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NEW DELHI: India may have picked Nawaz Sharif's four-point formula for peace to launch its attack on Pakistan, but the real target of the tough line New Delhi took at the United Nations this week was that country's army bosses in Rawalpindi.
Assessing that the Pakistan Prime Minister was not calling the shots on the India policy, the Modi government continued with its belligerence in reacting to Islamabad. While it was PM Sharif who put forward his government's suggestions for peace last Wednesday from the high podium, it is no secret that it is the other Sharif in the cantonment - army chief General Raheel Sharif - who calls the shots in Pakistan.
From its Rawalpindi headquarters, Pakistan's army has for too long shaped Islamabad's India policy and its stamp was evident in the Right to Reply by Pakistan's Permanent Mission in UN following Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj's address, and the decision to hand over the UN Secretary-General dossiers containing
purported evidence of Indian involvement in terrorism and fomenting instability in Pakistan. India's alleged atrocities in Jammu and Kashmir were the dominant theme in Pakistan's Right to Reply on Thursday and the issue has been Rawalpindi's lifeline to justify its role in the country.
PM Sharif - by fighting detractors at home - had responded positively to Narendra Modi's invite to his swearing-in ceremony in May last year. The two had decided to take forward relations, including
boosting cross-border trade ties. At the the landmark meeting of two PMs in Ufa, Russia, on July 10 Nawaz Sharif took a bold step of not referring to the K-word in a joint statement. Certain forward-looking steps were announced, but the first hurdle could not be crossed as Islamabad refused to limit the agenda of National Security Adviser-level talks on all forms of terrorism, going against the very spirit of Ufa. The Pak army's shadow was evident in the Sharif government's decision to cancel NSA-level talks, officials and experts in India point out. Terror attacks were planned in Punjab and J&K and violations by Pak army along the Line of Control and international boundary have been on the rise.
The writ of Raheel Sharif, one of the strongest Pakistan army chiefs, runs over the decisions — either to consult the Hurriyat Conference ahead of formal talks or bringing Kashmir issue at the centrestage of any bilateral dialogue. Terror does not figure high on his agenda vis-avis India. He has gone on record to teach India a "lesson" in case of any attack from here. New Delhi's tough line for any meaningful talks was evident from Swaraj's no-nonsense approach at the UN General Assembly on Thursday. "We do not need four points, we need just one -give up terrorism and let us sit down and talk."
Pakistan Army, not government, shapes policy towards India - The Economic Times
Assessing that the Pakistan Prime Minister was not calling the shots on the India policy, the Modi government continued with its belligerence in reacting to Islamabad. While it was PM Sharif who put forward his government's suggestions for peace last Wednesday from the high podium, it is no secret that it is the other Sharif in the cantonment - army chief General Raheel Sharif - who calls the shots in Pakistan.
From its Rawalpindi headquarters, Pakistan's army has for too long shaped Islamabad's India policy and its stamp was evident in the Right to Reply by Pakistan's Permanent Mission in UN following Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj's address, and the decision to hand over the UN Secretary-General dossiers containing
purported evidence of Indian involvement in terrorism and fomenting instability in Pakistan. India's alleged atrocities in Jammu and Kashmir were the dominant theme in Pakistan's Right to Reply on Thursday and the issue has been Rawalpindi's lifeline to justify its role in the country.
PM Sharif - by fighting detractors at home - had responded positively to Narendra Modi's invite to his swearing-in ceremony in May last year. The two had decided to take forward relations, including
boosting cross-border trade ties. At the the landmark meeting of two PMs in Ufa, Russia, on July 10 Nawaz Sharif took a bold step of not referring to the K-word in a joint statement. Certain forward-looking steps were announced, but the first hurdle could not be crossed as Islamabad refused to limit the agenda of National Security Adviser-level talks on all forms of terrorism, going against the very spirit of Ufa. The Pak army's shadow was evident in the Sharif government's decision to cancel NSA-level talks, officials and experts in India point out. Terror attacks were planned in Punjab and J&K and violations by Pak army along the Line of Control and international boundary have been on the rise.
The writ of Raheel Sharif, one of the strongest Pakistan army chiefs, runs over the decisions — either to consult the Hurriyat Conference ahead of formal talks or bringing Kashmir issue at the centrestage of any bilateral dialogue. Terror does not figure high on his agenda vis-avis India. He has gone on record to teach India a "lesson" in case of any attack from here. New Delhi's tough line for any meaningful talks was evident from Swaraj's no-nonsense approach at the UN General Assembly on Thursday. "We do not need four points, we need just one -give up terrorism and let us sit down and talk."
Pakistan Army, not government, shapes policy towards India - The Economic Times