The lingering repercussions of the 1965 war weakened and eventually felled Ayub, and the Kargil conflict helped topple Nawaz Sharif. Kashmir has the curious habit of devouring Pakistani rulers. Few causes have had facts, law, and principles so clearly on its side. And few causes have been so mismanaged and mangled as has Kashmir by Pakistani ruling circles. The downturn in Pakistan's domestic situation has benefited India in that it has distracted attention away from Kashmir.Also, the argument can be made that efforts and energy squandered in Afghanistan could have been more effectively conserved and deployed in furthering the Kashmir case. Irrespective of what has occurred in and around Pakistan, the issue of Kashmir remains as is.Some issues don't disappear. Kashmir is like a raging volcano whose lava smoulders under the surface and then explodes with surprising ferocity.There is a moral blindness about Kashmir among Indian security and policy elites, lulled as they have been under the self-deceptive cloak of secularism. Crimes against humanity have been committed under the banner of the "world's largest democracy" including, but not limited to, systematic rape, disappearances, torture, and custodial deaths - all amply documented by key human rights organisations.The case for Kashmir is quite clear-cut. India continues to cling on to Kashmir in violation of applicable UN resolutions calling for a fair and free exercise of the right of self-determination through a plebiscite under UN supervision.Why this has not been done is simple enough. India would lose the vote, in the blunt words of Krishna Menon, who was India's defence minister under Nehru and was the most vocal opponent of plebiscite.This promised and long-denied plebiscite continues to pose an enduring threat to regional stability and also thwarts India's wider geopolitical ambitions.
The key issue here is occupation. Occupation does not work, whether it is in Kashmir, Palestine, or Chechnya. The systematic coercion of one group of people by another to subjugate often leads to the very disaster which the proponents of occupation want to avoid. It is an irony, as well as the tyranny of the human condition, that those who hold their freedoms dear deny the same to others.It is futile to tackle the consequences of violent extremism while overlooking the causes. It is like seeking a prescription from a doctor without allowing him to make a diagnosis of the disease.Kashmir remains an unresolved geopolitical reality. And geography is sometimes destiny. To ignore injustice and human suffering in Kashmir would be flirting with fire.
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