http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/neighbourhood-initiative/article6037670.ece
Neighbourhood
initiative
Prime
Minister-elect Narendra Modi’s surprise invitation to the leaders of India’s
neighbours to attend his swearing-in ceremony on May 26 has the makings of a
shock and awe tactic with three messages: the first to Pakistan, the second to
the region and the third for domestic consumption. While dressed up as an
outreach to all SAARC leaders, the invitation was clearly meant
primarily for Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan.
To the extent that during his election campaign Mr. Modi’s references to Pakistan
were all linked to cross-border terrorism, the invitation is rightly seen as an olive branch to that country. Less
apparently, the invitation to witness Mr. Modi’s anointment is an assertion
that Pakistan now has to deal with a powerful new leader in New Delhi with a
decisive mandate, and that the onus is now on Pakistan to show that it wants
friendly ties. The invitation has put Mr. Sharif in an awkward position even
though he and an earlier Prime Minister from the Bharatiya Janata Party made
bilateral relations look easy for a while. Mr. Modi’s image across the border
is, however, different from that of Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s; and, as well as
being weighed down by anti-India hawks within his own party and Cabinet, the
Pakistani leader, who has many a time articulated a vision of friendly ties
with India, has an unsupportive and mostly hostile security establishment
breathing down his neck. There are indications that Mr. Sharif might find a way
out of this delicate corner by sending a representative. In any case, Mr. Modi
and the new dispensation in Delhi would be better served avoiding conclusive
judgments about Pakistan or Mr. Sharif on the basis of the response. Hopefully,
they will find more nuanced ways of coming to grips with what is a layered,
complex and difficult relationship.
The
second clear message is to South Asia and the larger region, including China,
that under the new leadership India intends to be proactively engaged with the
region, and in contrast to the United Progressive Alliance government, will not
let the initiative slip from New Delhi’s hands, whether in the Maldives, Sri
Lanka, Bangladesh or Nepal. The third message is meant for regional parties in
Tamil Nadu and in West Bengal that, allies or not, they can no longer dictate
terms on foreign policy. Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa was
the first to understand this; such a New Delhi-Tamil Nadu equation is exactly
what he wants, and he readily accepted the invitation. The Ministry of External
Affairs, which too appears to have been taken by surprise by Mr. Modi’s
invitation, will need to adjust to the reality that the control desk of India’s
foreign policy will be located in the new, more powerful Prime Minister’s
Office.
(Courtesy:
The Hindu)
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