Trump plays peacemaker with India, Pakistan on Kashmir dispute

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–US president makes separate phone calls to Imran Khan and Narendra Modi, asks them to reduce Indo-Pak tensions

 

US President Donald Trump spoke separately on Monday (early Tuesday morning in Pakistan) with the prime ministers of India and Pakistan in a bid to calm tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbors over the disputed Kashmir Valley.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has kept Kashmir under lockdown for more than two weeks after stripping it of its special status through a rushed presidential order, a move termed “illegal” by Pakistan.

Trump said on Twitter that he spoke to his “good friends” Modi and Khan about getting the two countries “to work towards reducing tensions in Kashmir. A tough situation, but good conversations!”

However, that might prove difficult, Bloomberg reported.

Khan recently compared Modi’s “Hindu supremacist” government to the Nazis and said India was suppressing its sizable Muslim minority and endangering regional security. “The world must also seriously consider the safety & security of India’s nuclear arsenal in the control of the fascist, racist Hindu Supremacist Modi Govt,” the Pakistani premier wrote on Aug. 18 in a series of tweets.

In their latest conversation, Khan told Trump that Pakistan “foresees a humanitarian crisis” arising from India’s “unilateral action” in Kashmir, foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi told reporters late on Monday.

In a statement on Modi’s conversation with Trump, the Indian prime minister’s office did not refer explicitly to a discussion on Kashmir, saying only that “in the context of the regional situation, the Prime Minister stated that extreme rhetoric and incitement to anti-India violence by certain leaders in the region was not conducive to peace.”

AFGHANISTAN CONCERNS:

The speed with which Modi’s government sought to take control in Kashmir may be linked to larger concerns about the US moving out its troops from neighboring Afghanistan, analysts say.

Trump’s comments on Kashmir may also be a way to assure Pakistan that its interests will be safeguarded in return for its help to keep the Taliban in check in war-torn Afghanistan, Harsh Pant, professor of international relations at King’s College London, said by phone in New Delhi.

“The larger geopolitics of the region was a major reason for India to immediately push for greater control over Kashmir,” said Pant. “For Trump, his priority is elections. Every time he brings up Afghanistan, Pakistan is bound to bring up Kashmir. But Trump’s comments are mostly optics. Operationally the trajectory of US-India relations remains unchanged.”

The talks between the US and Taliban have taken on greater urgency as Afghanistan heads for presidential elections on September 28. Trump is expected to push Khan to pressure the Taliban into signing a permanent ceasefire in Afghanistan.

“There is clearly a link between India’s Kashmir move and developments in Afghanistan,” Michael Kugelman, a Washington, DC-based South Asia senior associate at The Wilson Center, said in a message.

“The rapidly progressing peace process is increasing the likelihood of a future Afghan government with a prominent role for the Taliban — a best-case scenario for Islamabad and a worst-case endgame for New Delhi. India, by stripping Kashmir of its autonomous status and delivering a blow to Pakistan, can push back against Islamabad to undercut Pakistan’s strengthened hand in Afghanistan.”

KASHMIR SILENCED:

More than two weeks after the sudden decision to scrap autonomy in Kashmir and bring police and local administration directly under the control of Modi’s federal government, India is yet to release local political leaders who have been detained without legal recourse.

Fixed-line telephones in the valley are working and movement restrictions are being eased, Dilbagh Singh, director-general of police for Jammu and Kashmir, said through a text message late Monday.

However, media reports emerging from the valley claim the situation to be severely tensed. As of yet, there is no word on when the mobile or internet blackout would be lifted.

Trump’s conversations with the two leaders comes nearly a month after the US president said he would help resolve the Kashmir dispute by mediating talks. The president said he made the offer after being asked to do so by Modi — a request India vigorously denied making. When India’s foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar met Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at a recent regional summit, he stressed New Delhi’s longstanding policy of keeping Kashmir issues at a bilateral level.

South Asia analysts downplayed the significance of Trump’s call, saying it wasn’t unusual for US presidents to try and dampen tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad but that it still marks a minor diplomatic win for Pakistan, which generally tries to internationalize the Kashmir dispute.

“Given recent developments, this tweet makes for good optics for Islamabad,” Kugelman tweeted.

Pakistan has been trying to focus international attention to Modi’s sudden decision to scrap seven decades of autonomy held by its Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir.