<p>Redeployment from the Siachen glacier without asserting correct delinea-tion of land will mean accepting the Pak claim.<br /><br /></p>.<p>There has been a flurry of interest after Gen Kayani declared that India and Pakistan must live in peaceful coexistence as defence without development is neither viable nor acceptable. Hurrah! He saw all issues as capable of resolution and Siachen as an urgent starting point.<br /><br /> This impassioned appeal followed the tragic death on April 7 of 138 Pakistani troops in an avalanche ‘while on Siachen.’ He said “everyone knows why the army is here...because in 1984, the Indian Army occupied the area and in response to that the Pakistan army was sent in.” The facts are otherwise. <br /><br />General Kayani has also got the genesis of the problem wrong though he rightly asserts that both sides are paying a high price in blood, treasure and environmental costs. Pakistan’s solution calls for an Indian withdrawal from the glacier. <br /><br />India in turn is willing to accept a mutual pull back and redeployment of troops to agreed positions provided Pakistan acknowledges the present ‘Actual Ground Position Line’ (AGPL) that it holds. <br /><br />These are the proffered ‘solutions.’ The Indian Army, however, fears that Pakistan could renege on the agreement and send troops dressed as ‘mujahideen’ to occupy Siachen as it brazenly attempted to annex Kashmir in 1947 and again in 1965 and the Kargil Heights in 1998. <br /><br />The Siachen ‘solutions’ overlook the problem. The critical date is not 1984 but July 29, 1949, when the Cease-Fire Line Agreement was signed in Karachi by ranking military representatives of India and Pakistan and the UN Military Observer Group. <br /><br />It delineated the entire CFL, demarcating over 740 km on the ground. With the CFL increasingly running through high mountains and glaciated areas as it traversed north, it often followed a directional path in the absence of clear landmarks. Thus, finally, ‘Chalunka (on the Shyok River), Khor, thence North to the glaciers,’ passing through grid reference NJ 9842.<br /><br />The delineation of this segment of the CFL was, however, unambiguous: NJ 9842, ‘thence north to the glaciers.’ If everyone of 30 or more earlier directional commands were meticulously followed in tracing the CFL, there was no reason whatsoever for any departure from this norm in the case of the very last command. <br /><br />“Thence North”, could only mean due north to wherever the boundary of J&K state lay. The CFL was ratified by both sides and deposited with the UNCIP. It was revalidated as the LOC after Simla, and incorporated the military gains made by either side in J&K in the 1971 war. In the Kargil-Siachen sector, all gains thereby went entirely to India which acquired the Turtok salient just south-west of NJ 9842.<br /><br />Earlier in 1956-58, during the UN-designated International Geophysical Year, an Indian scientific team led by the Geological Survey explored the upper Nubra and Shyok Valleys, mapped and measured the Siachen and other glaciers and publicly recorded its findings. <br /><br />On the Indian side<br /><br />No protest followed. Why? Locate NJ 9842 on a detailed physical map of northern J&K and draw a line ‘thence North’ and much of Siachen will be found to lie on the Indian side of the CFL. Pakistani military maps (ref. Musharraf’s Memoir, “In the Line of Fire”. Free Press, London. 2006), depicting Pakistan’s military positions during the Kargil operations, situate the entire Siachen glacier on the Indian side of the delineated line, NJ 9842, ‘thence north to the glaciers.’<br /><br />All Pakistan, UN and global atlases depicted the CFL correctly till around 1967-72. By then Beijing had commenced its creeping cartographic aggression in Aksai Chin and in 1963 signed a boundary agreement with Pakistan which unilaterally ceded the 5,000 sq km Shaksgam Valley to China. <br /><br />Thereafter, Pakistan started extending its lines of communication eastwards and began licensing western mountaineering expeditions to venture east of K2. It was emboldened to extend this ‘eastward creep’ when, between 1967 and 1972, the US Defence Mapping Agency, an international reference point for cartography, began extending the CFL from NJ 9842 to a point just west of the Karakoram Pass, unilaterally hardening what was possibly no more than an extant World War II air defence information zone (ADIZ) line into a politico-military divide. World atlases followed suit. So did Pakistan, which followed cartographic aggression with moves to occupy Siachen. Getting wind of this stratagem, India, pre-emptively occupied the glacier in March 1984.<br /><br />In a US Institute for Peace conference on J&K in Washington in 1991, delegates were delivered a map at their hotel without the mandatory credit line regarding its origins. It was headed ‘The Kashmir Region: Depicting the CFL/LOC, Siachen and Shaksgam.’ This showed a hatched triangle NJ 9842-Karakoram Pass-K2, and Shaksgam in the north, with a legend reading, “Indian occupied since 1983”. The conference organisers disowned what it surmised was ‘possibly’ a CIA map that might be treated as ‘withdrawn!’ <br /><br />Any unqualified redeployment from the Siachen glacier without asserting the correct delineation of the CFL/LOC from NJ 9842 ‘thence north to the glaciers,’ will mean accepting the Pakistan claim and throwing the August 1948 UN Resolution and derivative 1949 Karachi Agreement into the dustbin. <br /><br />Manmohan Singh’s 2005 peace formula would sanctify the LOC as an evolving international boundary, rendered porous as ‘mere lines on a map’ across which movement and commerce increasingly flowed to bind the peoples of J&K and India and Pakistan together in friendship and cooperation. This is the only viable win-win solution for all in and over J&K. But unless the LOC is firmly anchored to a northern terminus, it will dangle loose and surely unravel, leaving everything for grabs. <br /><br />Siachen has no intrinsic strategic value. Both sides should withdraw or redeploy from there once there is clear acceptance of the 1949 CFL-cum-LOC. Thereafter the triangle NJ 9842, K2 and the Karakoram Pass can be designated an International Glacier and World Weather Park, hopefully with Shaksgam as a partner, to study and measure climate change. India should therefore welcome Kayani’s second thoughts and pursue it without getting snow-blinded regarding the facts, larger perspectives and the national interest. <br /></p>
<p>Redeployment from the Siachen glacier without asserting correct delinea-tion of land will mean accepting the Pak claim.<br /><br /></p>.<p>There has been a flurry of interest after Gen Kayani declared that India and Pakistan must live in peaceful coexistence as defence without development is neither viable nor acceptable. Hurrah! He saw all issues as capable of resolution and Siachen as an urgent starting point.<br /><br /> This impassioned appeal followed the tragic death on April 7 of 138 Pakistani troops in an avalanche ‘while on Siachen.’ He said “everyone knows why the army is here...because in 1984, the Indian Army occupied the area and in response to that the Pakistan army was sent in.” The facts are otherwise. <br /><br />General Kayani has also got the genesis of the problem wrong though he rightly asserts that both sides are paying a high price in blood, treasure and environmental costs. Pakistan’s solution calls for an Indian withdrawal from the glacier. <br /><br />India in turn is willing to accept a mutual pull back and redeployment of troops to agreed positions provided Pakistan acknowledges the present ‘Actual Ground Position Line’ (AGPL) that it holds. <br /><br />These are the proffered ‘solutions.’ The Indian Army, however, fears that Pakistan could renege on the agreement and send troops dressed as ‘mujahideen’ to occupy Siachen as it brazenly attempted to annex Kashmir in 1947 and again in 1965 and the Kargil Heights in 1998. <br /><br />The Siachen ‘solutions’ overlook the problem. The critical date is not 1984 but July 29, 1949, when the Cease-Fire Line Agreement was signed in Karachi by ranking military representatives of India and Pakistan and the UN Military Observer Group. <br /><br />It delineated the entire CFL, demarcating over 740 km on the ground. With the CFL increasingly running through high mountains and glaciated areas as it traversed north, it often followed a directional path in the absence of clear landmarks. Thus, finally, ‘Chalunka (on the Shyok River), Khor, thence North to the glaciers,’ passing through grid reference NJ 9842.<br /><br />The delineation of this segment of the CFL was, however, unambiguous: NJ 9842, ‘thence north to the glaciers.’ If everyone of 30 or more earlier directional commands were meticulously followed in tracing the CFL, there was no reason whatsoever for any departure from this norm in the case of the very last command. <br /><br />“Thence North”, could only mean due north to wherever the boundary of J&K state lay. The CFL was ratified by both sides and deposited with the UNCIP. It was revalidated as the LOC after Simla, and incorporated the military gains made by either side in J&K in the 1971 war. In the Kargil-Siachen sector, all gains thereby went entirely to India which acquired the Turtok salient just south-west of NJ 9842.<br /><br />Earlier in 1956-58, during the UN-designated International Geophysical Year, an Indian scientific team led by the Geological Survey explored the upper Nubra and Shyok Valleys, mapped and measured the Siachen and other glaciers and publicly recorded its findings. <br /><br />On the Indian side<br /><br />No protest followed. Why? Locate NJ 9842 on a detailed physical map of northern J&K and draw a line ‘thence North’ and much of Siachen will be found to lie on the Indian side of the CFL. Pakistani military maps (ref. Musharraf’s Memoir, “In the Line of Fire”. Free Press, London. 2006), depicting Pakistan’s military positions during the Kargil operations, situate the entire Siachen glacier on the Indian side of the delineated line, NJ 9842, ‘thence north to the glaciers.’<br /><br />All Pakistan, UN and global atlases depicted the CFL correctly till around 1967-72. By then Beijing had commenced its creeping cartographic aggression in Aksai Chin and in 1963 signed a boundary agreement with Pakistan which unilaterally ceded the 5,000 sq km Shaksgam Valley to China. <br /><br />Thereafter, Pakistan started extending its lines of communication eastwards and began licensing western mountaineering expeditions to venture east of K2. It was emboldened to extend this ‘eastward creep’ when, between 1967 and 1972, the US Defence Mapping Agency, an international reference point for cartography, began extending the CFL from NJ 9842 to a point just west of the Karakoram Pass, unilaterally hardening what was possibly no more than an extant World War II air defence information zone (ADIZ) line into a politico-military divide. World atlases followed suit. So did Pakistan, which followed cartographic aggression with moves to occupy Siachen. Getting wind of this stratagem, India, pre-emptively occupied the glacier in March 1984.<br /><br />In a US Institute for Peace conference on J&K in Washington in 1991, delegates were delivered a map at their hotel without the mandatory credit line regarding its origins. It was headed ‘The Kashmir Region: Depicting the CFL/LOC, Siachen and Shaksgam.’ This showed a hatched triangle NJ 9842-Karakoram Pass-K2, and Shaksgam in the north, with a legend reading, “Indian occupied since 1983”. The conference organisers disowned what it surmised was ‘possibly’ a CIA map that might be treated as ‘withdrawn!’ <br /><br />Any unqualified redeployment from the Siachen glacier without asserting the correct delineation of the CFL/LOC from NJ 9842 ‘thence north to the glaciers,’ will mean accepting the Pakistan claim and throwing the August 1948 UN Resolution and derivative 1949 Karachi Agreement into the dustbin. <br /><br />Manmohan Singh’s 2005 peace formula would sanctify the LOC as an evolving international boundary, rendered porous as ‘mere lines on a map’ across which movement and commerce increasingly flowed to bind the peoples of J&K and India and Pakistan together in friendship and cooperation. This is the only viable win-win solution for all in and over J&K. But unless the LOC is firmly anchored to a northern terminus, it will dangle loose and surely unravel, leaving everything for grabs. <br /><br />Siachen has no intrinsic strategic value. Both sides should withdraw or redeploy from there once there is clear acceptance of the 1949 CFL-cum-LOC. Thereafter the triangle NJ 9842, K2 and the Karakoram Pass can be designated an International Glacier and World Weather Park, hopefully with Shaksgam as a partner, to study and measure climate change. India should therefore welcome Kayani’s second thoughts and pursue it without getting snow-blinded regarding the facts, larger perspectives and the national interest. <br /></p>