Good Vibes at SAARC: Is Kashmir Ripe for Resolution?

Posted on April 29, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Foreign Relations
25 Comments
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Adil Najam

Let me confess that the real reason for the post is this photograph above. It shows the leaders of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) leaders in an informal moment of exchange at the 2010 SAARC Summit (L to R): Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, Mohamed Nasheed of Maldives, Manmohan Singh of India, Madhav Kumar Nepal of Nepal, Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani of Pakistan, Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh and Jigme Yoser Thinley of Bhutan.

I just love the picture: the colors, the composition, the symbolism. Maybe it will turn out that all of the above are exaggerated. So be it. Sometimes you want to hope.

And speaking of hope, I just published a short op-ed (co-authored with Moeed Yusuf) that reports on the deeper academic research paper we had written in Third World Quarterly which analyzes all the proposals made on the resolution of the Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan. This is not different from facts that we keep finding out about how close India and Pakistan were to at least a partial resolution, how recently. As in the original paper, and as I have noted here before, we also note in the op-ed in The News that “Windows of opportunity, by definition, are temporary. Unutilized ripeness can turn into staleness and, ultimately, stalemate”:

… the events surrounding the Kashmir dispute have been transpiring – for some time – in a manner that makes the situation ‘ripe’ for resolution. Ripeness increases the potential for conflict resolution and occurs when the subjective perceptions of all parties converge to create a window of opportunity; the latter represents moments in policymaking processes during which breaking the stalemate becomes possible. Ripeness does not guarantee resolution, but it does mean that there is an opportunity and the potential for possible headway.

…Having analyzed nearly 50 proposals recommended throughout the dispute’s history, the research has highlighted an emerging trend in opinion among policy experts. We find that the zone of convergence has increased significantly since the 1990s. Perhaps the most consequential dimension of convergence is the emerging trend on the issue of autonomy as the central pillar of any final resolution. Since the onset of the insurgency in Indian Kashmir in 1989, granting autonomy to all or part of the state has by far been the most recurrent theme in the proposed solutions. This reflects the realization that the current context does not allow either India or Pakistan to dominate Kashmir through a tightly monitored, centralized formulation.

…The general findings highlighted in this article are only to stress that although the issue may be ‘ripe’ today, it will not remain ripe forever. Like other windows of opportunity that have existed in the past, this too will have an expiry date. The key challenge is to move quickly from the broad consensus around autonomy towards specifics about the nature of autonomy, means of actual implementation, defining the precise roles of India, Pakistan, and Kashmiri authorities in an autonomous Kashmir, and mechanisms for future dispute resolution.

…Ultimately, ripeness can only be translated into resolution if the political leadership on both sides can muster the political will required to conceive and implement an agreement on the basis of the latent zone of convergence. Our research finding is that the zone of possible agreement clearly exists and is evident to all sides. Whether the political leadership on the two sides has the political will to capitalize on this ripeness remains to be seen.

The idealist in me would like to believe that the picture above is cause of hope. But there is also a part of me that is realist enough to realize that history is not judged by photo-ops, but by the real actions that those photo-ops signify.

It is good – very good – that the leaders of India and Pakistan are talking. The next step, of course, is to turn talk into action.

25 responses to “Good Vibes at SAARC: Is Kashmir Ripe for Resolution?”

  1. ShahidnUSA says:

    You hear this from the self proclaimed “King of all Visuals”.

    When a person talks a lot, it always doesnt mean that he knows a lot. It could be the embarrasment he or she is hiding.

    Its not the attention `he’ is getting, its the compassion.

  2. Jabbar says:

    You know, I read the comments here and elsewhere, like the one by Faraz above, and wonder that for a people who are always complaining that the world does not respect us and that the world only sees negative things in us, the fact is that we do not respect ourselves and we ourselves only see bad things in ourselves.

    Seems like out image in the world is bad, but our image of ourselves is even worse!

  3. Faraz says:

    I find it hard to imagine that in the above photograph Gilani is saying something intelligent, something worth listening to. But we can all hope…

  4. Ambuj says:

    If only we can deal with the cynicism of people across both sides, then “All IS Well”

  5. Sridhar says:

    Meengla,

    Is water really an issue or is it another one of the manufactured ones? The Indus Water Treaty is by any measure a success-story. It has held for over 40 years without significant problems and has survived two and a half wars and three decades of proxy war.

    Even the so-called disputes today are manufactured ones created partly by a hyperventilating media and partly by the establishment for its own reasons. The last such “dispute” was one that involved the Baglihar project, which the independent arbitrary ruled to be consistent with the Indus Water Treaty, with only very minor modifications. In that case, the mechanisms provided within the treaty were used for resolution of the dispute.

    Hence, I disagree with the notion that somehow water is likely to be a huge cause for tension in the future. Whatever dispute there is on water is a symptom of the tensions between the two countries, not its cause. Water will be in short supply in the future due to global warming, but if there is an amicable relationship between the two countries, they will find solutions together. If there are tensions between them, it will manifest itself in water-related disputes as well.

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