India seems almost as excited by
Pakistan’s election results as Nawaz Sharif
By Rajesh Rajagopalan
New Delhi seems almost as excited by
Pakistan's election results as Nawaz Sharif. Manmohan Singh's gushing letter to Sharif was probably to be
expected. Even the BJP has joined the general consensus that the strengthening of
democracy in Pakistan would improve India-Pakistan relations. But the India-Pakistan
dispute was not caused by military rule in Pakistan and the strengthening of
democracy, which this election surely indicates, will have only marginal
effects on improving India-Pakistan relations.
FOND HOPE OF LIBERALS
The belief that democracy will bring
peace is the fond hope of liberals everywhere.
Unfortunately, there is little support for such hopes. Of the four
India-Pakistan wars, two (1947-48 and 1999) were fought when the military was
not in power. And in 1971, while General Yahya Khan was hardly innocent, it is often forgotten that it was the
democratically elected Bhutto who was egging him on. Liberals often cite the case of France and
Germany, which had fought for a century before making lasting peace after World War II, but this had less
to do with democracy and more to do with the alliance they joined together in
fear of the Soviet Union. There are many reasons to hope that democracy takes
roots in Pakistan but to hope that it will bring peace between India and Pakistan might be
expecting too much.
What is most disturbing is the widely
prevalent belief in New Delhi that making peace is simply an act of will power.
The India-Pakistan conflict is seen as a failure of leadership more than
anything else. All it takes, then, is for good people on both sides to work
hard at peacemaking. Military dictators in Pakistan were seen as the problem
though General Musharraf is usually given a pass because he did come to Agra,
despite his Kargil misadventure.
UNBALANCED REGION
The problem with this argument is that
both sides have had leaders who genuinely worked to improve relations for much
of the last decade with little to show for their efforts. Both AB Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh have walked the extra
mile and they were joined by Musharraf and Asif Ali Zardari on the other side.
Sharif has made the right noises too, and he may very well want to make peace
but that is not sufficient. The main
reason for Indo-Pakconflict is Pakistan's insecurity, caused by the disparity
in military and economic power. But New Delhi does not recognise or acknowledge
that. Since independence, Pakistan has proportionately spent twice as much of
its national wealth on trying to keep up with Indian military power, but even
such sacrifice has been insufficient.
This disparity affects not just Pakistan but all of India's neighbours
because South
Asia is
one of the most unbalanced regions in the world. All of India's neighbours have
attempted to balance India at one time or another. The difference is that
Pakistan has had the capacity to do so much more systematically and continually
than the others. Unfortunately for
Pakistan and the region, India's rapid economic growth over the last decade has
only increased the disparity.
All said and done, surely Pakistanis
will be better off under an elected government than under a dictator. And there
are obvious reasons to be open to resolving some of the disputes between the
two countries. But New Delhi needs to temper its irrational exuberance with
some realism about what can be achieved.
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