[《Modi himself never indulged in such rhetoric, but constantly referred to
Pakistan during subsequent election campaigns. The 2017 Gujarat assembly
election is a case in point. During the campaign, he declared: “There was a
meeting of the High Commissioner of Pakistan, the former foreign minister
of Pakistan, the former vice president of India and the former Prime
Minister of India Manmohan Singh at Mani Shankar Aiyar’s house (…) My
brothers and sisters, this is a grave matter. Pakistan is a sensitive
issue; what was the reason behind this secret meeting with that high
commissioner, especially when elections are taking place in Gujarat?

To suggest that Congressmen were conspiring with Pakistanis over a dinner
(that, incidentally, held no secrets) was part of an electoral tactic, but
it also aimed at creating a politics of fear. Such politics were fostered
by alleged recurring jihadi attempts to assassinate Modi, that were exposed
by the Gujarat police in the early years of his tenure as CM.

While the sense of vulnerability vis-à-vis the Pakistani threat is
particularly acute in the border state of Gujarat, BJP leaders have
referred to Pakistan during other state elections. During the 2015 Bihar
election campaign, for example, Amit Shah said: “If the Bharatiya Janata
Party is defeated in the Bihar assembly polls and does not form a
government, firecrackers will be burst in Pakistan.” During the 2017
assembly election in UP in 2017, a BJP leader told journalist Prashant Jha
(How the BJP Wins): “We want anti-Muslim polarisation. Why pretend
otherwise?” Another BJP member explained his party’s success in UP to the
same journalist in simple terms: “It was an India-Pakistan election.”

The way one relates to Pakistan can be used as an acid test, not only to
polarise society along religious lines but also to differentiate the
patriots from the traitors. The February 2016 JNU event that resulted in
the arrest of Kanhaiya Kumar and others is a good illustration of this
process. They were arrested because of the alleged anti-national slogans
they had raised — these were publicised via video broadcast. ***Journalist
Vishwa Deepak gave a revealing testimony after resigning his job at Zee TV:
“The video, that never had a slogan of ‘Pakistan Zindabad’, we ran again
and again to stoke passions. How could we convince ourselves so easily that
the voices in the darkness belonged to Kanhaiya or his friends? Blinded by
prejudice we heard ‘Bharatiya court zindabad’ as ‘Pakistan zindabad’.”***
[Emphasis added.] Deepak does not attribute the words, “Pakistan Zindabad”
to any doctored tape, here, but to his own confusion, the confusion that
had been created by propaganda.
...
But peace talks are made even more difficult when the party in office tries
to mobilise voters by highlighting its military achievements against its
neighbour. For instance, in an Aap ki Adalat show in September on India TV,
Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman was asked: “During the election
campaign, you people had said that if they cut two heads, we will cut 10
heads. But 10 heads are not really being cut.” The minister responded: “We
are also cutting heads, but not displaying them.” Another election campaign
has started.]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/india-pakistan-talks-narendra-modi-lok-sabha-elections-5437144/?fbclid=IwAR2q7sUw8G0WWRrqKHa5JXdaH3BHkEwET4PBieQUjPtvok6-ppGh9ArmDcs

Elections and borders
India’s refusal to talk to Pakistan has much to do with BJP’s electoral
narrative.

Written by Christophe Jaffrelot |

Updated: November 8, 2018 2:21:04 am

Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan in
New Delhi. (File)

Sometimes what has not happened needs to be explained as much as what has
happened. External Affair Ministers of India and Pakistan, Sushma Swaraj
and Shah Mehmood Qureshi, did not meet on the sidelines of United Nations
General Assembly in New York in September. Why? In his victory speech in
July, Imran Khan had said that Pakistan would respond by taking two steps
for any step taken by India for normalisation of relations. In his
congratulatory message to Khan on his swearing in in August, Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi had responded constructively and called for
dialogue. Imran Khan had then sought a meeting between the two ministers of
foreign affairs in New York. India had agreed — the meeting was supposed to
take place on September 26 — but called it off less than 24 hours later for
two reasons: The “brutal killings” of Indian security personnel at the
hands of “Pakistan-based entities” and the release of 20 postage stamps
“glorifying a terrorist”, Burhan Wani. These two incidents happened before
the Ministry of External Affairs had confirmed the talks. Some analysts
have pointed out that only after confirming the talks did New Delhi realise
that three days after the meeting, it would celebrate the second
anniversary of the “surgical strike”. Contradictory signals would be sent
if peace talks were followed, that closely, by a grand commemoration of a
transborder attack against Pakistan.

This explanation is convincing but needs to be seen in a larger
perspective. The BJP is in an election mode and that makes it more
difficult for the government to talk to Pakistan. After all, this country
has figured prominently in all the recent election campaigns of the party —
those by Modi in particular. As the chief minister of Gujarat, Modi had
constantly spoken about the Pakistani threat and projected himself as a
strong leader vis-à-vis Pakistan and its jihadists. During the 2012 Gujarat
election campaign, he arraigned then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for
being weak vis-à-vis Pakistan. In a letter to Singh that was released to
the public even before it reached the PMO, the then Gujarat CM warned that
“any attempt to hand over Sir Creek to Pakistan would be a strategic
blunder”. Singh responded that that was not his intention.

This tactic gained momentum during the 2014 election campaign. In March
that year, Modi tweeted, “3 AKs are very popular in Pakistan: AK 47, A K
Antony & AK-49”. While Antony was the then UPA government’s defence
minister, Modi dubbed Kejriwal “AK 49” in obvious reference to his first
term of 49 days as Delhi’s chief minister. In a meeting in Hiranagar in
Jammu and Kashmir, he said that the three AKs were helping Pakistan in
different ways. In Kejriwal’s case, this accusation stemmed from the fact
that “his website shows Kashmir as part of Pakistan”. Antony was seen as
too weak vis-à-vis Pakistan. One month later, a former BJP minister of the
Bihar government and a future Union minister, Giriraj Singh, declared at an
election meeting in Mohanpur in Jharkhand: “Those opposing Narendra Modi
are looking at Pakistan, and such people will have a place in Pakistan and
not in India.”

Modi himself never indulged in such rhetoric, but constantly referred to
Pakistan during subsequent election campaigns. The 2017 Gujarat assembly
election is a case in point. During the campaign, he declared: “There was a
meeting of the High Commissioner of Pakistan, the former foreign minister
of Pakistan, the former vice president of India and the former Prime
Minister of India Manmohan Singh at Mani Shankar Aiyar’s house (…) My
brothers and sisters, this is a grave matter. Pakistan is a sensitive
issue; what was the reason behind this secret meeting with that high
commissioner, especially when elections are taking place in Gujarat?”

To suggest that Congressmen were conspiring with Pakistanis over a dinner
(that, incidentally, held no secrets) was part of an electoral tactic, but
it also aimed at creating a politics of fear. Such politics were fostered
by alleged recurring jihadi attempts to assassinate Modi, that were exposed
by the Gujarat police in the early years of his tenure as CM.

While the sense of vulnerability vis-à-vis the Pakistani threat is
particularly acute in the border state of Gujarat, BJP leaders have
referred to Pakistan during other state elections. During the 2015 Bihar
election campaign, for example, Amit Shah said: “If the Bharatiya Janata
Party is defeated in the Bihar assembly polls and does not form a
government, firecrackers will be burst in Pakistan.” During the 2017
assembly election in UP in 2017, a BJP leader told journalist Prashant Jha
(How the BJP Wins): “We want anti-Muslim polarisation. Why pretend
otherwise?” Another BJP member explained his party’s success in UP to the
same journalist in simple terms: “It was an India-Pakistan election.”

The way one relates to Pakistan can be used as an acid test, not only to
polarise society along religious lines but also to differentiate the
patriots from the traitors. The February 2016 JNU event that resulted in
the arrest of Kanhaiya Kumar and others is a good illustration of this
process. They were arrested because of the alleged anti-national slogans
they had raised — these were publicised via video broadcast. Journalist
Vishwa Deepak gave a revealing testimony after resigning his job at Zee TV:
“The video, that never had a slogan of ‘Pakistan Zindabad’, we ran again
and again to stoke passions. How could we convince ourselves so easily that
the voices in the darkness belonged to Kanhaiya or his friends? Blinded by
prejudice we heard ‘Bharatiya court zindabad’ as ‘Pakistan zindabad’.”
Deepak does not attribute the words, “Pakistan Zindabad” to any doctored
tape, here, but to his own confusion, the confusion that had been created
by propaganda.

Pakistan has become part of India’s election campaign for good reasons.
Election campaigns are the right time for debating issues such as national
security. And there is evidence of the fact that the ISI did orchestrate
the Mumbai attack in 2008 and engineered infiltrations of jihadists though
the Line of Control. Other terrorist attacks, including the one in
Pathankot, have also been convincingly attributed to the Pakistani security
establishment.

But peace talks are made even more difficult when the party in office tries
to mobilise voters by highlighting its military achievements against its
neighbour. For instance, in an Aap ki Adalat show in September on India TV,
Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman was asked: “During the election
campaign, you people had said that if they cut two heads, we will cut 10
heads. But 10 heads are not really being cut.” The minister responded: “We
are also cutting heads, but not displaying them.” Another election campaign
has started.


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Peace Is Doable

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