Trump, Pakistan, and Kashmir
Will
a shift in the U.S.-Pakistan relationship affect India-Pakistan
relations and Kashmir?
By
Fahad Shah
February
20, 2018
On
the first day of 2018, the president of the United States, Donald
Trump, took to Twitter to intimate a change in his country’s policy
toward its long-time ally Pakistan. A day later, the White House
confirmed a $255 million military aid cut to Pakistan, followed by
the cutting of $1.3 billion in annual aid to the South Asian nuclear
power, which has been the United States’ partner in the now
17-year-long Afghanistan war. The move had many connotations for
South Asia, in general, but particularly for Pakistan, which has been
in conflict with its neighbor India over many issues — mainly the
status of Kashmir.
India
and Pakistan have never really been at peace since their birth after
the partition of British India in 1947. The conflict started with
their conflicting claims over the Muslim-majority princely state of
Jammu and Kashmir, commonly known as Kashmir. Both countries control
parts of the region with a de
facto
border — the Line of Control (LoC) — dividing the two sides. The
LoC has lately been tense and the two countries have been exchanging
mortar shells and bullets, resulting in the deaths of dozens of their
soldiers and civilians. Within the Kashmir valley too, violence has
only increased.
Pakistan
has received more than $33 billion in aid since 2002 from the United
States and now the freeze of more than $2 billion total in U.S. aid
has turned relations bitter. “We can confirm that we are suspending
national security assistance only, to Pakistan at this time until the
Pakistani government takes decisive action against groups, including
the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network,” U.S. State Department
Spokesperson Heather Nauert told
reporters
last month.
According
to the Center
for Global Development,
the United States gave nearly $67 billion to Pakistan between 1951
and 2011. As the relationship between the United States and Pakistan
turns sour again, an impact on the India-Pakistan relationship
looks inevitable, with implications for the Kashmir dispute
eventually. But Tony Dalton, co-author of Not
War, Not Peace: Motivating Pakistan to Prevent Cross-Border
Terrorism,
told The
Diplomat
that it is difficult to make good predictions about how the downturn
in U.S.-Pakistan relations might manifest in the region.
“Tensions
in Kashmir (firings over the LoC, attacks on Indian military bases,
civil unrest) have many determinants that are mostly internal to
India and Pakistan, whereas Afghanistan clearly features inter-state
competition. It would not surprise me to see more attacks on
Indian-affiliated locations in Afghanistan in the future,” said
Dalton, who is also co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington D.C.
U.S.
Grows Closer With India, Pakistan Looks East
Dalton
also points out that the United States and many other countries
in the region are “keen to facilitate India’s rise.” Pakistan’s
leaders have long observed that the United States has turned toward
India, which also has interests in Afghanistan and has been investing
in the war-torn country. Recently, Pakistan’s National Security
Advisor (NSA) Lt. Gen. (retired) Nasser Khan Janjua warned
that nuclear war
in South Asia was a real possibility and accused the United States of
“following the Indian policy on the longstanding Kashmir dispute.”
At
the core of current geopolitical dynamics in the region is a power
struggle in South Asia. Janjua claimed in Islamabad that, as part of
U.S. policy to “counter Chinese influence in South Asia,
Washington is conspiring against [the] China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC) along with the Indians.” CPEC, which includes
investments of over $60 billion, passes through the part of Kashmir
controlled by Pakistan; India opposes the corridor due to its
claims over the region.
Dhruva
Jaishankar, a fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution’s
India office in New Delhi, says that the United States has at
various points in time tilted toward Pakistan instead or
attempted — as in the 1990s — to play the role of mediator.
“Deteriorating U.S.-Pakistan relations today, specifically
frustrations in Washington with Pakistan’s inability and
unwillingness to stem its support for terrorist groups, has opened up
some opportunities for India,” said Jaishankar.
He
says that China is investing more in Pakistan as part of CPEC.
However, the investment coming into Pakistan is probably only
slightly higher than Chinese investment into India. Jaishankar notes
that the “biggest impact of all this has been psychological.”
“Many
in Pakistan believe they have a new form of support from Beijing,
which has emboldened Islamabad in its engagements with both
Washington and New Delhi. Whether there are substantive reasons for
this newfound confidence remains to be seen,” he notes.
Today,
India is getting closer to the United States and Pakistan is looking
east. Pakistani Defense Minister Khurram Dastgir, in a recent
interview with the Financial
Times,
said that Islamabad is now deepening its relationship with
Russia and China as well as Europe, which he called “a regional
recalibration of Pakistan’s foreign and security policy.” The
shift, as Dastgir said, is because of the “unfortunate choice”
the United States continues to make in seeking out India to contain
China.
Some
experts believe that this could nevertheless be beneficial for
Pakistan’s new foreign policy. One former Pakistani diplomat, Arif
Kamal, in an email interview, tells The
Diplomat
that the bulk of U.S. assistance to Pakistan has been “transnational”
in the military domain. “The Trump era disconnect of assistance is
disadvantageous for both. However, if the cut persists, it can only
serve as a ‘blessing in disguise’ for Islamabad and hasten [the]
diversification of sources of its supplies,” noted Kamal.
Such
a development could lead to an intensification of the conflict
between India and Pakistan and further escalation of violence. As
Dalton notes, in the past, the United States was seen as “a useful
and credible party to help tamp down crisis or conflict,” but now
changes in the U.S.-Pakistan relationship have “eroded trust in
Islamabad that the U.S. would be a neutral outsider in a future
crisis.”
Impact
on the Kashmir Dispute
The
current crisis between India and Pakistan remains centered on
Kashmir. Their dispute leaves the civilians in the area living in a
highly militarized zone, facing continuous violence.
U.S.
policy over Kashmir has constantly been that India and
Pakistan need to solve the issue bilaterally. The only way out
is to engage in talks and those have been at a standstill for years.
But Kamal, the diplomat, points out that Pakistan is ready to wait
rather than give way to the other side “in view of the rejectionist
India[n] stance on the normalization process.”
“Islamabad
will continue to uphold Kashmiris’ right to
self-determination, though maintaining a high graph of support
to its ‘Kashmir constituency’ and without any militaristic
underpinning,” he says.
The
long-running conflict between the two sides over Kashmir has cost
tens of thousands of civilian lives, with many estimating that as
many as 70,000 civilians have died in last 29 years. Since the 2016
civilian uprising in the Kashmir valley, there has been a rise in
young boys joining militant groups and even attacking Indian forces’
installations.
The
violence has reached such a level that last month the United States
issued an advisory to its citizens, cautioning them against travel to
Jammu and Kashmir. In August 2017, Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi had said that “not the gun, nor bullets” would lead to a
breakthrough, but instead that “a solution will be reached through
dialogue.” But this month, after a militant attack on an Indian
army camp in Jammu, Indian Defense Minister Nirmala Sitharaman told
reporters that “Pakistan will pay for this misadventure.”
The
dynamics in Jammu and Kashmir and along the LoC, says Jaishankar, are
partly independent of the larger regional dynamics involving the
United States, China, and others. “Taken together, developments in
Jammu and Kashmir, the continuing stalemate in Afghanistan, the new
role of China, and domestic political dynamics in both Pakistan and
India do not augur well for India-Pakistan engagement in the
medium-term future,” he added.
Looking
back at history, outside powers have not had much
success mediating in the Kashmir dispute; not even the
United Nations is able to do much. Washington in particular has
not been very useful as a mediator on this issue, notes Noor Mohammad
Baba, a political scientist. He says that the United States hasn’t
been active in Kashmir so recent trends won’t make much
difference for the Kashmir conflict. “[T]hey [the United States]
have accepted the problem but they can’t enforce a solution on
Kashmir; they can only persuade,” he says.
“The
Americans will not say that Kashmir is not an issue; they will not go
out of their way to keep eyes closed against terrorism. Even if they
do, it wouldn’t make much difference. When the U.S. was very close
to Pakistan, and had problems with India, both were weak — the
Americans were interested but only to persuade both countries,”
says Baba.
Kashmir
At the Center
China’s
growing relationship with Pakistan has balanced the India-Pakistan
power equation, but the dynamics of U.S.-India relations are being
closely watched in the region. As economic concerns have always
driven and shifted the foreign policy of countries, it remains to be
seen how India, Pakistan, the United States, and China will look at
the growing violence in Kashmir and its regional impact.
According
to Dalton, the determinants of conflict in and around Kashmir
have more to do with domestic politics in India and Pakistan than
with the role of external powers in the region. “If there is
another Kargil [war], who might India and Pakistan turn to if they
sought outside crisis mediation? [It’s] not clear that the U.S.
could play this role anymore,” he observes.
It
remains an open question what kind of role the United States might
play in the larger peace process between India and Pakistan. In the
meantime, the two countries continue to stand alert against each
other, without the possibility of any productive talks on Kashmir —
a region in pain that is in dire need of attention and calm.
Fahad
Shah is a journalist and editor of The
Kashmir Walla
magazine and writes on politics, foreign policy and human rights. He
is the editor of anthology Of
Occupation and Resistance: Writings from Kashmir
(2013).
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