Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
India

Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech A Monumental Error Of Judgement: Hardeep Singh Puri

24 Sep, 2016 02:53 PM
    Absent good advice, democratically-elected leaders are capable of making serious mistakes which have far-reaching repercussions on the future of their country. 
     
    Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's address at the UN General Assembly on September 21 will go down in the country's history as a monumental error of judgement and an example of delusional politics.
     
    Pakistan has been battling allegations of being a state sponsor of terror for nearly three decades. Its track record and the brazen manner in which it has used terrorism as an instrument of policy should have led to its designation in any list of terrorist states that could be so compiled. 
     
    That Pakistan has escaped doing so is largely a reflection of a certain measure of success by its diplomacy in using its status as a front-line state for counter-terrorism purposes and the leveraging of its relationship with the US to escape such designation. Luck seems to now be running out.
     
    What has changed? The mistakes made by the West in Iraq in 2003, Libya in 2011 and the ongoing horrific violence in Syria have altered the narrative. Many countries are arming rebels and Pakistan perhaps believes it is not the only one. There is, however, a crucial difference. 
     
     
    The rise of the ISIS, the unwanted child of failed and neglected interventions, has driven the fear of God into Western establishments. Pakistan was already on the brink as a result of harbouring Osama Bin Laden in the Abottabad military cantonment. 
     
    For the Prime Minister of Pakistan to describe a commander of the Hizbul Mujahideen, seeking to establish an extension of the Caliphate, as a victim of an "oppressive state" is incredulous beyond the point.
     
    When India held the chair of the UN Security Council's Counter-terrorism Committee in 2012, the "zero tolerance" norm was adopted. The mainstream narrative against terrorism clearly establishes that the terrorist takes away the most fundamental right of all, the right to life. 
     
    Duplicitous state conduct and human behaviour may well decide to use the arming of rebels as a means to effect regime change, as, for instance, in the case of Libya earlier and Syria now. But to address the UNGA and proclaim a disciple of the ISIS in glowing terms is asinine behaviour at its best. Pakistan has also been getting its other sums wrong. For the first time after many years, it lost an election at the UN Human Rights Council last December.
     
    Pakistan is a major beneficiary of Saudi generosity, and yet it shied away from sending troops to Yemen on Riyadh's insistence. Countries act not out of emotion, but in their self-interest. Pakistan discovered this in New York on September 21. 
     
     
    The unkindest cut came when even China asked Islamabad to bilaterally solve its tensions with New Delhi. Pakistan's Permanent Representative in New York, a journalist by profession, succumbed to the temptations of the social media and hastily tweeted that she was going to the UNGA for her "PM's actress" instead of "address".
     
    It is well known that speeches by the Pakistan Prime Minister are sent to the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi for vetting. The speech delivered at the UNGA appears to have been drafted by the GHQ without even elementary vetting by Islamabad's professional foreign service. 
     
    A young Indian First Secretary, Eeman Gambhir, delivered a befitting response. Her astute reprimand reminded how "the trail" of 9/11 "led all the way to Abottabad in Pakistan", which stood on the "land of Taxila...now host to the Ivy League of terrorism".
     
    One of the illusions Pakistan has been harbouring for several decades is that a soft Hindu state, benign at its core and wedded to responsible behaviour, can be bled by a thousand cuts. It has underestimated India on two fronts. 
     
    One, in the world's largest democracy public opinion is a potent force. An inflection point has been reached. Even if the Indian state were to wish to continue the policy of acquiescence of the previous three decades, which is not a suggestion that it so wishes, public opinion would not allow it to do so. 
     
     
    Equally, the talk about desiring to isolate Pakistan appears to be somewhat misplaced. Pakistan already stands shamed. Some further shaming, through concrete evidence and dissemination of such evidence will do no harm. Pariah states never feel isolated. What India needs to drive home is that, henceforth, Pakistan will have to pay a price for irresponsible conduct, and that price can be extracted on multiple fronts -- political, economic and military.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Canadian Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against TD Bank's Coin-counting Machines

    Canadian Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against TD Bank's Coin-counting Machines
    TORONTO — A Canadian class-action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of people who used TD Bank coin-counting machines over a three-year period.

    Canadian Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against TD Bank's Coin-counting Machines

    Prison Lottery: Canadian Inmates In U.S. Often Barred From Transferring Home

    Prison Lottery: Canadian Inmates In U.S. Often Barred From Transferring Home
    TORONTO — For Canadians serving time in American prisons, the odds of being allowed to transfer to Canada are akin to winning a lottery, even with a Liberal government that has promised to do more for those detained abroad.

    Prison Lottery: Canadian Inmates In U.S. Often Barred From Transferring Home

    Married Woman Stabbed To Death In Public View In East Delhi

    Married Woman Stabbed To Death In Public View In East Delhi
    A 45-year-old married woman was stabbed to death with a pair of scissors in public view by a neighbour in east Delhi's Gandhi Nagar area today, police said.

    Married Woman Stabbed To Death In Public View In East Delhi

    Woo Dalits, Minorities: Amit Shah's Message To Kerala BJP Unit

    Woo Dalits, Minorities: Amit Shah's Message To Kerala BJP Unit
    Mr Shah was speaking at the NDA steering committee meeting here to review its performance in the state elections in which NDA bagged 15 per cent vote share and BJP made its maiden entry in the state Assembly, party sources said.

    Woo Dalits, Minorities: Amit Shah's Message To Kerala BJP Unit

    Subramanian Swamy Now Targets Economic Affairs Secretary, Makes Light Of Arun Jaitley

    Subramanian Swamy Now Targets Economic Affairs Secretary, Makes Light Of Arun Jaitley
    Swamy also put on hold his demand for sacking Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian following the government's strong support for him but said that he "will wait for events to prove truth."

    Subramanian Swamy Now Targets Economic Affairs Secretary, Makes Light Of Arun Jaitley

    Case registered against AAP MLA for misbehaving with locals

    A case has been registered against AAP legislator from Sangam Vihar, Dinesh Mohaniya, after few local residents complained he had misbehaved with them when they went to report irregular water supply problem in the area, police said on Thursday.

    Case registered against AAP MLA for misbehaving with locals