Why Kashmir Is Important Kashmir is not getting safe;
Why Kashmir Is Important Kashmir is not getting safe;
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Kashmir Importance |
Pakistani perceptions underwent another change
in 2014 when Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in India. That coincided with Pakistan’s successful
military operations against terrorist groups like the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan
that were causing mayhem in the country.
With stability inside of Pakistan and the surge of violence in India
against Muslims, along with the revocation of Kashmir’s autonomy by the Modi
government in 2019, the Kashmir issue returned to the fore of Pakistani
imagination, and this time on steroids with Prime Minister Imran Khan at the
helm.
As divisive as the Kashmir issue is, it is important for both Pakistan and India to recognize why it is important to resolve the issue. Here are five reasons why Kashmir requires urgent attention.
1. Peace Either Everywhere or Nowhere
The
events of 9/11 proved the point that underdevelopment, violence, and
instability in one part of the world will directly impact the rest of the world
– even the most developed countries in the West were not safe or secure. This has been the gist of U.N. calls for
integrating security and development to stabilize the Global South to secure
the Global North. This new policy
approach was best articulated by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who
argued that “famines and instability thousands of miles away lead to conflict,
despair, mass migration, and fanaticism that can affect us all.” Therefore, continued violence and subjugation
in Kashmir on a slow burn is unlikely to remain within the borders of Kashmir. The repercussions may erupt around the world
in different ways.
2.Status Quo Benefits Only a Few
The Kashmir issue is a byproduct of the British colonial project in India that led to a strained relationship between Pakistan and India. The international community has showed little capacity or interest to resolve the issue for 70 long years. The issue lingered on because the new status quo benefited many actors involved in the region and some external actors that thrive on the war industry. The status quo has become even more firm and volatile as a result of the Modi government's unilateral decision to revoke Article 370, leaving only extreme options for both parties.
3.The Untold Costs Kashmir doesn’t bleed alone
Pakistan and India bleed with it perpetually. For as long as the Kashmir continues to bleed through militarization, killings, rape, and draconian tactics, the chaos will continue to permeate and affect the lives of the people in the region. This is why Pakistan has been insisting on resolving the Kashmir issue for the benefit of Kashmiri people first, and then the overall stability of the region. In many ways, the true potential of India, Pakistan, and Kashmir itself is a hostage to the inability of status quo powers (in this case India) to resolve the Kashmir issue.
4.Principles Matter
For
Pakistan and India, Kashmir isn’t some far away land like Afghanistan was for
the U.S., that it could exit at will.
Pakistan and India share borders, cultures, traditions, and much more
with the Kashmiris. To then stand for
the rights of Kashmir may be exhausting and taxing, but it is principally
right. As much as anyone argues
otherwise through a reductionist “realist” lens, principles do matter in
policymaking and international relations, especially in the mid and long
run. As a result, it is critical that
the international community upholds its commitment to a peaceful solution to
the Kashmir dispute.
5. Rule By Fear
Why Kashmir Want To become Pakistan Part.
India
claims the entire erstwhile British Indian princely state of Jammu and Kashmir
based on an instrument of accession signed in 1947. Pakistan claims most of the region based on
its Muslim-majority population, whereas China claims the largely uninhabited
regions of Aksai Chin and the Shaksgam Valley.
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