ad info




TIME Asia
TIME Asia Home
Current Issue
Magazine Archive
Asia Buzz
Travel Watch
Web Features
  Entertainment
  Photo Essays

Subscribe to TIME
Customer Services
About Us
Write to TIME Asia

TIME.com
TIME Canada
TIME Europe
TIME Pacific
TIME Digital
Asiaweek
Latest CNN News

Young China
Olympics 2000
On The Road

 ASIAWEEK.COM
 CNN.COM
  east asia
  southeast asia
  south asia
  central asia
  australasia
 BUSINESS
 SPORTS
 SHOWBIZ
 ASIA WEATHER
 ASIA TRAVEL


Other News
From TIME Asia

Culture on Demand: Black is Beautiful
The American Express black card is the ultimate status symbol

Asia Buzz: Should the Net Be Free?
Web heads want it all -- for nothing

JAPAN: Failed Revolution
Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori clings to power as dissidents in his party finally decide not to back a no-confidence motion

Cover: Endgame?
After Florida's controversial ballot recount, Bush holds a 537-vote lead in the state, which could give him the election

TIME Digest
FORTUNE.com
FORTUNE China
MONEY.com

TIME Asia Services
Subscribe
Subscribe to TIME! Get up to 3 MONTHS FREE!

Bookmark TIME
TIME Media Kit
Recent awards

TIME Asia Asiaweek Asia Now TIME Asia story
ASIA
JULY 19, 1999 VOL. 154 NO. 2


Rock and a Hard Place
Nawaz Sharif's pledge to respect the de-facto Kashmir border may appease India but draws domestic ire
Pakistani soldiers near the Line of Control. Robert Nickelsberg for TIME

By ANTHONY SPAETH

On his domestic stage, Pakistani Prime Minister Mohammed Nawaz Sharif takes a wide stride. Since riding to power on a 1997 electoral landslide, he has revised the country's constitution, won a bruising battle with the judiciary over the appointment of judges and cracked a fierce whip at critical local journalists. In February, he talked peace with Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee at a summit in Lahore--no mean accomplishment as the antagonistic neighbors both now have nuclear weapons. And then, a few months later, he gave India a military black eye. Pakistani soldiers, along with recruits from Islamic fundamentalist groups, took control of strategic, Indian-held territory in the mountainous Kargil region of Kashmir. New Delhi has been struggling to dislodge the occupiers for the past two months, with a combined body count exceeding 1,000.

But last week, Sharif paraded on the world stage with a notable lack of confidence. To ascertain the depth of Pakistan's isolation on the Kargil conflict, he made a hurried trip to Washington. U.S. President Bill Clinton interrupted his Fourth of July holiday and spent more than three hours hashing out the issue with Sharif in Blair House, the official guest quarters across from the White House. At one point, the two men also held a private discussion, joined only by a notetaker. During a break in the talks, Clinton called Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee to confer for 10 minutes.

In the end, though, Sharif emerged a loser. Not only did he fail to get U.S. support, but he and Clinton issued a joint statement that amounted to a slap on Sharif's wrist. They announced that the Line of Control--the de facto border between India and Pakistan in Kashmir since 1972--would be respected, further stating that "concrete steps will be taken for the restoration of the Line of Control." In other words, Sharif promised Clinton to give India back its territory--though Pakistan still maintains that none of its soldiers has crossed the line, or even materially aided the ostensibly independent guerrillas giving the mighty Indian military such a terrific fight.

But if Sharif felt buffeted in Washington--not to mention in London and Beijing, where he also made similarly chilly pilgrimages--he was in for far worse back home. The news from Washington prompted fury across Pakistan. "We gained a great deal in Kargil, which was our finest hour," says Aliffudin Turabi, leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami, which claims to have trained some of the volunteers fighting in the conflict. "We have thrown it all away in Washington." Conservative Islamic groups held rallies at which effigies of Sharif were burned. "The compromise on Kargil inked in Washington is being seen as Pakistan's worst-ever defeat on the diplomatic, political and media fronts," wrote Khalid Qayyum, chief reporter for The Nation newspaper, in a front page analysis. Sharif didn't return from Washington for four days, prompting scathing comparisons with Wasim Akram, captain of the national cricket team, who has yet to come home and face the music following his team's embarrassing loss in the World Cup final last month in London.

Sharif's promises in Washington were exactly what India has been demanding: that the occupying forces go back to Pakistan, after which the fighting can stop. His efforts to get international mediation for the Kashmir problem--which India steadfastly refuses--went nowhere. "He created the mess for himself," says a senior U.S. official. "He has no good choices. He will have to find a way to manage the domestic consequences."

Public ire is so hot in Pakistan that an immediate pullout isn't likely, although Pakistan Army Chief Pervez Musharraf told local journalists last week that the Kargil fighters would be "requested" to change their position. Across the border, a confident Vajpayee was still talking tough at week's end. "We are not waiting," he said. "We are fighting. We are determined to throw them all out." If Pakistan pulls its troops back to its own territory, the Kargil conflict will end. But Sharif's biggest battle--for political survival--may just be starting.

Reported by Meenakshi Ganguly and Maseeh Rahman/New Delhi, Barry Hillenbrand/Washington and Syed Talat Hussain/Islamabad

THIS WEEK'S TABLE OF CONTENTS

R E L A T E D
S T O R I E S :

South Asia: Death in the Clouds
The fighting in Kashmir between Indian troops and Pakistani intruders has all the earmarks of a real war--and no end in sight

Counterattack
Indian forces begin to win back turf

Top Gun
The view from a Pakistani artillery position

First Person
A soldier admits that Islamabad's army regulars are leading the infiltration






This edition's table of contents | TIME Asia home

AsiaNow


   LATEST HEADLINES:

WASHINGTON
U.S. secretary of state says China should be 'tolerant'

MANILA
Philippine government denies Estrada's claim to presidency

ALLAHABAD
Faith, madness, magic mix at sacred Hindu festival

COLOMBO
Land mine explosion kills 11 Sri Lankan soldiers

TOKYO
Japan claims StarLink found in U.S. corn sample

BANGKOK
Thai party announces first coalition partner



TIME:

COVER: President Joseph Estrada gives in to the chanting crowds on the streets of Manila and agrees to make room for his Vice President

THAILAND: Twin teenage warriors turn themselves in to Bangkok officials

CHINA: Despite official vilification, hip Chinese dig Lamaist culture

PHOTO ESSAY: Estrada Calls Snap Election

WEB-ONLY INTERVIEW: Jimmy Lai on feeling lucky -- and why he's committed to the island state



ASIAWEEK:

COVER: The DoCoMo generation - Japan's leading mobile phone company goes global

Bandwidth Boom: Racing to wire - how underseas cable systems may yet fall short

TAIWAN: Party intrigues add to Chen Shui-bian's woes

JAPAN: Japan's ruling party crushes a rebel ì at a cost

SINGAPORE: Singaporeans need to have more babies. But success breeds selfishness


Launch CNN's Desktop Ticker and get the latest news, delivered right on your desktop!

Today on CNN
 Search

Back to the top   © 2000 Time Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.