AgNoStiC MuSliM
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Wrong - what you have posted cleary does condition Pakistani withdrawal to actions, or a plan of action that satisfied certain criteria the commission laid out - once again, read the text you yourself posted:Indian actions on demilitarization was to be preceded by Pakistans actions on demilitarization making it logically impossible to tie Pakistans withdrawal to Indian actions. That is in fact an absurd proposition. What it could have been contingent upon was the Indian _plan_ of demilitarization. But then, the Commission had explicitly detached Pakistans withdrawal from the Indian plan of demilitarization, it being a matter to be settled entirely between GoI and the Commission.
What makes Pakistans withdrawal unconditional and unilateral, is that it is irrelevant if Pakistan agreed (or disagreed) to the timing, manner and quantum of Indian withdrawal, so long as UN played the role of mediator. Pakistan had absolutely no say in any of this. It was all UNs headache. Pakistan had to withdraw _in advance_, consequent on which India had to begin withdrawing in accordance to a plan, agreed upon by GoI and UN and published in public. UN was to _supervise_ the withdrawal to ensure that no country was at a disadvantage. Period.
Nothing, that I have posted, says anything otherwise explicitly or implicitly.
"It was feasible [...] that the arrangements could be coordinated and supervised by the mediation party, namely, the Commission, so as to cause the two withdrawals to represent a dual operation which would be coordinated in timing and would result in a military situation in the State which was not such as to place either side at a disadvantage." (para 242)
"It (the Commission)repeatedly assured the Pakistan Government that this would be evident in the agreement itself, and it must be noted that the terms were to be published in full immediately upon the acceptance of the Governments. The withdrawal plan for the Indian forces [...] was consequently, to be published in advance of implementation by either side." (para 244)
The underlying clearly makes a Pakistani withdrawal neither unilateral nor unconditional - any one with a rudimentary understanding of English can see that.
If you peel all the layers, you would find that India had rejected only ONE proposal regarding demilitarization. It was about the quantum of troops to be left on either side, immediately after demilitarization. The reason was Pakistan's deliberately twisted interpretation of 'local authority' in evacuated territory (in spite of repeated clarification by the Commission) and the perfidy in connection with disbanding and disarming the 'Azad forces'. The idea of converting LoC into IB was the most practical solution given Pakistan's insistence on not meeting its obligation on one pretext or the other and thereby holding up demilitarization and everything that was to follow from it.
Peeling the layers? You mean more excuses to explain away Indian intransigence - since the Indian goal was to stall in order to withdraw from its commitment.
It is easy to point fingers when the party being accused is in fact guilty.It is easy to point fingers when ignorance is wisdom.
And where was the timeline for implementation of conditions, failing to meet which a party could determine that the commitment was null and void?Wrong. The commitment was to implement the principle of plebiscite once certain very specific conditions were fulfilled. Non fulfillment of those conditions gave India every right to withdraw from the resolutions.
Barring an explicit timeline within the resolutions, your argument would theoretically allow for 'withdrawal from the commitment on the basis of non-implementation' after two days - and is therfore an invalid excuse for India's violation of her commitment to the UNSC resolutions.
Statements followed up by actions in the form of the forcible annexation and integration of the disputed territory under Indian control - an explicit violation of the commitment to the UNSC resolutions that declare the territory disputed and the means of dispute resolution a plebiscite.That statements do not tantamount to violation of any commitment, is another matter