By Saumitra Mohan
The world
seems to be slowly becoming enveloped in the pall of gloom and doom. The
confirmation of the same is all around us if just take a look around us.
Against the background of the globe reeling under the massive problem of
recession and stagflation, the global peace index has also been worsening. And
the situation is no different for the countries of South Asia.
If the
behemoth India seems to be grappling with a negative economic scenario along
with the problems of terrorism and left wing radicalism, the scenario ipso
facto applies for the other countries of South Asia. The newly elected Nawaz
Sharif Government is already seized with the increasing terrorist menace in the
country led by a resurgent Taliban. Myanmar and Maldives are undergoing
political transitions, which have serious implications for the future of the
two countries. While Bangladesh grapples with a ‘Shahbag’ movement for
assertion of libertarian values, Sri Lanka is still coming to the terms with
the aftermath of the alleged excesses caused during the annihilation drive of
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam,
not to speak of the global pressure for a democratic resolution of the Tamil
problem in the island state. Afghanistan is also somehow reluctantly readying
itself for the final departure of the US forces to take the reins of national
security all by itself.
While all
these appear quite different and unrelated problems but the truth remains that
they are very much interconnected and intertwined. After all, we live in a
globalized world of complex interdependence. A problem in one country today does
have its positive or negative impact in other countries. And unless and until
we accept this fact and deal with the same in a synergized manner, we are
doomed to be accursed with many more without any success with those already
existing.
While the
1990s saw the end of the Cold War everywhere else, it actually saw a ratcheting
up of the same in South Asia, if defense expenditures are any indication to go
by. With the drawing down of the Iron Curtains on internecine and debilitating
Cold War, one expected the winds of positivity to blow away all the mistrust
and distrust in South Asia but the same never happened. And this is truer with
regards to the two principal protagonists namely India and Pakistan between
whom the chasm of mutual distrust seems to be growing by the day. It was not
very long ago when the Islamabad-based MahbubulHaq Foundation pointed out that with
if India and Pakistan were to reduce their defense expenditure even by a
percentage point, they could very well take care of the big gaping holes in
their social welfare programmes for health and education. But the fact remains
that many Track Two diplomacy efforts involving people-to-people contacts along
both sides of the border notwithstanding, the hawks and hardliners seem to be
winning the day.
And the
bigger players in our neighbourhood and those at the top of the international
pecking order are not helping matters by their selfish and motivated
interventions aimed at guarding their own vested interests. The bigger players embroiled
in the international power game of one-upmanship and in a bid to keep their
massive military-industrial complex well-oiled, deliberately try to keep the
conflicts zones of the world alive and on the boil. And the India-Pakistan
conflicts are no different. With the heavy loss of precious human lives, they
are still locked in belligerent posturings with the overall quality of life
suffering in both the countries.
With the
Pakistan still vowing to bleed a democratic India through thousand cuts and
continuing its proxy war against us, the situation looks bleak unless the
resurgent democratic forces in the former assert and prevail over a deeply
entrenched militarist mindset, there does not seem to be much hope for a new
beginning. While India conferred the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status on
Pakistan more than a decade back, Pakistan is still to take a call on that.
While South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA) was supposed to be a reality more
than a decade back, it is still beholden to the sanguinary rivalry of the two
titans with heavy financial losses accruing to every country of the Indian
Sub-Continent in terms of tariffs, taxes and duties. The trade, which could
occur across the border in an organized manner, now happens through a third
country or in an underhand manner (read smuggling) resulting in manifold jacked
up prices for the citizens.
While it is
more than advisable for the leadership of the two countries to continuously
engage each other to resolve the outstanding issues including intractable
boundary disputes, the Tulbul barrage
project, the Siachen problem, cross
border terrorism and such other cognate issues, the big daddies of
international politics should also desist from backroom meddling into the
longstanding disputes between the two classical rivals. The active peddling of
their selfish interests stems from the presumed apprehension of a rising South
Asia (read India) to threaten their super status and is targeted at tying India
down to South Asia.
But the
reigning and rising super powers have to understand that they can’t flourish
amid a sea of problems surrounding them. They can no longer continue to be an
island of affluence without bothering about the similar problems elsewhere. The
international division of labour is so entrenched that an unresolved problem in
one country comes back to haunt others, more so if these countries happen to be
as huge and as important as India and Pakistan. They also have to understand
that the luxurious quality of life in their own countries shall suffer heavily if
these countries continue to remain disturbed as also exemplified by the growing
tentacles of Taliban which is an offshoot of a disturbed Afghanistan and which
has hurt the rich North time and again with unceasing regularity.
Like the
fictional cat eating the entire bread of the two fighting monkeys, we should not
allow outsiders to sit in judgement over our fate. While there definitely is a
need for a positive facilitating role for big players to ensure peace in South
Asia, we should also see the writing on the wall in our own enlightened
interests otherwise it would be too late. In fine, the economic and social
prosperity in South Asia is very much beholden to the successful conflict and
dispute resolution between India and Pakistan. Other members of the South Asian
countries are just awaiting a positive outcome to get onto the prosperity
bandwagon but we two have got to come forward to show the way forward.
We can no
longer afford to move forward with our hands and legs tied down by the baggage
of history, not to speak of that proverbial millstone and albatross round our
neck. We shall require ourselves to tear off and throw away that millstone of
distrust and untie ourselves through positive engagements. If England and
France can come together after more than a hundred years of internecine and
sanguinary conflicts, if US and Russia could come together after a bloody Cold
War of more than four decades, if all the regions of the world are benefiting
through mutual economic engagements a la APEC, ASIAN, NAFTA, Shanghai
Cooperation Organization and European Union, can’t we also come together to
make a new beginning for our people. If we don’t learn from history, we shall
be doomed to repeat the same at our own cost and history shall not forgive us.
Lets see the writing on the wall.
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