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Stranded in troubled neighborhood
Anglo-Saxons drew the western borders when they happened to rule India.
They had taken up the country’s South in a fit of absent-mindedness. The
rest was conquered deliberately with a promise to push the Central Asian
nations back to their natural confines.
The Anglo-Saxons have never abandoned Pakistan while the country strived
to keep the western borders of the subcontinent intact for the sake of
its own survival. During the Cold War era, Americans were in the lead.
Europeans have also entered the scene after the fall of Soviet Union.
Pakistani and NATO forces are manning Durand Line now. Does India owe
anything to Pakistan? Is Afghanistan thankful to its eastern neighbour
for the labour it has borne to ensure its integrity? Pakistan is really
obsessed with these questions; it does not suit to the interest of
neighbours to impress on Pakistan that it is doing only a thankless job.
Why Pakistan is blamed by India and Afghanistan for fanning militancy in
the neighbourhood? Why they thrust on Pakistan the responsibility to
defend the porous borders on its own? Why they behave so irresponsibly
when their neighbour strives to find stable ground to set its foot on?
Can Pakistan abandon legacies so easily as the leadership of Kabul and
Delhi tend to suggest? Why they want only Pakistan to taste the fruit it
had not sowed the seeds of?
What really Afghanistan wants by restoring stipends of about 2200
notables of the tribal belt falling in Pakistan? Why India keeps on
informing the world that its western neighbour is responsible for acts
of terrorism on its soil?
Pakistan is less likely to be used as a scapegoat now onward.
Afghanistan and India have to end the accusation game and come up with
reasonable solutions as to how to manage the porous borders they happen
to share with Pakistan.
Pakistan is gifted with moderate size country in terms of natural and
human resources. The hostile neighbourhood is the main reason for its
being under the shadow of unitary system of government. Militancy seeped
into body politic to ensure existence in the turbulent strategic
environment.
The prospects of Pakistan’s returning to normalcy depend too much on the
attitude of the neighbours towards it. So far no country around it has
turned receptive to its strategic woes. The rest have dumped their
worries along the banks of the Indus River in the past; they are not
ready to abandon this course even now.
The Pakistani decision-makers are very much alive to the need of
restructuring the body politic as per the demands of the global age.
They have managed to keep its economy floating, diplomacy moving and
politics functional while its borders keep on burning for last seven
years. Would Afghanistan and India agree on a mechanism to manage the
porous borders along Pakistan?
Are Manmohan and Karzai the sorts of souls who will forget the turbulent
past to secure the future of one-fifth of humanity? Had India seen
beyond the tip of its nose, its history would have been different. Had
Afghans had stable ways ever, their country would not have been bombed
by the daisy-cutters.
The uneasy neighbourhood has proved a great constraint on strategic
thinking in Pakistan. Meagre resources but mammoth responsibilities have
put it on the path it is aspiring to abandon in global age. The more its
borders will become stable, the more its pluralist, essentially
tolerant, face will become visible.
While the neighbours behave irresponsibly, Pakistan must not necessarily
follow the suit. Peace is the strategy that answers effectively the
questions posed by country’s strategic environment. Raising standards of
civility in diplomatic discourse with neighbours is the first step to
this direction, rooting out militancy from its soil the other.
This strategy has already delivered. Parliament is functional for last
four years, economy has been liberalised, and media is vigilant while
judiciary is on a pro-active course to define freedom of people and
groups in the new age.
Propagation of the message of peace and love delivered by the Muslim
saints in its deserts and planes and showcasing the statues of Buddha in
the footsteps of Himalayas is a policy that makes operational part of
Pakistan’s strategy to ensure peace at home. It will necessarily
transform the challenge posed by porous border into an unparallel
opportunity as well — the people of Indus Valley know very well the art
of winning the hearts.
RIAZ MISSEN |