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Resolution of Kashmir can Unlock War in
Afghanistan
By Ghulam Nabi Fai
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 25, 2016
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Kashmiri women bringing
firewood home |
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The idea that the dispute over the status of Jammu and Kashmir can be
settled only in accordance with the will of the people, which can be
ascertained through the democratic method of a free and impartial
plebiscite, was the common ground taken by all the three parties to the
dispute, viz., the people of Kashmir, Pakistan, and India. It was supported
without any dissent by the United Nations Security Council and prominently
championed by the United States, Great Britain, France and other democratic
states. It became a matter of controversy only after India realized
that she could not win the people's vote. Due to the cold war, she found a
firm ally for her obstructionist position in the Soviet Union. With the end
of the cold war, the original perspective should have been recovered.
When Britain liquidated her Indian empire, the question arose: to whom would
power be transferred? This was settled by a process of election. Through a
tripartite agreement concluded by Britain, the Congress and the Muslim
League, British India was partitioned between the successor states of India
and Pakistan. The disposition of those territories not directly
administrated by Britain, but ruled by feudal princes under British
paramountcy, also had to be determined. The principle that followed
logically from the partition of British India was that these princely states
should merge, unless they could remain independent, with India or Pakistan
according to (a) whether they were contiguous to one or the other and (b)
what their people wished. The technical form that the merger took was the
signing of an Instrument of Accession by the ruler. But the act was not and
could not be, based on the arbitrary decision of one individual, for if it
did not have popular approval, the people would revolt and an international
conflict would arise. In fact, out of the more than 562 cases, there were
disputes only in three. In two of these, Hyderabad and Junagarh, the ruler
was Muslim while the majority was Hindu. When the ruler hesitated or refused
to sign the Instrument of Accession to India, contrary to the popular will,
India felt justified in marching in her troops and annexing the territories.
Her decision obtained international acquiescence. Kashmir was the
third case. The largest of all states and the only one bordering on four
countries ‑ Pakistan, India, China, and Afghanistan ‑ it was the opposite of
Hyderabad and Junagarh: the ruler was Hindu while the overwhelming majority
of the people was Muslim. There was an additional and unique circumstances:
unlike all other states, Kashmir had witnessed an open revolt against the
ruler in 1946. Ousted from Srinagar, his capital, on 26 October 1947, the
Maharaja called upon India to send her army to quell the revolt. India set
the condition that he sign the Instrument of Accession to India and, without
waiting for his signature, sent her troops into the state on 27 October
1947. The act was so incongruous with what had happened elsewhere ‑
where in all cases the people's wishes had prevailed ‑ that India knew it
would provoke violent opposition from the people of the state as well as
from Pakistan and outrage world opinion, India, therefore, felt compelled to
declare that the accession executed by the ruler -- the Maharaja was
"provisional" and subject to "a reference to the people." Between
October and December of 1947, the Azad Kashmir forces successfully resisted
India's armed intervention and liberated one‑third of the State. Realizing
it could not quell the resistance, India brought the issue to the United
Nations in January 1948. The Security Council discussed the
question exhaustively from January to April 1948. It came to the
conclusion that it would be impossible to determine responsibility for the
fighting and futile to blame either side. Since both parties desired
that the question of accession should be decided through an impartial
plebiscite, the Security Council developed proposals based on the common
ground between them. These were embodied in the Security Council resolution
# 47 of 21 April 1948 envisaging a cease‑fire, the withdrawal of all outside
forces from the State and a plebiscite under the control of an administrator
who would be nominated by the Secretary General. Of the United Nations.
A development that hardened India's stance was Pakistan's joining military
pacts sponsored by the United States. From 1955, India took the
position that, in view of this alliance, it could no longer countenance the
withdrawal of its forces from Kashmir. India found a ready supporter for
this position in the Soviet Union, which, after 1958, blocked every attempt
by the Security Council to unfreeze the situation and implement the peace
plan originally accepted by both parties – India & Pakistan. This caused the
paralysis of the Security Council on Kashmir ‑ a condition which lasted from
1958 to this day. Even today, India's occupation of Kashmir has
been left undisturbed by the international community, even though its
validity has never been accepted. At no stage, however, have the people of
Kashmir shown themselves to be reconciled to it. Kashmir's record of
opposition to its annexation by the Indian Union, can by no standard be
reckoned as less genuinely demonstrated than that of countries of Eastern
Europe under the dominance of the Soviet Union. But while the popular revolt
in the countries of Eastern Europe was observed and reported by the
international media, that in Kashmir has remained largely hidden from the
world's view. The persistence of this problem has been a
source of weakness for both India and Pakistan. It has diminished both
these neighboring countries. Indeed, some discerning observers already
perceive a growing awareness in the Indian middle class that the persistence
of the Kashmir problem weakens India by diminishing its stature among the
great powers. As a matter of fact, there have always existed saner
elements in Indian Public Square which have questioned both the ethics and
the practical advantage of India’s intransigence on Kashmir. As they have
received little support from outside, they have remained mostly subdued.
India's obdurate stand has been effective in creating the
impression that the idea of a plebiscite is unworkable. This, however,
cannot be a considered conclusive. In the first place, the commonsense
appeal and justice of the idea is undeniable. There is no way the dispute
can be settled once and for all except in harmony with the people's will,
and there is no way the people's will can be ascertained except through an
impartial vote. Secondly, there are no insuperable obstacles to the setting
up of a plebiscite administration in Kashmir under the aegis of the United
Nations. The world organization has proved its ability, even in the most
forbidding circumstances, to institute an electoral process under its
supervision and control and with the help of a neutral peace‑keeping force.
The striking example of this is Namibia, which was peacefully brought to
independence after seven decades of occupation and control by South Africa
and East Timor where the United Nations Transitional Administration
organized elections which resulted in the 88-member Constituent Assembly.
Thirdly, as Sir Owen Dixon, the United Nations Representative, envisaged
seven decades ago, the plebiscite can be so regionalized that none of the
different zones of the state (Valley, Jammu, Ladakh, Azad Kashmir and
Gilat-Baltistan) will be forced to accept an outcome contrary to its wishes.
If a credible peace process is instituted, some t's will need to be
crossed and some i's dotted, but given the political will of India and
Pakistan to implement their international agreement, and the will of the
Security Council to secure that implementation, these can present no
obstacles. It is not the inherent difficulties of a solution, but the lack
of the will to implement a solution, that has caused the prolonged deadlock
over the Kashmir dispute. The deadlock has meant indescribable agony for the
people of Kashmir and incalculable loss for both India and Pakistan.
The mantra has been repeated too often that the world powers have no
alternative to relying on bilateral talks between India and Pakistan to
achieve a settlement. The experience of more than sixty-nine years is
ignored. No bilateral talks between India and Pakistan have yielded
agreements without the active role of an external element. The world powers
must recognize that there can be no settlement, negotiated or otherwise,
without the active and full participation of the genuine Kashmiri
leadership. In order to quicken and strengthen the peace process,
the world powers would definitely recommend improving the atmosphere in
Kashmir by a full restoration of civil liberties, including the liberty to
express themselves peacefully on the question of their own future. A
suppression of this freedom means empowering terroristic elements.
This in turn paves the way for destabilizing Pakistan – something that is
certainly not in India’s own interest, nor in the interest of the
international community, including the United States. Peace between
India and Pakistan could help unlock another conflict with even higher
stakes for the United States: the war in Afghanistan. Indeed, a growing
chorus of experts has begun arguing that the road to Kabul runs through
Kashmir—that the U.S. will never stabilize the former without peace in the
latter. Suddenly, bringing India and Pakistan together seems to be very much
in America's interest. Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai is the Secretary General
of World Kashmir Awareness and can be reached at:
gnfai2003@yahoo.com
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