Author: IANS
Publication: The Times of India
Date: June 18, 2009
URL: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Pakistan-has-lost-Kashmir-plank-Pak-media-/articleshow/4671914.cms
Pakistan has lost its Kashmir plank with India
bringing on centrestage the need to counter terrorism, an editorial in a leading
English daily said on Thursday while welcoming the apparent sub-continental
thaw after the meeting in Russia between President Asif Ali Zardari and Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
"There was a time when Pakistan wanted
'movement' on Kashmir from India. Now India wants 'movement' first, on terrorism,"
Daily Times said in an editorial headlined 'The message from Yekaterinburg'.
"One phase is over whether Pakistan likes
it or not. The next phase is upon us and that is Pakistan's war against Baitullah
Mehsud's Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and al-Qaida.
"One reason phase one is over is that
even for Pakistan, the priority now is getting rid of the terrorists. Beyond
that is a new model of relationship in South Asia between its two big nuclear-armed
states and with the threatened countries that lie on the edge of the region,"
the editorial contended.
Manmohan Singh had delivered a blunt message
to Zardari at their meeting in Yekaterinburg Tuesday, their first after the
Mumbai terror attacks that India has blamed on elements operating from Pakistan.
"I must tell you quite frankly that I
have come with the limited mandate of discussing how Pakistan can deliver
on its assurances that its territory would not be used for terrorists attacks
on India," Manmohan Singh had said.
Delhi Times also noted that New Delhi's official
line on Pakistan before the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit
at Yekaterinburg that India and Pakistan had attended as observers was - do
something about terrorism first and then expect the resumption of dialogue
with India.
"The message from Yekaterinburg was that
the 'primary issue of terrorism will be discussed by the foreign secretaries
of the two countries before the leaders of the two countries meet again in
mid-July on the sidelines of an international conference in Sharm-el-Sheikh,
Egypt'," the editorial said.
Holding that the war against terrorism "should
not be an India-Pakistan war", the editorial said: "A new kind of
dialogue between the two countries is essential. And it can't be a rehash
of what happened in the past, in which some optimists saw 'great progress'
but which yielded no results."
According to The News: "The resumption
of greater normalcy between Islamabad and New Delhi is welcome."
"But while dialogue and negotiations
between the two nations are to be encouraged, and have in the past led to
steps - such as the cross-border bus services - that help people meet and
encourage contact between them, it is time now to fix a firmer goal,"
said the editorial, headlined "Time to talk".
Holding that both Pakistan and India "have
suffered immense losses due to terrorism", the editorial said: "They
then stand to gain from coming together."
"But if this is to happen, India must
accept it too has made many errors and committed many wrongs that need to
be righted. Simply making demands on others while failing to correct one's
own mistakes serves very little useful purpose."
"India needs to demonstrate it deserves
a status as 'big brother' in the region by setting the right example and,
by doing so, winning the respect of its smaller neighbours," the editorial
maintained.
Dawn, too, focused on the theme of terrorism,
saying the two countries should focus on the scourge that "threatens
the peace and stability of South Asia".
"It is important that neither government
provide any kind of sanctuary to terrorists operating against the other in
the misplaced belief that this strategy promotes its political interest."
"It is time both realised that terrorism
is a double-edged sword that also destroys its protector and patron. Hence
the SAARC mechanism that has already been set up to investigate and fight
terrorism must be activated and used effectively to the advantage of both,"
said the editorial, headlined "Handshake in Russia".