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SAT · 2026-05-23 · 04:11 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0523-78585
News/Are India and Pakistan quietly preparing to restart dialogue…
NSR-2026-0523-78585Analysis·EN·Diplomatic

Are India and Pakistan quietly preparing to restart dialogue?

Despite public stances against dialogue, unofficial voices in India are pushing for renewed engagement with Pakistan. Dattatreya Hosabale, general secretary of the RSS, suggested India should explore dialogue, a sentiment echoed by former Indian army chief General Manoj Naravane.

Abid HussainAl JazeeraFiled 2026-05-23 · 04:11 GMTLean · CenterRead · 6 min
Are India and Pakistan quietly preparing to restart dialogue?
Al JazeeraFIG 01
Reading time
6min
Word count
1 271words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Despite public stances against dialogue, unofficial voices in India are pushing for renewed engagement with Pakistan. Dattatreya Hosabale, general secretary of the RSS, suggested India should explore dialogue, a sentiment echoed by former Indian army chief General Manoj Naravane. These calls come after a 2025 war between the two nations, with Pakistan welcoming the suggestions. Analysts suggest these unofficial pushes may be providing political cover for the Modi government to potentially restart formal engagement. Meanwhile, informal meetings between former officials and retired military figures from both countries have been occurring since the war.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Diplomatic
Political Strategy
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Former Indian army chief General Manoj Naravane publicly backed the RSS leader's position on dialogue.

quoteGeneral Manoj Naravane
Confidence
1.00
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Pakistan welcomed Hosabale's comments and is awaiting an official reaction from India.

quoteTahir Andrabi (Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesperson)
Confidence
1.00
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India and Pakistan engaged in a four-day war in May 2025, following an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir.

factual
Confidence
1.00
04

Dattatreya Hosabale, general secretary of the RSS, suggested India should explore dialogue with Pakistan.

quoteDattatreya Hosabale
Confidence
1.00
05

Analysts suggest that while there's a growing rationale for India and Pakistan to re-engage, a full-fledged dialogue will not be easy.

factualAnalysts
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

6 min read · 1 271 words
India and Pakistan remain publicly entrenched, even as unofficial voices push for renewed dialogue and restraint.Pakistan-rangers" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="132578" data-entity-type="organization">Pakistan Rangers and Indian Border Security Force soldiers lower their national flags at the Pakistan-India joint checkpost at Wagah border, near Lahore, Pakistan, May 14, 2025 [Mohsin Raza/Reuters]Published On 23 May 2026Islamabad, Pakistan – Earlier this month, as Indian television channels and government leaders were celebrating the anniversary of the Pakistan-in-may-2025" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="132579" data-entity-type="event">War against Pakistan in May 2025, one of the most influential ideologues of the political movement that Prime Minister Narendra Modi leads struck a discordant note.In an interview with an Indian news agency, Dattatreya Hosabale, general secretary of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) – the mothership of the Hindu majoritarian philosophy of Hindutva that guides Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party – said New Delhi should explore dialogue with Pakistan.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Two wins, two losses: What India, Pakistan have learned a year after warlist 2 of 4India to Iran: How two wars shaped rise of Pakistan’s Asim Munirlist 3 of 4Handshake in Dhaka: Can India and Pakistan revive ties in 2026?list 4 of 4Can India stop Pakistan’s river water — and will it spark a new war?end of list“We should not close the doors. We should always be ready to engage in dialogue,” he said.His comments instantly stirred up a political storm in India, with the opposition questioning the RSS position and pointing out how it was in stark contrast to Modi’s.Indeed, Modi and his government have repeatedly said “terror and talks can’t go together”, arguing against any dialogue with Pakistan, which India accuses of sponsoring and arming fighters that have attacked Indian-administered Kashmir and Indian cities for decades. The four-day 2025 war – which Pakistan and India both insist they “won” – followed an attack by gunmen in the resort town of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir in which 26 tourists were killed.Pakistan welcomed Hosabale’s comments, with Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tahir Andrabi saying Islamabad would wait to see whether there was “an official reaction” from India to calls for talks.More than a week later, the Modi government is yet to formally respond to Hosabale’s call for dialogue, but other prominent voices in India have backed the RSS leader, leading to suggestions that New Delhi might be preparing the ground to restart formal engagement with Pakistan.Analysts say, however, that while there’s a growing rationale for the neighbours to re-engage diplomatically, and that they have already quietly taken baby steps in this direction, resurrecting a full-fledged dialogue will not be easy.Voices from the margins – or testing the waters?The push for talks didn’t end with Hosabale.Former Indian army chief General Manoj Naravane publicly backed the RSS leader’s position, also telling an Indian news agency on the sidelines of a book launch in Mumbai that the “common man has nothing to do with politics” and that friendship between peoples naturally helps improve relations between states.Across the border, Andrabi responded: “We hope that sanity will prevail in India and warmongering will fade away and pave the way for more such voices.”While the RSS is the same as the BJP and is not itself in government, most senior BJP leaders, including Modi, have served for years in the group, which plays a critical role in building grassroots support for the governing party.Irfan Nooruddin, a professor of Indian politics at Georgetown University, said the signals for talks were emerging from the RSS and retired generals like Naravane for a reason.“The Modi government has boxed itself into a corner with its anti-Pakistan rhetoric,” he told Al Jazeera.“For it to unilaterally stand down and initiate dialogue would be potentially politically costly. So, for the calls to come from the RSS and from ex-military leaders is to the BJP’s advantage as it gives them political cover. Any efforts on their part can be spun as responding to calls from society rather than a political concession,” the Washington, DC-based academic said.Below the surfaceThe calls for dialogue aren’t coming in a vacuum, point out analysts.Jauhar Saleem, a former Pakistani diplomat, told Al Jazeera that roughly four meetings involving former officials, retired generals, intelligence figures and parliamentarians from both sides had taken place over the past year, since the May 2025 war that ended in a ceasefire that United States President Donald Trump insists he mediated.The meetings, split between Track 2 and Track 1.5 formats involving several serving officials, were held in Muscat, Doha, Thailand and London, he said. A Track 1.5 format refers to a meeting where there are serving officials and retired bureaucrats, military officers and members of civil society from both sides. Track 2 events are ones where members of civil society and retired government and military officials from the two sides meet, but with the blessings of the governments. These mechanisms are used by governments as icebreakers and to test the waters for formal diplomacy where there’s a lack of trust between two countries.“I believe they have helped carry forward informal dialogue on a range of issues with a view to preventing major misunderstandings, and testing the ground, perhaps paving the way for formal contacts, which have been almost non-existent in recent years,” Saleem said.Tariq Rashid Khan, a former major-general who later served as Pakistan’s ambassador to Brunei, described the dialogues as essential infrastructure rather than diplomatic progress.“Track-1.5 and Track-2 dialogues are not a substitute for official diplomacy. Instead, they are a safety valve,” he told Al Jazeera.When asked directly last week about reports of such contacts, Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs declined to comment.“If I was to comment, there would be no back channel,” Andrabi said during his briefing.The altered equationThese quiet engagements are unfolding against a backdrop that has shifted considerably since the ceasefire of May 10, 2025.Pakistan’s global standing has changed markedly in this period. Field Marshal Asim Munir, who commanded Pakistani forces during the conflict, was by April 2026 personally brokering the ceasefire between Washington and Tehran.The Islamabad talks held on April 11-12 produced the first direct high-level engagement between the US and Iran since 1979, with President Donald Trump publicly crediting Munir and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif multiple times.Meanwhile, India-US relations are under strain over trade tariffs and immigration restrictions, narrowing the space in which New Delhi can count on Washington to defer to its regional preferences on Pakistan.For India, analysts say, that shift carries consequences New Delhi has yet to publicly acknowledge.“The geopolitical situation has flipped on its head,” Nooruddin told Al Jazeera. “India has gone from having pole position with respect to its leverage in Washington to being on the outside, while Pakistan has expertly managed to re-enter America’s good graces. India could afford to ice out Pakistan when it appeared to be forging a special relationship with the US, but no longer.”But Khan, the former Pakistani military official, cautioned against overstating the significance of the recent signals.“Quiet signalling reflects realism more than sudden reconciliation,” he said.The deep divideKhan’s scepticism was underscored by the events of the past week.Speaking at a civil-military event at the Manekshaw Centre in New Delhi on May 16, Indian Army chief General Upendra Dwivedi said if Islamabad continued to “harbour terrorists and operate against India”, it would have to decide whether it wanted to be “part of geography or history or not”.Within 24 hours, Pakistan’s military responded. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) directorate described the remarks as “hubristic, jingoistic and myopic”, warning that threatening a nuclear-armed neighbour with erasure from the map “is not strategic signalling or brinkmanship; it is sheer bankruptcy of cognitive capacities”.Any attempt to attack Pakistan, the ISPR added, could “trigger consequences that shall neither be geographically confined nor strategically or politically palatable for India”.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

9 terms
india pakistan dialogue
1.00
hindutva
0.80
rss
0.70
narendra modi
0.60
2025 war
0.60
kashmir
0.50
terror and talks
0.50
political storm
0.40
unofficial voices
0.40
§ 07

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