DGMO
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2010
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That's the wrong stance to take. As much as we want K resolved, we can't just dive into it with the trust deficit in place.anyways bottom line is no kashmir means NO TALK
India needs to witness sincerity, and after Kargil, the Parliament attack and then 26/11, we're talking about three major events in nine years that have damaged relations.
So what does India want? They want to talk about K, of course they do, you think it's not in their interest to have a stable North? The fact we were talking about K under Musharraf, and according to some had outlined an 'understanding' on a solution, shows that they do.
But how did we get there? Musharraf took verifiable steps, these included ensuring infiltration dropped significanly, Jihadi dontations were impacted, groups were banned, talk of peace increased, cricket diplomacy happened, cultural exchanges took place, Samjhuta Express and bus services were initiated. Therefore, a raft of proposals took place for the Indian Govt to say "hold on a minute, perhaps they are serious in wanting peace?" They were in a position to convey that to the electorate, and take appropriate steps. The judiciary crisis derailed matters, but progress was being made, how anyone can deny that I don't know.
But then 26/11 happened. If 10 hardened members of Bajrang Dal / VHP had ambushed the Marriot Islamabad, Serena Islamabad and ISB Airport and killed 170+, we'd be slightly p1ssed off at our neighbour and also have an enraged population wanting revenge or a break-off in ties.
So we need to talk, we need there to be trust. Ultimatums result in deadlock, and that helps no-one, not us, nor the Indians, nor the Kashmiri's in the long-run.