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What some consider to be ‘the Dulat line’ sprang to mind when the Centre on Monday appointed a ‘representative’ to talk with any and all Kashmiris.
Not only did the appointment appear to be the sort of strategy the former RAW chief would back, it brought to the surface something that has been subtly apparent over the past couple of months, during which this accommodative approach has been in the works.
Dulat has been in touch with several prominent figures from Kashmir, and figures in Kashmiri society who have been closely associated with him have been promoted by the current intelligence operatives in the Valley.
A top man from the intelligence bureau personally escorted one such figure past a security barricade to visit Home Minister Rajnath Singh in the second week of September.
It would normally not be remarkable for a retired intelligence hand to have so much influence. What is remarkable is that Amarjit Dulat, one of the three most prominent intelligence men to have dealt with Kashmir, is considered the antithesis of National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, who calls the shots on Kashmir in this government.
More so, Dulat has been associated with luring ‘separatist leaders’ with money, jobs, loans and other benefits for their families. Doval, on the other hand, is seen as being behind the National Investigating Agency’s probes into the funding of ‘separatist leaders’.
Dulat not only warmly endorsed the appointment of Dineshwar Sharma as the Centre’s ‘representative,’ the latter apparently went to meet him almost as soon as he was appointed.
Responding to an interviewer a few hours later, Dulat indicated that he has been in the loop. “One had been expecting something like this for quite some time,” he said. And, he added that “the Hurriyat and other Kashmiri leaders should also respond favourably”. In the past, several ‘separatist leaders’ have responded to Dulat’s efforts on behalf of Prime Minister Narasimha Rao and Prime Minister AB Vajpayee.
In the same interview, Dulat strongly endorsed Sharma for the task, calling him the best person for this job. “There is nobody better than him to start dialogue in Kashmir. He understands Kashmir and feels for it very much. I can say this because he had been for a long time a friend and a colleague. He has all the qualities that an interlocutor should have.”
Sharma worked closely with Dulat in Kashmir during the 1990s, when he would have been about 15 years junior to Dulat.
However, it was Doval who picked Sharma to head the Intelligence Bureau at the end of 2014.
Sharma retired at the end of 2016 after a two-year term.
He has evidently not been held responsible for the Bureau’s failure to assess and warn against the fallout of killing militant commander Burhan Wani – or the long and unsettling uprising that followed it in the second half of 2016.
In an interview, Dulat highlighted the need to talk to Pakistan too.
“Why stop dialogue? Let’s admit that Pakistan is a factor in Kashmir,” he said.
That echoed the public line of former chief minister Farooq Abdullah, whom Dulat has strongly backed ever since he was deputed to handle Kashmir for the Intelligence Bureau in 1990.
It will be interesting to watch how any of those who have traditionally taken outright ‘separatist’ stances might position themselves when Mr Sharma begins his engagement in Kashmir.
(The writer is a Kashmir-based author and journalist. He can be reached at @david_devadas)
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