This story is from July 18, 2010

The day after: India raps Qureshi's etiquette

During the negotiations, at several times, the entire Indian delegation was left alone in Qureshi's room in the Pakistan foreign office, while the Pakistan delegation stepped out to consult their bosses.
The day after: India raps Qureshi's etiquette
NEW DELHI: Shah Mehmood Qureshi really couldn't complain about S M Krishna's phone etiquette. During the day-long negotiations, at several times, the entire Indian delegation was left alone in Qureshi's room in the Pakistan foreign office, while the Pakistan delegation stepped out to consult their bosses. In any diplomatic negotiation, it's perfectly normal for officials to stay in touch with their headquarters. Therefore, there is complete mystification in the Indian camp about Qureshi's bellicosity, said sources familiar with the Islamabad.In the run-upto the talks, the two sides had worked on the confidence-building measures thatwould be announced during the visit. These included a set of meetings betweencommerce secretaries (to kickstart trade), water resources secretaries (to lookfor cooperation in this area) even parliamentarians to meet each other. Withthis, India was going to indicate that it was ready for launching the fullspectrum of dialogue. A meeting of surveyors general would also have beenscheduled to resolve the Sir Creek issue.But this would take time,because after Mumbai, India wants Pakistan to take some credible action onterrorism, which would prompt further opening up by India.ButPakistan, said sources, would have none of it. The Indian delegation went in thetalks believing that the agreements were a done deal, when Qureshi sprang a"roadmap" on them, insisting that talks on Kashmir, peace and security andSiachen should happen simultaneously.
They wanted a calendar of eventsculminating in the foreign ministers' next meeting in Delhi at the end of theyear.As Pakistan PM Yousuf Gilani's remarks on Saturday made clear, the Pakistani side took Manmohan Singh's assurance that "all issues would be discussed" more literally than the Indian side. Gilani said, "Pakistan wants the continuation of dialogue with India. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has assured me that all issues will be discussed." Qureshi said, "We are very serious about normalising our relations with India."India was not ready to takethe big jump into the core issues just yet, without Pakistan taking any actionon terrorism. Certainly, on issues like Siachen, the Indian government was notyet ready to take the plunge.Given the Pakistani objections, theIndian side even worked on some drafting language that took into accountpositions on both sides. By scheduling a foreign secretaries' meeting they hopedto take care of two of the three issues -- J&K and peace andsecurity.But this was not acceptable to the Pakistani minister, whotook the my-way-or-the-highway road. In retrospect, what Pakistan understoodfrom resumption of dialogue and what India understood were very different, whatforeign secretary, Nirupama Rao called a "difference inperception".For the Indian side, the signal was that Pakistan didnot want to negotiate. The reason remains a bit of a mystery. It could be thatthe Headley revelations about ISI involvement in Mumbai was the straw that brokethe camel's back in the Pakistan army establishment and they found the homesecretary's revelations to be an excuse. Or it could be that Pakistan thoughtthat pushing India to talk on Kashmir when there was ongoing turmoil in thestate was the right thing to do.Whatever, it has brought backmemories of the 2001 Agra summit, which also ran aground when Pervez Musharrafwanted to put Kashmir as the "core" issue in a joint statement and refused tobudge.Then, as now, India's intelligence on the inner workings ofthe Pak army mind remains sketchy. And that is always a problem.The way forward is less clear, though evidently India will have to fix the breach, even if Pakistan doesn't. Krishna and Qureshi are scheduled to meet next week in Kabul during the peace conference. Whether they decide to move on will be watched carefully. The Indian proposals on resumption of dialogue are still valid, say sources. So if Pakistan wants to pick up on them they can.
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