South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no.269

04. 07. 2001

  

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SUMMIT: Pak brain-storming

 by B.Raman

Proactive on the Jammu & Kashmir (J & K) issue, reactive on other issues.

That is emerging as the likely negotiating strategy of Gen.Pervez Musharraf, the self-styled Chief Executive and President of Pakistan , during his forthcoming summit with Mr.A.B.Vajpayee, the Indian Prime Minister, at Agra.

As part of his preparations for the summit, he has already completed separate discussions with carefully-selected groups of mainstream and religious political leaders, religious leaders (Ulema) without any political affiliation and leaders of the Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK) and heads/representatives of pro-Pakistan overseas Kashmiri organisations.

To assuage the anger of the Hurriyat over his allegedly succumbing to the Indian pressure not to invite its leaders for a meeting in the Pakistani High Commission at New Delhi, he had invited the Hurriyat representatives in Pakistan for his interactions with the POK leaders and reportedly intends meeting leaders of the so-called United Jihad Council, a conglomeration of Pakistan-based terrorist organisations headed by Syed Salahuddin, leader of the Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), to reassure them that there has been no change in Pakistan's attitude towards the Hurriyat and no softening of its stance on Kashmir.  This meeting was originally not in his programme.

He has reportedly already had a secret meeting with the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) last month when he visited its headquarters at Muridke along with Lt.Gen. Mohammed Aziz, a Corps Commander at Lahore.

Points to be noted about these pre-summit consultations are:

* Leaders of all religious parties, all prominent members of the Ulema, leaders of all political and religious formations of the POK, including those of the local branches of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of Mrs.Benazir Bhutto and the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) of Nawaz Sharif, were invited.

* Outside POK, no PML leader was invited.  The former Speaker of the dissolved National Assembly and the former President of the dissolved Senate, both of whom belong to the PML, were invited by virtue of the office held by them before the dissolution and not as leaders of the PML.

* As regards other mainstream political parties, the invitations were addressed to carefully-selected individual leaders with whom the Army felt comfortable and not to the parties.  While the PML, the PPP and all other constituents of the Alliance For the Restoration of Democracy (ARD) except the Awami National Party (ANP) rejected the invitation, Afsandyar Wali Khan of the ANP was given special permission by the ARD to attend since Wali Khan wanted to point out to the General the hypocrisy of the Army and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) opposing reconciliation with India whenever an elected government was in power and then trying for reconciliation itself when it seized power, which he did eloquently.  Apart from the ANP, none of the other political leaders who attended has any significant electoral support in the country.

* No political or religious leader of the Northern Areas (Gilgit and Baltistan) was invited.  Nor did the General invite any of the prominent leaders of Sindhi, Balochi and Pakhtoon organisations, which have been demanding the right of self-determination for their ethnic groups.

* Even though the interactions were supposed to cover all subjects likely to figure in the summit, the discussions were largely confined to the Kashmir issue except in the meeting with the Ulema during which the latter virulently criticised Nawaz Sharif for importing sugar from India and accused him of covertly promoting normalisation of trade with India in violation of the national policy of "no normal trade till the Kashmir issue is resolved."

* Musharraf, who invariably wore his uniform as the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) during these meetings, did not ask Lt.Gen.Muzaffar Usmani, Deputy Chief of the Army Staff (DCAS) or Lt.Gen.Mohd.Yousef Khan, the Chief of the General Staff (CGS) or any of his Corps Commanders or any member of the National Security Council (NSC) to be present.

* Amongst those who assisted him during his interactions were Lt.Gen.Ghulam Ahmed, his Chief of Staff, who oversees his offices as the Chief Executive and the President, Maj.Gen.Rasheed Quereshi, his press spokesman, Inamul Haq, Foreign Secretary, and Syed Anwar Mahmood, Information Secretary.  Abbas Sarfraz Khan, Minister in charge of Kashmir and the Northern Areas Affairs, attended the meeting with the POK leaders and Dr.Mehmood Ahmed Ghazi, Minister for Religious Affairs, attended the meeting with the Ulema.  Abdul Sattar, Foreign Minister, did not attend any of the meetings since he was out of the country.

* Even though official note-takers were present at all these meetings, Musharraf himself took down copious notes and spoke very little except to intervene when questions were posed to him or when some clarifications were asked for.

The Pakistan Foreign Office has set up a number of inter-ministerial/departmental co-ordination groups, presided over by the concerned official, to prepare background/position papers on various subjects such as J&K, the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline, normalisation of bilateral trade relations, re-opening of the Indian Consulate in Karachi and the regular functioning of the Pakistani Consulate in Mumbai, the Wullar barrage and Siachen issues, greater people-to-people contacts etc which could figure in the summit.  At the same time, the concerned officials have been saying that the fact that such co-ordination groups have been set up need not necessarily mean that all these subjects would figure in the agenda.  They have been saying that as of now the agenda is unstructured and that the only certainty is that the main focus would be on J & K. According to them, they are preparing position/background papers on other subjects in case Musharraf required them.

However, Usman Aminuddin, Minister for Petroleum, who is presently in Washington, reportedly to find out, inter alia, whether the existing US sanctions against Pakistan and Iran could come in the way of the implementation of the pipeline project, was reported to have told Pakistani pressmen in Washington that the pipeline project is on the agenda of the summit.  Justifying its reported inclusion in the agenda, he said that Pakistan stood to financially benefit from it. 

Surprisingly, there are no reports of any co-ordination group on nuclear confidence-building measures.  Musharraf, however, held a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, of which he is the Chairman, which could have discussed the nuclear confidence-building measures.

After completing his discussions with political, POK and religious personalities, Musharraf has started taking ,almost daily, co-ordination meetings with the Ministers, members of the NSC and senior officials concerned.  It is noticed that most of these meetings are also being attended by Lt.Gen.Usmani, who is reportedly playing an active role.  The active association of Lt.Gen.Usmani with the brain-storming sessions is partly meant to rebut speculation in India about differences between Musharraf and Usmani over the summit and over Musharraf taking over as the President.

At the time of the recording of this note, the composition of Musharraf's delegation had not been finalised.  It is, however, believed that the following are likely to be amongst the members of the delegation: Abdul Sattar, Foreign Minister; Lt.Gen.Moinudeen Haider, Interior Minister; Abdul Razaak Dawood, Commerce Minister; Usman Aminuddin, Minister for Petroleum and Natural Resources; Shaukat Aziz, Finance Minister, Lt.Gen.Ghulam Ahmed, Maj.Gen.Rasheed Quereshi, Maj.Gen.(retd) Mahmud Ali Durrani, former ISI station chief in Washington and presently a close advisor of Musharraf and an active member of the Belusa group; Inamul Haq; and Syed Anwar Mahmood. 

It would be interesting to see whether Musharraf also brings either Lt.Gen.Usmani or Lt.Gen.Mohammed Aziz, Corps Commander at Lahore, or both in order to reassure the religious parties to which they are close and to refute speculation about his having differences with them.

The summit is being projected as Kashmir-centric; sherpaless in the sense of the pre-summit role of the bureaucrats being reduced to the minimum unavoidable and almost paperless in the sense of there being no previously-worked out drafts of declarations or communiques even before the leaders meet in the summit.

Musharraf's present thinking so far as could be gathered seems to be on the following lines:

* He would try to keep the focus largely on J & K.

* He does not expect any solution or even the initial contours of a possible solution to emerge from the summit.  He would be satisfied if the summit sets in motion a high-level, political process under a mutually agreed framework with a mutually agreed time-frame to work out a solution for the Kashmir problem in accordance with the wishes of the Kashmiris.

* While the solution would emerge from this time-bound process, the status quo cannot be the solution.  The flexibility, which he might be prepared to show, is in respect of the manner of determining the wishes of the Kashmiri people.

* There is no question of his issuing an appeal to the Jihadi organisations to stop their jihad in J & K till a solution is found.  Just as in Vietnam and Afghanistan, talks on a political solution and the fighting went on side by side till an agreement in the negotiations was reached, so too in J & K, the jihadis would insist on continuing their jihad till a political solution was in sight.  Moreover, all these jihadi organisations are indigenous and not amenable to the influence of Pakistan.

* While he himself would not take the initiative in raising other issues, he would show readiness to discuss any other issue raised by the Indian Prime Minister and be accommodating to the extent that the Indian Prime Minister is accommodating on the Kashmir issue.

* While he might be willing to go ahead with the pipeline project, he would be against its being linked to the normalisation of bilateral trade, which would have to await a solution of the Kashmir problem.

The high-level political process to find a solution to the Kashmir issue, which he has in mind, could be a ministers' group.  If there is an agreement on this subject at the summit, his choice to represent Pakistan in this group could be either Lt.Gen.Haider, his alter ego or Sattar or Shaukat Aziz.  When he met the POK leaders, some of them reportedly insisted that any high-level political mechanism that might be set up to find a political solution to the Kashmir issue should confine itself to J & K which is part of India and should not take up the question of POK and the Northern Areas or India's allegations of cross-border terrorism.  According to them, since the jihad was the result of alleged Indian atrocities, it would automatically stop once a political solution was reached. Musharraf did not seem to have reacted to this demand.

To keep the drips flowing, Musharraf has to show to Pakistan's creditors and the IMF that the Agra outcome was not totally negative.  To prevent the mullahs and jihadis from crying for his blood, he has to show them that Agra was not a clone of Lahore or Shimla and that he stood his ground on J & K.  To keep India interested in a sustained dialogue, he has to convince it that he is a man with whom it can do business.

He would come to India wanting and hoping to achieve all these objectives. 

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com )

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