Ashish Sharma
The Indian Express
June 11, 1999
Title: Silence of the lambs Author: Ashish Sharma Publication: The Indian Express Date: June 11, 1999 Silence. Stunning silence. As characteristic as gunfire is to the troubled Himalayan heights and casualty to war, or war-like situation, is the silence of the lambs, or the doves of peace who retreat with the first signs of the breach of misplaced trust by the other side. More than a couple of weeks have passed since India began losing some of its finest men in response to the Pakistani perfidy in Kargil. And for just as long we have stopped hearing from all those who have been advocating magnanimity as the cornerstone of our Pakistan policy. All those who react with righteous indignation whenever any Pakistani musician is stopped from performing in a public concert anywhere in India. All those who travel to Pakistan on goodwill trips and come back with notions of cosy brotherhood which people-to-people contact between the two nations can supposedly ensure. All those who lustily cheered Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee's historic bus ride to Lahore as the harbinger of new harmony just as they had bemoaned Pokharan II as an avoidable act of provocation. All those who genuinely seemed to believe that if we didn't let political hostility come in the way of cultural ties, even if it was scarcely reciprocated, Pakistan would eventually be sobered into submission for the larger good. All of a sudden, as it becomes clear that the Lahore spirit only served as a deceptive facade for the 52-year-old Pakistani designs on India, reactivated with all the vigour that our not-so-friendly neighbour could summon without sounding the war cry, the talk has shifted to the failure of assessment on the part of India. All of a sudden, it is Vajpayee the Indian Prime Minister who is called into question, rather than Vajpayee the statesman of the subcontinent. All of a sudden, it is the political perseverance and administrative acumen of Vajpayee that is at test, rather than his singular capacity to deflate the anti-RSS-controlled-BJP bogey. Which is just as well. For the rhetoric-ridden BJP, which seems at pains to be everything to everybody, Kargil is yet another rude reminder of the complexities of the real world. It can only do the party a lot of good, as it endeavours to come through the crisis with a show of firmness. For the so-called secularists and Friends of Pakistan, though, it might be altogether another story. Every Pakistani shell that pounds the peace in Kargil, inflicts additional blows to the theorists of India-Pakistan amity. More specifically, the all too familiar voices that are periodically raised to denounce the Government of India for its want of liberalism in dealing with the globe-trotting cultural ambassadors from Pakistan. The same voices that exhorted India to forever play the benign elder brother to its impertinent younger sibling. The same voices that were won over but once, in that heady brief spell which lasted until the euphoria of the bus ride to Lahore. Even as the Indian soldiers reclaim the strategic heights inch by embattled inch, these voices seem to have been bombed out. It is time for these nagging voices to find courage to own up that they have been as mistaken as any other wishful thinker. It is time for these voices to speak up against the Pakistani perfidy just as they constantly do in favour of initiating overtures to our neighbour. They have two good reasons for doing this. One, the Delhi-Lahore-Delhi bus service is still up and running with not a seat vacant on either side, which should give them sufficient ground for advocating the validity of people-to-people contact. And two, which should be even more of a motivation, if they stay silent now, they will have lost the moral high ground to carry on with their refrain ever again. India is waiting.
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