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Modi's visit to Pakistan creates World Headlines

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Indian PM Modi's low profile surprise visit to Lahore, Pakistan creates big World Headlines and a hope for domestic revival of Indian-Pakistan relations, Is India feeling Isolated via China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, Afghanistan and Russia, Is Modi politically embattled domestically? :



India’s Modi makes surprise visit to Pakistan, Lahore

By Sampath Perera
29 December 2015

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made an apparently impromptu visit to Lahore to meet his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, on December 25. The visit was the first by an Indian prime minister to Pakistan in well over a decade which created world headlines.

It took observers by surprise, not just because it did not appear on the itinerary of the Indian prime minister, who spent December 23 and 24 in Moscow and then travelled to Kabul to help inaugurate the Indian-constructed Afghan parliament building.

Only in recent weeks have Modi and his Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government pulled back from a highly provocative policy of refusing all high-level diplomatic engagement with Islamabad until it cedes to Indian demands that it renounce “support for terrorism.”

The year 2015 saw the worst border skirmishes between South Asia’s two nuclear-armed states in more than a decade. Further exacerbating tensions were bloodcurdling war threats issued by both Indian and Pakistani political and military leaders.

India’s corporate media has been quick to hail Modi’s Pakistan trip as a diplomatic coup.

In fact, it was a pragmatic maneuver, aimed at placating Washington and shoring up the increasingly embattled Modi government domestically.

Under Modi, India has tilted further to the US and become even more closely integrated into Washington’s anti-China “pivot to Asia.” At the same time, Modi has sought to assert India’s claim to be the regional hegemon, and this has necessarily meant a policy of confrontation with Pakistan.

While the Obama administration has lavished India with armaments and help in implementing its economic and military-strategic “Look East” policy, it became increasingly concerned in recent months that Indian belligerence was disrupting its plans to have Pakistan help broker peace talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government. These talks are supposed to begin as early as next month.

Publicly, Washington did not criticize India for boycotting talks with Pakistan, but US Deputy Secretary of State Anthony Blinken made a number of increasingly worried comments last autumn about the possibility of war erupting between India and Pakistan.

In an interview with the Indian Express earlier this month, Blinken said he feared a terrorist attack in India could “spark off a large-scale conflict” with Pakistan, adding, “The only thing worse than an intentional conflict is an unintentional conflict, where an incident sparks something and it spirals out of control.”

The US diplomat went on to publicly press for the renewal of diplomatic engagement between New Delhi and Islamabad. The war danger, he said, “is one of the reasons why it is so important, in our judgment, that India and Pakistan find ways to communicate, to reduce tensions, and ultimately to find a more cooperative relationship.”

Of course, Blinken omitted mention of the fact that a key factor in destabilizing Indo-Pakistan relations has been the US drive to integrate India into its military-strategic offensive against China. This has included offers to jointly develop and produce advanced weapons systems and a civilian nuclear deal that gives India access to foreign nuclear fuel and technology, allowing it to focus its indigenous nuclear program on weapons development.

While Washington’s prodding is obviously behind the sudden turn in New Delhi’s relations with Pakistan from confrontation to apparent rapprochement, the official narrative is that it can all be traced back to a chance 167-second November 30 encounter between Modi and Sharif on the sidelines of the Paris Climate Change Conference.

This allegedly led to a December 6 meeting in Bangkok, Thailand, between India’s national security advisor, Ajit Doval, and his Pakistani counterpart, Nasir Khan Janjua, which was publicly disclosed only after the fact.

The successful conclusion of the national security advisors’ meeting made it possible for India to send External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj to Islamabad to attend the latest session of the multilateral “Heart of Asia-Istanbul Process” on December 8.

While the US is not formally part of this conclave, it made clear that it saw the meeting, which brought together diplomats from Afghanistan and all of its neighbors and near neighbors, including Russia, China, Iran and India, along with several Gulf States, as important for moving toward a “political settlement” to the Afghan war.

While in Islamabad, Indian External Affairs Minister Swaraj met with Prime Minister Sharif, and the two subsequently announced the launching of a “Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue” between India and Pakistan, in which all outstanding issues, including the fate of the disputed Kashmir region, will figure.

The “Bilateral Dialogue” is, in fact, a new name for the “Comprehensive Peace Dialogue” that was launched in 2003 and which has been effectively stalled since India suspended it in December 2008 in the wake of the Mumbai terrorist attack.

By visiting Sharif on Christmas Day, Modi has given his personal stamp of approval for the thawing of relations with Pakistan, winning praise from Washington, which was no doubt less enthused by the first leg of his trip. That took Modi and a large delegation of Indian businessmen to Moscow. While there, Modi reaffirmed the importance of the Indo-Russian strategic alliance and signed a number of significant arms deals.

Modi’s surprise visit to Lahore also allows him to demonstrate that he is firmly in charge and capable of dramatic action at a time when his 19-month-old government is increasingly being criticized by big business for its failure to restore India’s high growth rate and its hesitation in pushing through pro-investor labor and land-ownership reforms in the face of popular opposition.

Sections of the business elite, as reflected in such corporate mouthpieces as the Times of India and the Hindustan Times, had also been urging Modi to reconsider his hard-line stance against all engagement with Pakistan, arguing that it had brought no substantive dividends and was a distraction from the government’s economic “reform” agenda.

While a meeting of the Indian and Pakistani foreign secretaries is apparently in the works for early in the new year, there is nothing to indicate that Modi’s visit accomplished anything apart from a media splash. The Indian prime minister arrived in Lahore with an entourage of top-level foreign and military security officials, but their Pakistani counterparts were not available for talks. It would not appear that this was a deliberate snub, but rather a result of the lack of advance preparation for the visit.

Previously, however, the Pakistani military worked to subvert Sharif’s attempts to lessen tensions with India. With Washington’s tacit support, the top brass of the Pakistani military have over the past two years wrested back control of the country’s foreign and national security policies from the civilian government.

Modi, meanwhile, has made a political career out of posturing as a Hindu strongman and issuing vows to put Pakistan in its place.

The reactionary Indo-Pakistani geo-political conflict is rooted in the suppression of the anti-imperialist revolution in South Asia by the colonial bourgeoisie and the communal partition of British India in 1947 between a Hindu-dominated India and a Muslim Pakistan.

This conflict, which has become central to the respective ideologies of the rival bourgeoisies, has over the course of the past decade become increasingly entangled with Washington’s drive to sustain and expand its domination of Eurasia.
 
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I read the first para then saw the name sampath perera then realised what could be the source and why op did not put the link, and stopped reading.

Just want to reply to what i read:
Lets see whats CPEC ,its for people who dont know about it or dont understand it.

CHINA now has to go around and has to travel longer and spend more to get or import or export With this project they want to achive is a shorter and faster and cheaper route.

Now for that they will construct the road pipelines and other things and the money they spend on that is the loan to Pakistan ,which Pakistan has to pay back with intrest.and to top that up the maintance of that is the responcibility of Pakistan along with the saftey of the project thats why special force is being created to take care of its saftey.
And what will Pakistan get in return,transit fee.
I havent talked about the power projects being started in Pakistan by china,they are moving or selling the plants from china which they have promised closing by 2020 anyway at climate summit.
Good luck.
C=china
P=Pakistan
E=eakdhum
C=chuna

And India feels isolated.where do you guys live.
 
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does it means, india-pakistan war is eminent because last time otol bihali visited pakistan and after some time we saw a war...................:sniper::guns:
 
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@5:55 mins of this video, what Modi meant at Afghan address, that centuries and centuries of terror in Afghanistan and Pakistan must be stopped??? Is he referring to Muslim Invaders from past 1000 years from Afghanistan and Pakistan over to India, he now calling them all terrorists ????


Without doubt Pakistanis are the most hospital place on earth.
 
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does it means, india-pakistan war is eminent because last time otol bihali visited pakistan and after some time we saw a war...................:sniper::guns:

did you mean Atal ?

On the rest of your post ::

mental5-4.gif
 
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Pakistani hospitality to guests is best:



Sajjan Jindal's presence in Lahore coinciding with Modi visit raises questions
 
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did you mean Atal ?

On the rest of your post ::

mental5-4.gif
Oh Bhai, the last time you had a PM of high caliber like Vajpyaee who rescued your stranded army through an intelligent political solution. At present, you people also have a nincompoop in shape of Modi. Modi is as big a nincompoop as Nawaz Shareef. Be careful.
 
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Pakistanis are reading too much into the visit... it grabbed headlines because it was designed to do precisely that... it was a counter offensive to what Pakistan leadership has been trying to do for past few months... Pakistani leadership was shouting on top of their voices "We want better ties with India" ... GOI decided to do some Guerilla warfare.. and took the diplomatic charm offensive to Pakistan... Now if relationship takes a spin... all blames will be on Pakistan.
 
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Modi, BJP govt, Congress, Indian media and Indian Armed forces alll has realized it does not have any geopolitical clout to isolate and win over from Pakistan through brute force and is therefore forced to evaluate other options. Pakistanis will make sure before we allow india any trade route across our nation all outstanding issues should be settled and from Pakistani perspective we don't have any problem with India or her people except they are forcefully occupying our land.

Neighbouring Pakistan is not getting affected much if she doesn't trade or have any diplomatic relations with India infact its beneficial and shielding to her economy in many ways its India who is begging for MFN status and trade routes to Af'tan and Iran and to get anywhere closer to that Modi and other Hindu fanatics will have to give Kashmiris their right to self determination, resolve Sir Creek, water issues otherwise this whole thing would never proceed beyond photoshoots and selfies.

Modi can be a good diplomat, he had done all the hard way against proud Pakistanis but in Pak-India equation there is not much room for diplomacy as the lines are drawn precisely and everybody knows where exactly they stand and its the last chance for India once Chinese CPEC is ready and functioning I don't see much room left for India. Its India which is loosing everyday. Modi in his visit must have the taste of development and progress in Lahore alone, where Pakistanis are now living.

Pakistan can survive another few decades without Kashmir but if India doesn't get cheap and quick access to Central asia for another 50 years they will loose all chances they currently have to compete with China or become a strong regional power economically. India needs resources more than Pakistan needs anything from India or Indians.

Source: Modi's visit to LAHORE Pakistan creates World Headlines
 
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Pakistanis are reading too much into the visit... it grabbed headlines because it was designed to do precisely that... it was a counter offensive to what Pakistan leadership has been trying to do for past few months... Pakistani leadership was shouting on top of their voices "We want better ties with India" ... GOI decided to do some Guerilla warfare.. and took the diplomatic charm offensive to Pakistan... Now if relationship takes a spin... all blames will be on Pakistan.

No one cares about the Modi visit. His visit means nothing unless major points of contention are resolved. We actually want an end to conflict. Hence, the decision to actively engage for a better relationship. Peace is always better than war. Nonetheless, if India has other ideas about the relation with Pakistan be my guest. We aren't wearing any bangles here.

We know why Modi came because he too has demands and a wish list. We're dangling an Afghanistan carrot and we know it is irresistible. Whatever you seek can only be provided once all outstanding conflicts are resolved in a meaningful manner. I think you're the one reading too much into things here.
 
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