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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JPR who wrote (10721)2/18/2000 12:02:00 PM
From: JPR  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Congressman Gedjenson JETTISONS THE IDEA OF CLINTON'S VISIT TO PAKISTAN

Clinton piles praise on South Asians, but no mediation in the Kashmir dispute. Congressman Sam Gedjenson JETTISONS THE IDEA OF CLINTON'S VISIT TO PAKISTAN & said it would also be seen as legitimising the military coup in Pakistan.


expressindia.com
Special interest, but no special envoy -- Clinton
CHIDANAND RAJGHATTA

WASHINGTON, FEBRUARY 17: The United States needs to be more
involved in South Asia to persuade India and Pakistan to talk but the two
countries ``have to work out this business of Kashmir between
themselves'. Treading this delicate line between shrill Pakistani demands
and prickly Indian sensitivities, President Clinton on Wednesday carefully
spelt out the US diplomatic agenda for the sub-continent in the coming
days.

Evidently, there will be plenty of behind-the-scenes American persuasion
to get the two sides to talk, which partly fulfills Pakistani pleas to put the
Kashmir issue center-stage but falls short of its demand that the US
mediate between the two sides. At the same time, Washington itself will
not broker any solution or arbitrate between the two countries, keeping in
mind New Delhi's firm stand that it is a bilateral matter.

``Unless we were asked by both parties to help, we can't get involved (on
the Kashmir issue),' Clinton said at a White House press conference. He
said in every other case, such as the Middle East or Northern Ireland, the
US was involved because both parties wanted so. But in the case of India
and Pakistan, although the US was in a position to make a constructive
contribution, it would not interpose itself.

``If they don't want us, it won't be doing any good; we'd just be out there
talking into the air. And I'm not in for that,' Clinton said.

The President's categorical assertion that India and Pakistan have to
tackle the Kashmir issue between themselves disappointed the Pakistani
lobby hoping for mediation and came as a relief to Indian supporters.

Even more significantly, the President virtually ruled out an emerging
Pakistani demand to appoint a special envoy for Kashmir, saying it would
not contribute to the resolution of the problem.

``I agree that a bilateral dialogue is the most productive approach to a
solution, and that a US special envoy (for Kashmir) would not contribute to
a resolution of the problem,' Clinton wrote in a letter to the co-chairman of
the India Caucus, Congressman Gary Ackerman.

The President, however, said he continued to be concerned about the lack
of dialogue between India and Pakistan. ``Both countries should work to
resume their dialogue with the goal of resolving all the issues dividing
them, including Kashmir,' he added.

When asked at the White House event if the US would step in if both
countries asked, Clinton responded with an emphatic ``absolutely'. He
then went on to make a case for some kind of US involvement with lavish
praise for the people of the subcontinent. He spoke of the success in
terms of education and income levels of Indian Americans and Pakistani
Americans who had done ``stunningly well' and ``astonishingly maybe,
had good contacts with one another (in the US).' But in South Asia, he
suggested, the tensions were holding back progress.

``If the tensions between India and Pakistan could be resolved, it is my
opinion, based on my personal experience with people from India, people
from Pakistan and people from Bangladesh, that the Indian subcontinent
might very well be the great success story of the next 50 years.

``You're talking about people who are basically immensely talented, have
a strong work ethic, a deep devotion to their faith and to their families.
There is nothing they couldn't do. And it is heartbreaking to me to see how
much they hold each other back by being trapped in yesterday's
conflicts,' Clinton said feelingly.

The President however said he had not made a final decision about a
stopover in Pakistan although he was going to India and Bangladesh. ``I
will make a decision about whether to go based on what I think will best
serve our long-term interests in non-proliferation, in trying to stop,
particularly, the arms race, and trying to help to promote stability,
democracy and a resolution of the conflict between India and Pakistan,'
he said.

Hours before the President spoke, his Secretary of State, Madeleine
Albright, faced lawmakers at a Congressional hearing who were agitated
at a possible Presidential stopover. Cautioning that a Clinton stopover in
Pakistan would send the wrong message to the international community
about the United States' commitment to democracy, Congressman Sam
Gedjenson said it would also be seen as legitimising the military coup in
Pakistan.