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US State Department shows Azad Kashmir as part of Pakistan

it is actually good, we should ignore.
 
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The funny thing is, India is hell bent on showing territories it has no control over as part of its country. India does not have control over Azad Kashmir or Gilgit-Baltistan (or Aksai Chin, Chinese Kashmir), yet it wants to show it as it as its country. Pakistan & China have maps that reflect the true ground realities, but India chooses to remain delusional. When someone shows an 'incorrect' map of their country, they get disgruntled, & their journalists get into a scuffle with high level officials of other countries. India is getting affected by its ultra-nationalistic mindset, it is becoming a nation of hot headed hawks.
 
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i don't see anything wrong with the map the area of Azad Kashmir & northern areas ( gilgit & baltistan) which is under the administration of Pakistan should be shown as part of the-disputed territory governed by Pakistan, like wise the area of jammu & Kashmir which is under the administration of India should be shown as part of the-disputed territory governed by India like wise aksai chin which is administered by china should be shown as part of the-disputed territory governed by china as accepted by international laws & norms it's perfectly fine as it gives the right picture of the situation based on ground realities because both India & Pakistan are signatories of the 1949 cease fire line agreement, the Tashkent agreement of 1965 & the Simla declaration of 1972, plus china & India's understanding as per the 1962 line of actual control understanding, therefore i don't see anything wrong with the maps posted on the U.S department of state website
http://www.state.gov/cms_images/SCABureau_450.jpg

hey i mean come on internationally recognized position's based on ground realities & agreements can not be & should not be tempered by what the Indian Constitution says or for that matter what the Pakistani Constitution says its just not morally right the map is perfectly fine i don't see any thing wrong with it whatsoever even the BBC has the same map

http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/sp...broad/regions/south_asia/img/india_map203.gif

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44059000/gif/_44059547_map_1947-2007_629.gif

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/39881000/gif/_39881480_india2_wagah_map203.gif

the maps are perfectly fine both India & Pakistan should show maturity & must control their emotion too much emotion is not normal
 
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November 22, 2011, 9:25 AM IST.

Are All These Maps Really Pro-Pakistan?


By Tom Wright
OK, so everyone knows that India, like Pakistan, claims the divided region of Kashmir in its entirety.

Everyone also knows that the seven-decade stalemate that has split the Himalayan territory between India- and Pakistan-administered portions is unlikely to change any time soon.

So, why does India get so upset every time a government, company or international body fails on a map of the region, however small, to show India’s territorial claims over the Pakistan-administered portion of Kashmir?

It’s happened many times before and occurred again this week after Indian officials complained to the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi about a map on the State Department website that showed Pakistan-administered Kashmir as part of Pakistan proper.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs lamented the “gross inaccuracies” in the map and said it had conveyed its displeasure to the Embassy. The whole of Kashmir is an “integral part” of India, it said, and maps “should depict the boundaries of our country correctly.”

It’s one thing for a customs official insisting on black-penning the Indian version of the border onto a child’s imported globe (yes, this happened.) But for it to reach the level of official, public MEA statements is absurd.

India has become increasingly militant over its cartographic claims. Editions of The Economist magazine, including the current one, have been held up by Indian customs over objections they showed the effective borders in Kashmir rather than only India’s claims.

Why India believes other countries and international publications must show its territorial claims and not the situation on the ground is unclear, and not matched by how map-makers deal with other disputed borders.

Take the 38th Parallel, for instance, the cease-fire line that has divided the Korean peninsula since 1945. Fighting between North and South Korea ended in 1953, but the border has never been formalized. Yet South Korea doesn’t yell publicly when Google Inc.’s maps show the 38th Parallel as the nation’s effective border with North Korea.

When Google did the same thing with India last year, showing its de facto rather than claimed border with Pakistan-administered Kashmir, it caused a furor here. (Google relented and, today, if you access its maps in India, you’ll confusingly see India sharing a border with Afghanistan, which might be India’s claim but is not reality.)

It is now customary to mark a map of Kashmir with dotted lines with labels that say “controlled by Pakistan and claimed by India” and “controlled by India and claimed by Pakistan.” (China controls a part which is claimed by India, but that’s another story.)

But the U.S. State Department map, part of an A-Z of thumbnail sketches of countries with whom America has diplomatic relations, was by no means meant to show this level of detail.

A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi acknowledged there were “inaccuracies” and said the State Department had removed the map. But he added it “was not meant to represent the same precision and intricacies of a scientific map.”

There was much gnashing of teeth in the Indian press. One Times of India report even went so far as to claim these cartographic missteps are starting to anger not only officials but also journalists.

It’s clear that India will have to move beyond this kind of petty griping if it’s going to take the lead in a peace deal with Pakistan, an unstable country that is fast losing the support of the U.S.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has made peace with Pakistan a key plank of his administration, and a settlement on Kashmir will be key.

At a time when the world, the U.S. included, is courting India, hoping to tap into its economic growth and the global reach of its culture, it’s unclear why those in Delhi officialdom continue to see this kind of unintended geographical faux-pas as some kind of Machiavellian plot to do the country out of its rights.

Brahma Chellaney, an analyst at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research, contacted by the Times of India, went as far as to say the map showed a “pro-Pakistan cartographic tilt.”

Perhaps that was true during the Cold War, when India warmed to the Soviet Union and the U.S. courted Pakistan. But as anyone who spends time in Pakistan at the moment knows, this kind of comment would be met with disbelief by the chattering classes in Islamabad, who feel the U.S. is embracing India while slighting Pakistan.

The examples are piling up. President Barack Obama made an historic trip to India a year ago, but has failed to visit Pakistan. The U.S. in 2005 signed a civilian nuclear deal with India and caused anger in Pakistan for denying them the same kind of agreement. And the U.S. is increasingly berating Pakistan in public for its ties to Taliban militants and has effectively turned the spigot off on aid.

So why all the fuss over a small map which shows how things stand in Kashmir and in no way curtails India’s claims over the region?


Are All These Maps Really Pro-Pakistan? - India Real Time - WSJ


India cries too much :coffee:
 
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This is one thing I cannot agree with the Indian government. Why do our maps not even show a azad Kashmir as a territory occupied by pak ? It is just dishonest to not let us know what the real situation is. The Indian govt is not even claiming that area. So it wouldn't hurt to be more truthful

The Indian government wants to fool their people that their country shares a border with Afghanistan :rofl:


And when your people believe this, and want to see the border they will just find the border with Pakistan in your north and your west and they'll be shocked why Indian government had lied to them:rofl:
 
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The funny thing is, India is hell bent on showing territories it has no control over as part of its country. India does not have control over Azad Kashmir or Gilgit-Baltistan (or Aksai Chin, Chinese Kashmir), yet it wants to show it as it as its country. Pakistan & China have maps that reflect the true ground realities, but India chooses to remain delusional. When someone shows an 'incorrect' map of their country, they get disgruntled, & their journalists get into a scuffle with high level officials of other countries. India is getting affected by its ultra-nationalistic mindset, it is becoming a nation of hot headed hawks.

And such people are either very good for their country or they become a khud kush bombaar for their country. Let's see what happens in this case.
 
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GOD DAM IT... i knew ISI was up to some thing :P
 
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US removes India, Pakistan maps after protest | World | DAWN.COM

WASHINGTON: The US State Department has removed maps of India and Pakistan from its website that it says had inaccurate depictions of divided Kashmir.

Cartographers must tread carefully in their portrayals of the Himalayan region.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir, and each claim the portion that the other controls.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Monday the India map contained inaccuracies and will be fixed. The corresponding map of Pakistan was also removed.

According to Indian media reports, New Delhi objected that all of Jammu and Kashmir was not shown as part of India. Pakistan’s Embassy also took up the issue with the US Country maps on the website have little detail.

Neither the India or Pakistan maps appeared to show their respective portions of Kashmir as disputed.

:lol:
 
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They will probably make a map like this.

_56478071_india_arunachal_304.gif



They wont make a fantasy map like Indian government does to fool its people :lol:
 
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They will probably make a map like this.

They wont make a fantasy map like Indian government does to fool its people :lol:

We ll have to wait to see what they come up with. But yeah most probably something like that.
 
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We ll have to wait to see what they come up with. But yeah most probably something like that.

They should continue with the same map that Omar has shown. That makes sense.
 
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