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Time for India to talk directly to Pakistan army

April 11, 2017 13:22 IST

'The Modi government will be wasting its time talking to Nawaz Sharif.'
'It would be better if it were to open a direct channel with the Pakistan army,' says Rajeev Sharma.
Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com

Illustration: Dominic Xavier

The death sentence for former Indian Navy officer Kulbhushan Jadhav in an alleged espionage case by a Pakistan military kangaroo court is a signature case of the modus operandi of the powerful Pakistan army which traditionally keeps the civilian government out of the loop.

It shows that the Pakistani military establishment cares two hoots for the elected government in office.

It proves yet again what the world knows: That in other countries the State has an army but in Pakistan the army has got a State.

It's also a signal of things to come in the India-Pakistan bilateral context as the timing of Jadhav's death sentence is hugely important.

The development comes close on the heels of the two sides holding talks under the rubric of the Indus River Waters Commission and an Indian parliamentary delegation just concluding a visit to Pakistan -- both events decidedly a forward-looking step.

More importantly, the development comes just about ten days before the two countries' Coast Guard were to hold talks in New Delhi. Now this event is as good as cancelled because it is highly unlikely that the Modi government will go ahead with these talks after this extreme provocation.

The latest turn in the Jadhav saga points to many more important things in diverse areas:

All this indicates that the Modi government will be wasting its time and effort negotiating peace with the Nawaz Sharif government.

It would be better off if it were to open a direct channel with the Pakistan army. India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval clearly has his task cut out in this regard.

Perhaps most importantly, the Jadhav case may well be linked to a retired Pakistani army officer's disappearance.

Lieutenant Colonel Mohammed Habib went missing from Lumbini in Nepal close to the Indian border a few days ago. The Pakistani media is awash with inspired stories that Habib has been 'kidnapped' by the Research and Analysis Wing, India's external intelligence agency.

There is a possibility that the haste shown by the Pakistani military court in sentencing Jadhav to death may be a pre-emptive move to tell its domestic constituency that the military establishment made the first move and the Indian action (of 'kidnapping' Habib) is a retaliatory action.

Pakistan is back on the front burner of the Indian strategic establishment. The Jadhav case will have a loud echo in India-Pakistan bilateral diplomacy.

Rajeev Sharma, an independent journalist and strategic analyst, tweets @Kishkindha

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