separatist politicians
distanced themselves from the nascent cease-fire, sharply limiting the prospects
for negotiations.
The cease-fire swiftly crumbled in August. Kashmiris blamed India for
wavering between conducting the proposed talks strictly within the Indian
constitution (which disallows secession) or under the broader banner of
insaniyat, or humanity. India and the United States pointed toward the HM
leader in Pakistan, Syed Salahuddin, whose commitment to the cease-fire
was uncertain. Soon after the cease-fire had been declared, Salahuddin was
on every media channel possible, saying that no talks could be considered
unless Pakistan was an immediate participant in them.
Despite the chill in Indo-Pakistani relations, private contacts, known as
track two, grew in number between New Delhi and Islamabad. On its national
independence day, August 14, Pakistan once again called for direct
talks between the two countries on Kashmir. Behind the scenes, continuing
pressure came from Washington and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan as
concerns about Indo-Pakistani tension mounted.
Late in the summer, rumors abounded that HM might call another ceasefire,
but this time the surprise took time. When it did come, it came from
New Delhi. On November 19, 2000, Vajpayee issued a statement indicating
that Indian security forces would not “initiate combat operations” against
militants in the Jammu and Kashmir regions during the Muslim holy month
of Ramadan. Referring back to his August call for all issues to be resolved in
the spirit of insaniyat, he once again indicated that the door was open for
talks with militants.
As Ramadan began on November 27, 2000, the Indians halted offensive
operations. Militant attacks continued, with the murder of four children in
Sarju village, 160 kilometers from Jammu. Despite this attack, Pakistan reciprocated
India’s peace move a few days later. Foreign Secretary Inamul
Haq announced that Pakistani troops along the line of control would exerl
Alexander Evans
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY _ SPRING 2001 186
cise “maximum restraint.” It looked as if moves were afoot to turn the private
contacts between India and Pakistan into a basis for formal talks.
Kashmiri leaders may or may not be involved, and only time will tell
whether this process, like many previous initiatives, dies before it can yield a
lasting peace. One thing is certain: the United States, if it continues to play
a choreographed but active role, wants to see substantive Indo-Pakistani
talks accompany genuine attempts to resolve the Kashmir problem. Bush inherits
a fairly straightforward Kashmir policy: keep a low profile and intercede,
but do not intervene.
Islamabad’s Palace Debate
Many Kashmiri separatists were angry about the 1999 Kargil crisis.4 The war
in the mountains drew attention away from Kashmiris and added weight to
Indian claims of proxy war. The impact of Kargil has also been felt throughout
the region. In India, however, Kashmir stopped being a remote issue for
many Indians and became embedded in popular culture, as the recent Indian
film, Mission Kashmir, attests.
In Pakistan, the Kargil crisis helped accelerate a process already underway.
Since 1998, a debate has been going on about Kashmir among the elite
who determine foreign and security policy. Several years ago, only the odd
voice would be raised against the existing policy on Kashmir to support
implementation of the UN resolutions. Today, a growing band of modernists
are arguing that Pakistan should amend the fixed policy it has had since
1947. The following explanation is simplified, but provides a basic understanding
of the modernists’ argument.
The modernists contend that a position based on the unfinished business
of partition no longer resonates internationally after 54 years. Speeches
about UN resolutions passed half a century ago are notorious among Western
diplomats stationed in Pakistan and often evoke a sigh from academics
and journalists working on Kashmir. Instead, the modernists argue that Pakistan
should support meaningful self-determination for Kashmiris. In practice,
this approach means including the option of independence along with
the historic choice between India and Pakistan. After all, they point out, India
is still wary of international involvement in Kashmir—much less a plebiscite—
because it cannot be sure that the so-called “misguided youth” of
Kashmir will choose India over possible alternatives. The best current option
for Pakistan, conclude the modernists, is letting the best argument have
its day in the court of Kashmiri public opinion.
A few Pakistani modernists are even unsympathetic to the national preoccupation
with Kashmir and instead argue that the fate of Pakistan will be
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determined by economic successes, not foreign policy triumphs. Today, they
argue, the fate of Pakistan lies as much with investors, reformers, and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) as with the generals in power. The most
important people in Pakistan right now, therefore, are those who can revive
the Pakistani economy. They have little time for the Kashmir issue, which is
viewed as just one of several justifications for a heavy defense budget that
Pakistan can ill afford.
Traditionalists, on the other hand, oppose any modification of the 54-
year-old policy on Kashmir, arguing that any dilution
of the core Pakistani position will pave the
way for a de-internationalization of Kashmir,
eventually allowing India to successfully absorb
the territory. Of course, only the UN can alter existing
UN resolutions, but, nonetheless, the traditionalists
raise a compelling argument. They are
concerned that unilateral shifts of policy by Pakistan
are unlikely to be met by reciprocal concessions
from India. Because the only tangible carrot
is U.S. economic aid, and given that the IMF is unlikely to allow Pakistan to
default, they argue that Islamabad should stand firm. Their priority is the
long-term accession of Kashmir.
Some modernists propose curtailing support for militants fighting India in
Kashmir. They argue that military action alone will not dislodge India, but a
sustained political campaign that had genuine Kashmiri roots might one day
get renewed support from the international community. Traditionalists oppose
any concessions on covert support for militancy. They argue, not without
justification, that any reduction in support for militant groups would
offer India an unfair advantage.
Modernist influence may well lie behind recent statements made by the