Entire Opposition Join Hands Even
As Doves In RAW And ISI Coo
Saeed Naqvi
Dated: 25.05.2018
Two
mutually reinforcing images from last week may well define the next phase in
national affairs. It is too early to call them game changers but they have
considerable potential.
The
most comprehensive array of opposition leaders, almost a record, who assembled
in Bangaluru for H.D. Kumaraswamy’s swearing in as Chief Minister of Karnataka
is significant because it happened despite the contradictions inherent between
the various groups in that galaxy.
The
occasion produced the man and he better be noticed: Kunwar Danish Ali, the
Jamia Millia educated, JDS spokesman, carried sufficient credibility on both
sides to swiftly stitch together the Congress-JDS alliance in the state. This
became the platform on which stood India’s non BJP diversity. In stitching this
extensive hem too Danish Ali is being applauded by those who know.
Muslims
in politics are either too weather beaten or “too Muslim” to navigate
diversity. Danish Ali, in my view, is a political animal with a wide reach and
one who keeps his faith intensely private. We should hear more about him should
the Karnataka experiment remain intact.
The
other iconic image was, quite curiously, of a book release. It must have been a
few hours of grave national danger, because seldom has the well appointed
auditorium of the Claridges hotel been more packed with spies, past and
present. For its sheer audacity, Spy Chronicles, RAW, ISI and the illusion of
Peace, is by itself a thrilling title, but when the authorship comes out in
sharp silhouette, the revelation takes ones breath away. A.S. Dulat, former
chief of RAW and Gen. Asad Durrani, former head of Pakistan’s Inter Services
Intelligence (ISI) have put their heads together and have, without compromising
fidelity to their respective oaths of office, produced a 320 page document
which must now onwards inform those in the sub continent shaping policy on
Kashmir and Indo-Pak relations.
The
high powered congregation in Bengaluru and the brave effort of the
Dulat-Durrani duet, both respond to the same national quest – a softer more
humane sub continent. Alas, a calmer India, on its own, divorced from the sub
continent, is just not possible. It is, likewise, not possible for Pakistan.
1947 was both a blessing and a curse. We could define our separate nations
according to our lights but we were also yoked together by geography from which
proceed historical and sociological currents which flow forward but also
regurgitate into the past.
The
first concerted effort to wrench away from the sub continental centre of
gravity came from Pakistan dictator, General Zia ul Haq. His push for
Nizam-e-Mustafa invited nascent Islamophobia which has metastasized into the
modern horror.
Just
when fluctuations in Indo-Pak ties gives way to a seemingly interminable
hostility, comes the Dulat-Durrani intervention, opening a ventilator in an
otherwise suffocating hothouse.
What
the book touches on is, in effect, the nub of the matter. Indo-Pak initiatives
flounder on that ubiquitous document meant for the principal, say, the Prime
Minister, marked “for eyes only”. If the Deep State on both sides is the
obstacle, why not allow spymasters on both sides to sort out the cobwebs which
the principals cannot?
Leftovers
from Partition are Kashmir, Pakistan, Hindu-Muslim tensions. If tense communal
relations are a requirement for the politics of Hindu consolidation, it
follows, as night follows the day, that Kashmir and Indo-Pak relations must
simmer in perpetuity. They have been placed on auto by our own hands.
To
obviate communalism as an essential requirement for electoral politics, it is
essential that the motley political crowd on the podium at in Bengaluru is
regularized. Many societies called it a rainbow coalition.
Both,
pre requisite and a consequence of the Bengaluru experiment is precisely this:
tone down social disharmony which communalism aggravates. This end is
unachievable without the Dulat-Durrani initiative taking off. Social
disharmony, it needs to be stressed, is the overarching malaise under which
communalism is played. That is why one photograph that came out of the
Bengaluru assembly is epochal – Sonia Gandhi leaning her head against
Mayawati’s.
It
may be odd to remember Urdu poetry at this juncture but do indulge a line. The most
graphic poet, Mir Anis, describes cosmic tumult in which two mutually hostile
creatures come together in the face of common danger:
“Shaheen
o kabk chhup gayey
Ekja
mila ke sar”
(Facing
danger, the falcon and the dove put their heads together in the thicket)
Considering
that Congress lost its deposit in the March by-elections in UP’s Phulpur and
Gorakhpur constituencies, Sonia Gandhi would be seen to be in requirement of
the BSP supremo, Mayawati’s help. Mayawati may not have been the winner but it
was with her help that Akhilesh Yadav’s SP won the two seats.
In
this situation what would one make of Congress Election Chief in Madhya
Pradesh, Digvijay Singh’s statement from Bhopal. He dismissed any tie up with
the BSP. Neither was Sonia’s photograph with Mayawati an announcement of a tie
up, nor does Digvijay Singh’s reported statement scuttle it. This non-story is only
a precursor to what is in store: political busy bodies will load a triangular
situation – Congress, BSP, SP – with such heavy voltage speculation that some
strand somewhere will snap. The process of coalition building will only be
partly in the hands of the principals. To a large extent the process will be
conditioned by the din surrounding it which will create misgivings all around
as in rapid fire magazines.
The
Dulat-Durrani initiative will be subjected to an even more severe ordeal by
fire, atleast upto 2019. The events of last week provide hope which will
generate its opposite – the Pulley principle.
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