Submit your comments on this article |
India-Pakistan |
Time for talk is over |
2014-05-26 |
![]() Who could have predicted that negotiations with terrorists would fail? Sharif came to power a year ago promising to find a peaceful settlement with the Islamist militant group, but as round after round of talks failed, the powerful armed forces favored a military solution. Their patience finally ran out and, late on Tuesday afternoon, during a tense meeting, the army effectively declared it would override a crucial plank of the government's strategy and take matters into its own hands. Asked to sum up the message General Raheel Sharif wanted to convey at the gathering, he added: "The time for talk is over." The next day, Pakistani forces launched rare air strikes against militants holed up in the remote, lawless tribal belt near the Afghan border. It is not clear whether Sharif authorized the operation. On Thursday, they backed that up with the first major ground offensive against the Taliban there, undermining Sharif's yearlong attempt to end a bloody insurgency across his country through peaceful means. Disagreement over the militant threat is the latest row to flare up between the government and military, and relations between the two branches of power are at their lowest ebb for years, according to government officials. The government did say talks with the Taliban would go on. After all, diplomats are paid to talk. Of course the army will be "talking" too. "We will talk with those who are ready for it and the (military) operation is being launched against those who are not ready to come to the negotiating table," spokesman Pervez Rashid told local media on Thursday. But the operations put the military, which has a long record of intervening in civilian rule through plots and coups, firmly back at the centre of Pakistan's security policy. The balance of power is shifting at a time when foreign troops are preparing to withdraw from Afghanistan, and arch-rival India has just elected a Hindu nationalist leader promising to be more assertive on the international stage. "This is the clearest signal yet that the army will dictate its terms now," a member of Sharif's cabinet said. |
Posted by:Squinty |