By Shahid R. Siddiqi. Axis of Logic, Jul 18, 2010
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July 18, 2010 (Axis of Logic) - A cartoon published in an American newspaper in 2002 showed former president George Bush sitting behind his desk in the Oval Office, utterly confused by a news report he was reading about India and Pakistan going to war over Kashmir. “But why are the two countries fighting over a sweater,” he asked Dick Cheney who stood by with his usual sly smile on his face.
Besides reflecting the intellectual capacity of the American president of the time, the cartoon was a realistic portrayal of the understanding that American leaders have generally shown of this longstanding dispute between Pakistan and India.
“India, whose forcible occupation of Kashmir in 1947 created the conflict, refuses to settle it.” |
Indian Brutalities & The International Reaction
India has not hesitated to use brutal force to maintain its hold on Indian occupied Kashmir and suppress revolt. The US, UN and other international organizations failed to take note of grave human rights violations. They failed to provide any specific, actionable proposals for a permanent solution. All they extended were diplomatic courtesies, suggested vague formulas and generalities that are open to multiple interpretations.
“India has consistently and blatantly refused to honor the will of the people.” |
This situation was compounded by the Indian dreams of regional hegemony that led it to dismember Pakistan in 1971 and go on to become a nuclear power, which forced Pakistan to develop its own nuclear deterrent for safeguarding its security.
Consequently, India has consistently and blatantly refused to honor the will of the people, negotiate Kashmir’s future status and stop the use of brutal force.
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1 comment:
Ubaid Malik, thank you for pointing this out. There are many who have been misled by the Indian government's fabrication of an 'Instrument of Accession'.
Alistair Lamb in his 'The Indian Claim to Jammu and Kashmir - A Reappraisal' had shown the truth behind such a claim:
http://indianterrorism.bravepages.com/alistairlamb.htm
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