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'By crossing LoC, Pakistan wrecked talks'
June 23, 2004 08:59 IST
Former US president Bill Clinton had firmly rejected Pakistan's pleas to mediate on the Kashmir issue at the height of the Kargil crisis because India objected to third party intervention.
The then Pakistani prime minister, Nawaz Sharief, Clinton recalls, called him and asked if he could come to Washington on July 4, the American independence day, to discuss the "dangerous standoff" with India that had begun several weeks earlier when "Pakistani forces under the command of General Pervez Musharraf crossed the Line of Control".
The Kargil Crisis: The Complete Coverage
"I told Sharief that he was always welcome to Washington but if he wanted me to spend American independence day with him, he had to come to the United States knowing two things, first he had to agree to withdraw his troops back across the Line of Control, and second, I would not agree to intervene in the Kashmir dispute, especially under circumstances that appeared to reward Pakistan's wrongful incursion," Clinton says in his just released memoirs, My Life.
Clinton says Sharief's moves were perplexing because earlier in February that year, then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had travelled to Lahore to promote bilateral talks aimed at resolving the Kashmir issue and other differences.
"By crossing the Line of Control, Pakistan had wrecked the talks. I didn't know whether Sharief had authorised the invasion to create a crisis he hoped would get America involved or had simply allowed it in order to avoid a confrontation with Pakistan's powerful military," Clinton writes.
"Regardless, he had gotten himself into a bind with no easy way out," he adds.
Sharief, Clinton says, was concerned that the situation Pakistan had created was getting out of control and he hoped to use "my good offices" not only to resolve the crisis but also to help mediate with Indians on the question of Kashmir itself.
"Even before the crisis, Sharief had asked me to help in Kashmir, saying it was worthy of my attention as the Middle East and Northern Ireland. I had explained to him then that the United States was involved in those peace processes because both sides wanted us. In this case, India had strongly refused the involvement of any outside party," Clinton says.
The former president writes that during the talks on July 4 in Washington, Sharief once again urged him to intervene in Kashmir and once again Clinton explained to Sharief that without India's consent, it would be "counterproductive".
But, Clinton says, he told the PM that he would urge Vajpayee to resume the bilateral dialogue if the Pakistani troops withdrew.
"He agreed, and we released a joint statement saying that steps would be taken to restore the Line of Control and that I would support and encourage the resumption and intensification of bilateral talks once the violence has stopped." Clinton writes.
After the meeting, Clinton says, he thought perhaps Sharief had come in order to use pressure from the US to provide himself cover for ordering military to defuse the conflict.
"I knew he was on a shaky ground at home and I hoped that he would survive because I needed his cooperation in the fight against terrorism," the former president writes.