http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/lets-not-be-so-predictable/article5000176.ece

OPINION <http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/> »
EDITORIAL<http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/>
Published: August 8, 2013 02:20 IST | Updated: August 8, 2013 13:10 IST
Let’s not be so predictable

The ambush and killing of five Indian
soldiers<http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/five-indian-soldiers-killed-near-loc/article4995032.ece?ref=relatedNews>
on
the Line of Control has produced exactly the reaction that the perpetrators
must have wanted — an overheated political and media pushback in India
against moves by the two countries to restart their stalled dialogue. Over
the last month, New Delhi and the new government in Islamabad were quietly
setting the stage for the resumption of talks that had been derailed by the
beheading of an Indian jawan at the LoC in January. Emissaries shuttled
between the two capitals, and both sides were said to be on the verge of
restarting the process. A meeting between Manmohan Singh and Nawaz Sharif
on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York had also all but
been finalised. But it has been clear since the Mumbai attacks that
whenever the two countries take even the most tentative steps forward,
there are elements out to ensure such attempts make no progress. This time,
the efforts at sabotage appear to have begun with the recent attempted
bombing of the Indian consulate in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, except that it
was foiled and instead ended up killing hapless Afghan civilians, including
children. Rather than seeing through this game, the Bharatiya Janata Party,
which made bold moves for peace with Pakistan while in power, has chosen to
be predictable. The Congress’s craven surrender on earlier occasions, when
it hit the “pause” button on talks out of sheer political panic, has only
encouraged such grandstanding.

The uproar against talking to Pakistan and on Defence Minister A.K
Antony<http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/antony-meets-pm-briefs-him-on-loc-situation/article4999195.ece?ref=relatedNews>’s
alleged “escape route” to the Pakistan Army misses the point that despite
the bluster of a “befitting response”, there is no alternative to dialogue.
Whether it was Pakistani soldiers or terrorists in military uniforms who
killed the Indian soldiers is not germane. This is not the first time the
truce along the LoC has been violated in the past 10 years of its
existence. It is only by engagement that the two sides can protect this
ceasefire, the value of which cannot be overstated. And, it is only through
engagement that Islamabad can be held to its 2004 commitment not to permit
terrorists to operate from territory under its control, and be pushed to
act against those responsible for violence against India. Prime Minister
Sharif has given every indication that he is sincere in his wish for
friendship with India but equations between him and the Pakistan Army are
yet unsettled. Which way the civilian-military balance tilts will depend in
large measure on how Prime Minister Singh reacts to Mr. Sharif’s overtures.
If India fails to grasp the civilian hand this time, that balance will only
end up tilting in a way that will further harm its interests.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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