Recalling back stories is sometimes instructive for the land mines that these reveal. In the story of India-Pakistan relations, there have been plenty of those. In February 1999, then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif shook hands in Lahore and issued a joint declaration. This was preceded by an elaborate build-up of carefully constructed dialogues, resulting in a new conversation between India and Pakistan.
But few remember that then Pakistan Chief of Army Staff, General Parvez Musharraf, Air Chief Marshal Parvez Mehdi and Admiral Fasih Bokhari did not attend the reception for the Indian PM, and stayed away from ceremonial functions. They protested that the government should not "welcome an enemy nation in this manner". They also told Nawaz Sharif their presence at Wagah would send out wrong signals and jeopardise the honour of the Pakistani armed forces.
In early May, the Indian Army discovered large scale infiltration by Pakistani soldiers across the LOC in the desolate Kargil sector, engaged in a practice known as salami-slicing: setting up camp in enemy territory and annexing land. The operation to evict the mountain tops of the Pakistani Army is now celebrated in India as Operation Vijay. It was mounted as another operation was mounted in Pakistan - by Gen Musharraf to depose Sharif in a coup.
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After a hiatus, the silence between the two countries was broken following an invitation by PM Narendra Modi in 2014 to Nawaz Sharif to his swearing-in ceremony.
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Vajpayee on February 21, 1999, after crossing the Wagah border