‘100 Years of Peace’, Pakistan’s Security Policy Wants Prolonged Peace With India.

‘100 Years of Peace’, Pakistan’s Security Policy Wants Prolonged Peace With India.

Pakistan wants prolonged peace with neighbours India Pakistan’s first-ever National Security Policy, including elaborated plans to encourage two-way trade and investment with India, albeit without a final settlement of the Kashmir issue.

The National Security Policy, separately endorsed by the National Security Committee and the Cabinet last month, is scheduled to be formally unveiled by Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday.

While some portions of the policy were made public, the main document will remain largely classified.

A Pakistan government official Tuesday told reporters in Islamabad that the country is “not seeking hostility with India for the next 100 years”.

“The new policy seeks peace with immediate neighbours,” the official said. He added that both India and Pakistan are looking at a period of normalising trade and business ties.

“Economic security will be the central theme of the new national security policy…. But geo-economics does not necessarily mean we overlook our geo-strategic and geo-political interests,” the official said.

He added that the long-standing Kashmir issue has been identified as a ‘vital national policy’ issue for Pakistan.

100 Years of Peace.

The original 100-page policy, which would be kept under wraps, leaves the door open for trade and business ties with India without the final settlement of the longstanding Kashmir dispute provided there is progress in the talks between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, an official was quoted as saying by the paper.

“We are not seeking hostility with India for the next 100 years. The new policy seeks peace with immediate neighbours, the official said on condition of anonymity.

If there is a dialogue and progress, there would be a possibility of normalising trade and commercial ties with India as it had happened in the past, the official added.

Ties between India and Pakistan nose-dived after an attack on the Pathankot Air Force base in 2016. Subsequent attacks, including one on an Indian Army camp in Uri, further deteriorated the relationship.

The relationship dipped further after India carried out an airstrike in Pakistan on February 26, 2019 in response to the Pulwama suicide attack in which 40 CRPF jawans were killed.

The relations deteriorated after India announced withdrawing the special powers of Jammu and Kashmir and bifurcation of the state into two union territories in August, 2019.

India has told Pakistan that it desires normal neighbourly relations with Islamabad in an environment free of terror, hostility and violence.

As the new national security policy seeks a shift in Pakistan’s approach from geo-strategic to geo-economics, there is a renewed optimism of a possible thaw with India, the report said.

It took seven years to prepare this policy, which was started by then-national security adviser Sartaj Aziz in 2014.

“Inputs were taken from all the federal, provincial institutions as well as military and other departments, the official said.

The official said the Opposition was not taken on board since policy making was the domain of the executive but for a consensus, “we are ready to sit with the Opposition.”

However, the Opposition had boycotted the session when National Security Adviser Moeed Yusuf briefed the parliamentary committee on national security a few weeks ago.

When asked to comment on the implementation of the policy, the official said the classified document lays out a complete implementation mechanism and the prime minister will review the progress on a monthly basis.

The policy will be reviewed every year and at the time of change of government, the official said, adding the issue of political stability was also taken care of in it.

Pakistan has a chequered history with no elected prime minister having ever been able to complete his/her five-year term.

The new policy also deals with the issue of militant and dissident groups and advocates dialogue with reconcilable elements.’

INDIA PAKISTAN