You didn’t answer the question I posed to the other member in the quote though, instead you’ve left an emotionally charged assessment centred around the moral legitimacy of our cause.
I have news for you, everyone thinks they’re doing the right thing. Two sides in a war, both think they have moral legitimacy, nobody fights because they think they’re wrong. Modi might be a fascist, but his internal thinking is that he’s doing God’s work. So how do we judge legitimacy? Well it’s a grey area, but one of the metrics is based on objectivity and neutral analysis of actions taken in their own internal legitimacy. Meaning if I start what I see is a just war against you while pretending to be your friend, I may well have a reason in my head for doing it, a neutral analysis of whether my action was right or not is to remove my motivation and look at the act; which is the unprovoked initiation of a conflict.
One bit of nuance you actually missed that I didn’t mention in my post as it wasn’t relevant here, but which I have to mention because you’ve gone several steps forward logically and a few steps back in timeline, is that Siachen conflict was started by India, Kargil in many ways was a late response to India’s own transgressions. But you are quick to assume a lot and leave a big set of value judgements instead of realising the nuances in my argument and analysis. Also forget NS, I have very strong views on Kargil, and I’m afraid folks like yourself will always find them hard to accept. It doesn’t matter really, IK could have been PM in 1999. Almost the exact same story might have played out and my opinion would be exactly as it is now, unchanged.
Now back to Kargil, please answer these questions with a simple yes or no. Did we start the Kargil war? Did we start it while negotiating in good faith with India? Is it not duplicitous that we were talking with them, while secretly occupying their peaks? If this happened to us today, we talk with India, talks bear fruit and good will, India underhandedly captures parts of our land, would it not be a backstab?
And look at the context here, this was NS quoting Vajpayee, from the latter’s perspective there would have been people who told him not to talk with Pakistan, to keep us as enemies, he would have personally thrown his political capital and personal trust behind the Pakistani leadership, in order to negotiate in good faith, he was quite literally and publicly backstabbed. You don’t think he was called a fool for trusting us? To this day, while IK and army alike signal about willingness to talk with India, they snub us. To this day people in India who are against talking with us sight Kargil as an example of why they shouldn’t bother.