When Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif met in Paris less than a month ago, few could imagine that the outcome of talks — that lasted less than three minutes — would lead to the historic developments that have followed. So what exactly did the Prime Ministers speak about, as they sat together on the sofa of a waiting lounge on the sidelines of the climate change summit? The Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson referred to it as a ‘courtesy meeting’ at the time, but sources have confirmed to The Hindu that each second of the conversation between Mr. Modi and Mr. Sharif was spent on how to resume the dialogue process.
“PM Modi came up to PM Sharif with the words, ‘It is time to start talking again’, after which PM Sharif suggested they sit down and talk,” an official present at the meeting said. Mr. Sharif is understood to have replied that he too wanted to restart dialogue, but that talks were blocked by the failure of the National Security Advisors (NSAs) to meet in Delhi, and that talks must be held on “all issues and without pre-conditions”.
Mr. Modi reportedly agreed to including all issues, including Jammu and Kashmir in the list, which had been omitted in the Ufa statement, and suggested sending the Foreign Secretaries to the meeting as well. “That was it, and the rest is history” a senior Pakistani official said, corroborating the reported version.
Officials also say that the secrecy around the reachout to Pakistan was necessary. In fact, officials on both sides have confirmed that India reached out to Pakistan four times earlier for a meeting between the Prime Ministers in 2015, including the telephone call by Mr. Modi to Mr. Sharif in January after a long period of no-talks, the visit by Mr. Jaishankar to Pakistan under the SAARC agenda, the meeting in Ufa, for which the Indian side initiated the request, a request for a meeting in New York, which Pakistan rejected, and the brief meeting in Paris, which was choreographed by the Indian side, which ultimately led to a month of breakthroughs in ties.
“Seen in this respect, the cancellation of NSA talks this year were an aberration, not the rule in PM Modi’s Pakistan policy,” a senior official, who has been closely associated with framing the policy, explained to The Hindu. “Had we announced the meetings before they happened, however, they would have collapsed like the NSA talks did.”
Earlier this month, speaking to The Hindu, Mr. Sharif confirmed that belief. “There is no secrecy,” he said at the opening of the TAPI pipeline project in Turkmenistan, “If we didnt announce them, it was by way of abundant precaution.”