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Why Modi acted now on Kashmir?
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Deepika Bhan | 12 Aug, 2019
The question is why did Modi chose ‘now to do what he has done with
Article370? There was no big election in sight so as to create a build
up for electoral gain. Neither was there any major crisis or any
embarrassing situation for the government to find a succour in Kashmir.
Perhaps, this was the best time to enact the best of action story for
the Modi-Shah Combine.
The ‘now' time had several elements going
in the favour of the Combine - a stable domestic political situation,
weak Pakistan, a hungry desperate Trump and pre-occupied power blocs. It
is said that things happen when the right time comes. History will
judge whether the ‘master stroke' is right or wrong.
Domestic Front On
the domestic front Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit
Shah are, for the time being, very comfortably placed as the opposition
seems to have simply gone into oblivion. With Rahul Gandhi deciding to
lie low, the Congress party is in its most unconfident state. The rest
of the Opposition too seems to have fallen flat. With no big contender
in front, the government is comfortably galloping ahead. In the NDA, all
the allies put together appear minuscule before the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP), and within the party, the hold of the combine is absolute.
No one dare go against any decision taken by the big bosses.
In
Kashmir, the situation has been far better than what it was in previous
years. ‘Operation All Out' ensured that top rung terror heads were
eliminated. Strong vigil on the LoC and the International Border ensured
that infiltration was getting checked. In the first five months of
this year, 101 terrorists were killed including 23 foreigners. After the
Pulwama suicide bombing attack, the crackdown on the terror network has
been effective.
The NIA action against the separatist leaders
has exposed their real faces before the Kashmiris. The incarceration of
hardcore separatist leaders like Asiya Andrabi, Shabbir Shah, Masrat
Alam and a few others have reaffirmed the might of the investigating
agencies. The Kashmiri understands that most of the separatist leaders
have been using the so-called ‘azadi movement' for filling their coffers
and settling their sons, daughters and relatives out of the state and
country. After demonetisation and the crackdown on hawala operations,
the Valley witnessed a drastic reduction in stone pelting incidents.
In
fact, Hurriyat leader Maulvi Omar Farooq, who is the top religious head
of Muslims in Kashmir, had started talking about other subjects like
drug addiction, and was also openly advocating for the return of the
exiled Kashmiri Pandit community. He even got the Hurriyat to form a
coordination committee to work for the return of the Pandit community.
For the first time in 30 years, the Valley did not observe a shutdown or
protests when Amit Shah reached the state after becoming the Home
Minister. The central government's ‘ back to village' programme, which
saw government officials reach villages and far-flung areas, was well
received by the locals.
Weak Pakistan At present, Pakistan's
economy is in poor shape. Inflation is around 11 per cent, the Pakistani
Rupee has dropped to 160 against the dollar, forex reserves are
sufficient to only service one and half months of imports and it is in the
midst of a serious twin-deficit problem. Pakistan continues to be in
the FATF grey list because its domestic laws are weak to tackle money
laundering and terror financing issues. FATF has categorically told
Pakistan to act against terror by October or face blacklisting. It was
because of the FATF hard talk that terror masterminds like Hafiz Saeed and
Masood Azhar have been put in jail and restrictions placed on their
organisations. The Pakistan establishment is forced to keep its terror
network under wraps, at least for the time being. This situation suits
India perfectly.
Trump's Afghan Move It does not matter to US
President Donald Trump that Pakistan is at the root of the problems in
Afghanistan. For Trump, all he wants is to get his forces out of
Afghanistan and meet his electoral commitment of getting them back
before the US presidential polls in November 2020. It is obvious that
Trump wants a deal with Taliban anyhow. So he met Imran Khan in
Washington DC, approved a $125 million support programme for the upkeep
of F16 fighter jets and, much to Pakistan's glee, offered to mediate
with India on Kashmir.
No one can guarantee a deal with the
Taliban but Trump's near desperation for such a deal has seen Pakistan
trying to put Kashmir on the discussion table. India has been kept out
of the Afghan peace process even though India has a stake in that
country. But Pakistan's bid to link Kashmir with Afghanistan and Trump's
eagerness for it perhaps struck alarm bells in Delhi.
Trump
wants the deal with the Taliban finalised before September-end and his
troops back home by the year end. No one can trust the Taliban and
Pakistan to keep their word. In case they do not, then the terror
violence in Kashmir is likely to see a rise and separatist feelings
fueled on radicalization can lead to a very difficult situation for
Delhi. To avoid this, one of the best solutions was to fully integrate
Jammu and Kashmir to enable free movement of people into the Valley from
elsewhere in India.
The China Factor Even though China's
support to Pakistan is total, yet it has always considered Kashmir as a
bilateral issue between the two. In 1963, Pakistan ceded around 6,000 sq
km of Aksai Chin from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir to China. China also claims
large parts of Ladakh, India and China have been negotiating over the
Line of Actual Control in Ladakh. Both countries have stressed the need
to talk. China claims that Tawang in Arunachal is an inalienable part of
Tibet and for India Aksai Chin is an essential part of Ladakh. The
negotiations between the two countries could help find a way out on
this.
All the above factors and many more were taken into
consideration by Modi-led government and the surprise package was thus
worked out. The perfect time of internal as well as the external
considerations jelled well. The road ahead, however, is not all that
easy. And it will take a long time for the situation to stabilise in the
valley.
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