Well, they are not pursuing
unification AFAIK. They are pursuing
liberation as you want to do in Kashmir. Of course the similarities end there.
So your argument doesn't apply. Most Afghans simply don't want to live with the "Indian Muslims" that they consider you.
Ironic, isn't it? Almost delicious irony.
I fail to see the irony since we are not interested in absorbing Afghanistan or consider it part of 'Akhand Pakistan'. Your attempt at comparison with kashmir fails yet again when one considers the fact that the overwhelming majority of Pashtun voted in favor of Pakistan in a referendum after independence, despite the most popular Pashtun leader at the time opposing it.
http://www.defence.pk/forums/military-history/39251-nwfp-history-referendum-pakhtunistan-demand.html
My point merely is that any rational claim of 'unification' (and it is the GoA and Afghans that primarily make it, not Pakistanis) works in favor of Afghanistan being absorbed into Pakistan, not of Pakistani territory being given to Afghanistan.
I think the international community is dealing with the bigger headache, stopping the terror factories in that region. I am not sure even Pakistan has raised this particular concern with anyone in any meaningful way.
Pakistan has raised its concerns. Pakistan officials have raised their concerns privately and at international conferences, and NATO is not so dense as to not realize what drives Pakistani motivations in Afghanistan.
Well, I have nothing new to say here. May be an Afghan member can add his/her thoughts.
I am sure you have frequented Afghan fora occasionally, typically the response fluctuates between the non-factual (Durand Agreement has expired) and the nonsensical (derogatory comments about Pakistanis, mostly non-Pashtun - daal khor etc. - that also betray their opinions about Indians).
We do have a very erudite Tajik-Afghan on this forum, Ahmad, who to his credit is strongly opposed to any policy on the part of Afghanistan to claim Pakistani territory, and is very critical of those Afghans who push such ideas, as well as of the GoP for, IHO, not doing everything it can to stop the Taliban.
You see, given the ethnic tensions and delicate ethnic balance in Afghanistan, the 60% of Afghans who are not Pashtun have no interest in seeing the Afghan Pashtun population expand by any significant number, and turn them into a majority.
Off-topic. I can go back to calling the whole Islamic invasions of India as illegal and rolling back all its effects. Time moves on and nations must move on as well.
Bad comparison again, since no nation-state called India existed back then. The modern Indian State however is still a UN member and is committed to the UN Charter, as is Pakistan, and the UNSC resolutions also continue to exist currently, to which India also committed.
Well, I can see your POV but have no sympathy with it. To me it is "hathdharmi" that is causing large scale problems all over the place. Pakistan will realize one day the folly of this policy if not already.
Regardless of what you think of it, and what the PA thinks of it, resource constraints will prevent action in NW for the forseeable future. Pakistan has 140,000 troops deployed in the FATA and Swat struggling to pacify the Taliban and reconstruct the affected areas. That mission has to be completed first. The floods will only push the timeline for action in NW further back IMO, but there is nothing that can be done about that, since we are seeing no quick movement from the US on assets such as helicopters and other equipment that could act as force multipliers and alleviate some of the strain on current resources.
I am not saying its easy but it is a reality of your relationship with Afghanistan.
We have inherited problems in our region and our countries and leadership are not sagacious enough to resolve them. So we do what we do best, rhetoric and legalese, not issue resolutions.
It is not about 'being easy' but about the fact that Afghanistan's policy of contesting the Afghan-Pak border is tantamount to an act of war and aggression against Pakistan, given no international legitimacy to their claims, and no effort to obtain international legitimacy.
If the Afghans wish to contest the border, there is a 'legal and peaceful means' of doing that, through the UN or ICJ. So long as the Afghans do not even try that, and attempt to destabilize parts of Pakistan and encourage violent elements, Pakistan has every right to guard its interests how it sees fit. The responsibility to change here lies with Afghanistan and Afghans.