abhijitm wrote:Ok ShauryaT lets agree that we need to demilitarize Siachen. My question would be, why now? why today is the most right time? Its not that Kargil, parliament attack, AI highjack, 26/11 etc happened many paki generations ago. Its the same generation and crop of people who are running pak now. So why not judge their sincerity in some other civil , social, economical and more importantly terrorism areas first before jumping on to military bases. Why so sudden haste? Lets the trust building take its own natural course and then demlitarization of not only Siachen but many other parts may also happen. We can definitely afford to stay put for a while. What do you say?
Meanwhile we have much more important areas to concentrate on to save money and human life which can add much more value to our country than demilitarizing a military base on the border.
Fair question. There are various perspectives to the issue and its linkages to other things geo-political. I will leave the larger perspectives out of the picture here. Just like you are wondering, why now? Many ask, why has it taken so much time. After all, we have had had talks on Siachen since Zia/RG times. The simple answer to your question is Siachen is seen as a low hanging fruit. It is an inhospitable area, devoid of population and of none to low military significance. So, amongst the available options, this is seen as a good starting point, where risks can be managed. It also proves to both sides that a negotiated settlement with a meaningful impact on the ground can be had and serves as a model for the future.
Extreme positions on both sides, do not lend to conciliation. Think of this issue from a Pakistan perspective. When is the last time, we moved on ANYTHING major with Pakistan through negotiations. In fact one of their retorts is India uses negotiations to NOT make progress. Is it not a common wisdom on this board, let the chai-biskut discussions happen, nothing will move an inch. Put yourself in their shoes for a minute. Pakistan sees us as an existential threat and they do not have the conventional power to defeat us and take ANY land from us, if India decides to firm up its will. They simply do not have those type of resources. To compound matters, it is a dysfunctional state, if not a failed one. It severely lacks cohesion and control. It lacks control over internal provinces, it gets raped and gets some bones thrown at it at times by outsiders, its socio-economic-political environment has gone from bad to worse. One way or the other, all this will affect us and it has. One cannot wish away 180+ million and a piece of geography that makes India a virtual island. The Ostrich like syndrome that India has had so far, will not help. Ideally, I would have preferred all elements of Sama, Dana, Bheda, Danda to be used but wishes cannot be horses and I have to settle for what our own polity is capable of. It is my belief that by moving the ball forward, we will marginalize those elements of Pakistani polity that hold extreme views on India.
India should club the issue of Siachen, with other areas such as trade, extremism and geo-political access. But, we have to be careful, to not club too many things together, for it gets compounded and then the proposals fall on its own weight. Both have to accept that not ALL issues will be settled in one swoop.