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Lal Bahadur Shastri, India’s second prime minister, was confident of subcontinental peace, which is why he signed the Tashkent Accord with Pakistan on 10 January, exactly 50 years ago.
But this collapsed due to his death, hours later on 11 January, an event that should be probed even though half a century has elapsed, veteran journalist Kuldip Nayar, a long-serving aide of the Indian leader, said.
Nayar, who was Shastri’s media advisor, is also possibly the only survivor of Tashkent, said that it was the prime minister, who got then Pakistani president Field Marshal Ayub Khan to pencil in the words “without resorting to arms” in the first draft of the Tashkent Agreement.
Under the agreement, the two countries said that their armies would return to the positions they held on 5 August, 1965, the day they went to war for the second time after the partition of the subcontinent in 1947.
Reinforcing this view, Nayar recalled Ayub Khan, saying on the morning of Shastri’s death: “Here lies the man who could have brought Pakistan and India close.”
Ayub Khan, in fact, was one of the two front pallbearers, who carried Shastri’s coffin to the aircraft that transported it to New Delhi.
Elaborating on Shastri’s sagacity, Nayar pointed to a letter the then Shah of Iran, Mohammad Raza Pahlavi, wrote to Ayub Khan in the wake of the Chinese invasion of India in 1962, asking him to send Pakistani troops to beat back the invaders.
Shastri had assumed officesoon after India’s first prime minister died on 24 May 1964, in spite of the fact that it was widely felt that Nehru wanted his daughter, Indira Gandhi to succeed him.
So how did Tashkent, now the capital of Uzbekistan, but at that time part of the undivided Soviet Union, come to be chosen as the venue of the peace negotiations?
Though military cooperation between India and the Soviet Union had begun soon after the 1962 war with China, this took a quantum leap after the Tashkent Accord and today, India imports almost 70 percent of its armaments from Russia, the successor state after the collapse of the Cold War superpower.
Nayar also said there was much bonhomie between the Indian and Pakistani delegations, as also between the journalists of the two countries who were reporting on the talks.
As for the circumstances of Shastri’s death hours after the Tashkent Accord was signed, Nayar said:
Speaking about the future of India-Pakistan ties, Nayar saw great hope.
“Had people like Lal Bahadur Shastri been around, all this would not have happened,” Nayar concluded.
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