Ironduke
SENIOR MEMBER
New Recruit
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2006
- Messages
- 27
- Reaction score
- 0
Given the instability on a regional and internal level in the nations of South Asia, a thought sprung to my mind regarding a framework for a workable supranational organization in South Asia.
A few things immediately come to mind
A few things immediately come to mind
- if it were a coalition of currently existing states, India would be the dominant actor, something Pakistan and the smaller regional states would fear
- however, India would fear the "hijacking" of radical Islamist elements from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and its own Islamic population on this organization, thus destroying its genuine, open democratic institutions
- the United Kingdom - devolution to Scotland, Wales, northern Ireland, and now probably England in the coming years
- Belgium - a multi-tiered devolution to Flanders and Wallonia, as well as the French, Dutch, and German speaking communities
- Germany - devolved powers to the several Lander (states)
- The European Union is this process in the reverse of the above (centralization of 27+ states that then act as decentralized, devolved actors
- the individual states and provinces of India and Pakistan are effectively the equivalent of a European nation-states linguistically, culturally, ethnically, in every way except in governance
- devolve power from Islamabad to the Punjab, Sindh, Balochistan, NWFP, Pakistani Kashmir, etc.
- devolve power from New Delhi to the 28 states and territories, including Indian Kashmir
- the devolution process in India encourages Pakistan to follow the same trend, and vice versa (race to the "bottom")
- after political power has sufficiently devolved, and New Delhi and Islamabad have become less centralized centers of power and the regional/state/provincial capitals have taken on a strong role, the stage is set for a genuine, workable supranational framework on the level of the European Union
- a re-consolidation of political power happens on a region-wide, supranational level
- Kashmir could consolidate within this functioning supranational framework
- Bengalis could consolidate and cooperate on a cultural, ethnic, and linguistic level, as has happened with the Hungarians of Romania and Slovakia
- Nepal and Bhutan would be easy-ins, as they already meet the "requirements" (they are nation-states)
- The Tamils and Sinhalese of Sri Lanka could effectively set aside their disputes, and the Tamils of northern Sri Lanka/Tamil Nadu would be able to cooperate more effectively without being a threat to either India or Sri Lanka
- such a method and organization would be effective competition to China politically, economically, and culturally in Asia
- such a move would weaken the threat of Wahhabi/Jihadi elements in South Asia
- internal nationalist pressures in the subcontinent would be satisfied/undercut within a workable, fair framework
- there would be less disaffection among various political/ethnic/religious elements in the subcontinent, as they would all be given a fair deal
Last edited: