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Big country with a small heart

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harpoon

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IN Karachi’s Keamari harbour, near Baba and Bhit islands and close to the Yacht Club, is a macabre sight: scores of wooden fishing boats are quietly away. A few are still riding high in the water, but most are partly submerged, their hulls and masts tilting at crazy angles.

This watery graveyard contains the life-savings of hundreds of Indian fishermen who were unfortunate enough to cross the unmarked coastal boundary between Indian and Pakistani waters. Captured and locked up, they languish in jail, sometimes for years. Their release in exchange for Pakistani fishermen in Indian jails for a similar ‘crime’ depends on the state of relations between the two countries.

The boats and the imprisoned fishermen are apt metaphors for the situation in which India and Pakistan find themselves. Frozen in their rigid position of no-war, no-peace, both countries take out their frustration on the weakest of the weak.

As the recent meetings between Indian and Pakistani officials showed yet again, there is little stomach for a sane and peaceful resolution of their outstanding problems on either side. They go through the rituals of pretending to negotiate, knowing full well that no agreements will emerge at the end of the exercise. There is simply no political will in either Islamabad or New Delhi to cut the Gordian knot.

And yet, there was a time when there was hope for a breakthrough. Under Benazir Bhutto and Rajiv Gandhi in 1989, an agreement over the absurd squabble over the Siachen glacier was reached. Sadly, the Indian establishment torpedoed it before the ink had dried. And Musharraf, for all his flaws, as well his responsibility for the Kargil folly, genuinely tried to solve the festering Kashmir dispute, and presented some out-of-the-box ideas, including putting the UN resolutions aside. He was snubbed by India for his pains.

So if Pakistan, with its huge security problems, its dysfunctional civilian government and its prickly, blinkered generals, can make serious attempts at mending fences with its neighbour, why can’t India? After all, with its overwhelming military superiority, its rapidly expanding economy and the goodwill it has globally, it should be brimming with self-confidence. So what excuse does India have for not being more proactive and imaginative in promoting regional peace?

The truth is that somehow, despite its economic and military clout, India continues to punch well below its weight in the region. When Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said recently that 25 per cent of all Bangladeshis hated India, he might have been undiplomatic, but he was saying something everybody knows. Here is a much smaller neighbour that owes India its very existence as an independent state, and yet anti-India sentiments in Bangladesh are rampant.

Or take Sri Lanka, an even smaller neighbour. In the closing stages of the civil war two years ago, tens of thousands of Tamils were massacred, and India could do nothing to persuade Colombo to desist. This is despite the fact that the citizens of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu were convulsed at the sight of their cousins being slaughtered.


The only time India attempted to intervene in the conflict was when it sent a peace-keeping force to the island. These soldiers were pulled out after three years following heavy fighting with the LTTE. Since then, India remained a bystander while Pakistan and China armed and trained government forces. So although India is helping Sri Lanka with various infrastructure projects, it has very little influence in Colombo.

Or take Nepal, another of India’s neighbours that has gone though a long and bloody civil war. Although the land-locked nation’s economy is almost completely integrated with India’s, New Delhi was unable to intervene in the civil war, or in the long political crisis that has paralysed the country.

Even within India, the expanding Naxalite insurrection, as well as other separatist movements in Mizoram and Kashmir, highlight the establishment’s lack of imagination and self-confidence. These problems have been around for decades, and continue to get worse rather than better. Surely some creative ideas ought to have been put forward by now. But force seems to be the only answer New Delhi is capable of.

India’s successful entrepreneurs have seized opportunities created by globalisation, as well as by their country’s growing middle class and its trained manpower. Indian politicians, diplomats and civil servants, on the other hand, retain their old mindset from an era when India was just another developing nation. Instead of using its expanded hard and soft power to have a greater say in the region, India appears to be a timid player on the world stage.

In order to translate its growing strength into influence, India need not be the bully on the block, as it has so often seemed to its smaller neighbours. Given its resources and expertise in many fields, it can reach out to extend a helping hand. It can and should expand trade, and encourage its entrepreneurs to invest in the region.

The regional organisation, Saarc, must be reactivated to become the platform for expanding regional trade and travel it was designed to be. But for any of this to happen, India needs to break out of its timorous frame of mind and think big. Before it can be seriously accepted as a major global player, it has to sort out its regional disputes.

Whenever I have suggested that India can afford to be magnanimous as it is so much more powerful than Pakistan, I am routinely attacked by Indian readers. But what’s the alternative? Clearly, Pakistan’s generals are too insecure to take the initiative, and its shaky civilian government is in no position to take up from where Musharraf left off.

However, both Asif Zardari and Nawaz Sharif have expressed their desire to normalise relations with India.Somehow, the political elites as well as the media in both countries are quite content with the status quo. They seem to think that it is perfectly normal to stay locked in a confrontation for decades when the rest of the world is moving ahead. And while India has done phenomenally well in recent years, the majority of its population still lives in abject poverty.

A few years ago, I was at a conference in Colombo to discuss the Kashmir problem, and a retired Pakistani general said: “India is a big country with a small heart.” High time Indians proved him wrong.


Big country with a small heart | Opinion | DAWN.COM
 
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I read this Article yesterday in Dawn..it is a nice read, but for India its difficult to answer the questions asked in article. We have to look into past as well as future.
 
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We can play the waiting game..like China we think in terms of centuries not years

Do you really think that we are blessed with such incredible strategic vision? :lol: I think you will be disappointed.

Patience is always rewarded though.
 
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I think the author showed his ignorance while commenting about India's relation with SL and Nepal. LTTE would never have been trounced without the tacit support of India. In Nepal's case we dumped a pro-India king in favor of anti-india Maoists as King became increasingly dictatorial in his dealings with his own people.
 
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For a long time I was fancying the idea of south Asia economic block consisting of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, Nepal, Sri Lanka,Nepal. But then I realize it's impossible thinking of This small heart mindset, poisonous education to young generations by its congress party. Today it becomes even harsh as the west has bought up India media.
 
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heart enlargement is a chronic disease from which India does not wants to suffer..

We can play the waiting game..like China we think in terms of centuries not years

now dont compare youself with china now :lol::lol::lol:

indians and their monkey wearing jewelery idiom :lol:
 
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For a long time I was fancying the idea of south Asia economic block consisting of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, Nepal, Sri Lanka,Nepal. But then I realize it's impossible thinking of This small heart mindset, poisonous education to young generations by its congress party. Today it becomes even harsh as the west has bought up India media.
There are no pro pakistani indians in india
 
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but deep down they are inflicted with Inferior Complex, making them defensive to the extreame in general.

and next step of that is Stockholm Syndrome that they are buttering the west for what they had suffered.
 
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the article seems to be biased and not being able to understand India. for that matter very few people can . as for being small hearted , i do not mind considering the state of a few "big hearted " neighbors of ours.
 
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but deep down they are inflicted with Inferior Complex, making them defensive to the extreame in general.

and next step of that is Stockholm Syndrome that they are buttering the west for what they had suffered.

forgive me but it seems form the recent actions taken by the GOP the same can be said about you .
 
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but deep down they are inflicted with Inferior Complex, making them defensive to the extreame in general.

and next step of that is Stockholm Syndrome that they are buttering the west for what they had suffered.

STFU buttering west it was you guys who did it your own people in usa call them selfes as indians have some shame
 
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its not even education, envy, jealousy, indian society's mentality, self superiority complex, like untouchables(achut) and brahmins problems, india like its caste system mentality has a mentality to create problems, not looking others as equals, many indian members here call chinks to chinese, or slit eyes, i have observed, though india's economy is nothing like china's economy, but still some how indians think of themselves as the greatest thing god created

I agree with most of what you have said about Indians. It seems about right. But are you sure these things don't exist in your country? Before you start judging us, try to take a deep look at your society and reply what your thoughts are.
 
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we don't have a choice. but we at least is trying to balance.

look at you, a so called power, but so well dancing with the west. Even Iran is pissed by you.
 
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