Congratulations are due to you again, Mr. Singh. After waiting anxiously for nearly three hours outside the conference room in Sharm el Shaikh when we finally received the joint statement, I thought it was a moment for Pakistani Prime Minister to establish himself as a regional leader. And, I was wrong.
By taking a considerable leap of faith, you have positioned yourself to be recorded in South Asian history as Sane Singh. What appeared to both Indian and Pakistani journalists as you ceding too much ground to the Pakistani Prime Minister was actually reflection of your grander goals. We were (both Indians and Pakistani) particularly fixated on a line saying that the peace process should no longer be linked to Pakistan’s progress in cracking down on militancy. A Pakistani colleague called it a ’diplomatic coup’ for Pakistan. Thumping his chest he told his TV channel that Pakistan had come out a victor. Must admit, I made the same mistake. When my anchor asked why India was playing on the ’back foot’, I implied that India was under tremendous international pressure to forge peace and reduce tension with Pakistan.
You can’t blame us. De-coupling of terrorism from bilateral talks was a reversal of India’s position since the Mumbai attack.
My Indian counterparts were angered by the inclusion of a reference to Pakistan’s southwestern province of Baluchistan, where Pakistan says India’s intelligence service is supporting a separatist insurgency. In the past India had always denied that, and resisted making the issue part of the two countries’ dialogue.
I watched your speech to the Indian parliament during a heated two-day debate on recent foreign policy issues. I know you watered down some parts of the joint statement, but you stood by the basic position that India needs to talk to Pakistan directly: admitting that the only alternative is another war.
I am glad that you were firm on your Baluchistan position: if you have nothing to hide why not put this out on the table as well. If India is not interfering in Baluchistan we will soon put this behind us.
I know you will not win the favor of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) but you have won my support. And, as long as you stick to the peace process you will continue to win hearts and minds of many Pakistanis like myself.
Mr. Singh- I know I speak for many like minded Pakistanis when I say: Justice and fairness should be the first and foremost priority of any future dialogue. I can assure you that majority of Pakistani people are willing to reciprocate.
I know Mr. Singh that your domestic critics will remain unconvinced: I saw that BJP walked out of Parliament in protest over the Baluchistan issue. But you have been blessed with an opportunity of historic proportion. Your opponents are still in disarray after their dismal performance in this year’s election, whereas Congress now has an even stronger mandate and greater control over its coalition.
Mr. Singh, successful leaders are not afraid of taking unpopular positions. So even if it seems unpopular at present you should press ahead and resume composite dialogue with Pakistan.
In my past pleadings to you, I have proposed a “sous rature” for Kashmir – because the conflict is inadequately represented thus far as a territorial issue. Since this is an important issue, I propose we keep it legible yet cross it out. And, going forward use a more accurate term; water conflict.
Water is linked to the crises of climate change, energy and food supplies, and in our case, a territorial dispute. Unless Kashmir’s link with water is addressed and resolved, these other crises may intensify leading to further political insecurity and conflict at various levels.
It is abundantly clear to most educated Pakistanis that the Kashmir dispute cannot be resolved until every Pakistani citizen is assured access to water – today, tomorrow and for times to come.
You have demonstrated the courage and wisdom I expected from our sagacious neighbor and I hoping you will drop the idea of building dams that deprive Pakistani farmers of vital water supplies. Please resume the composite dialogue and address the critical issue of the Tulbul Navigation project on Wular Lake in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir.
I know Mr. Singh you have taken a considerable risk to repair the relationship and for that you deserve credit. Hats off to, Sir!
Now let’s address the water crises right away.






