Kashmir, the West, and the Misled Dreams of Pakistan
Kashmir, the West, and the Misled
Dreams of Pakistan
https://rakeshinsightfulgaze.blogspot.com/2025/05/when-facts-meet-fanboys-modis-strike.html
The war between India and Pakistan has flared up
again—unnecessary, avoidable, and, once more, deeply unbalanced. It won’t help
Pakistan. But it may help Modi shore up political capital at home, taking
action at a moment when his government should be facing tough questions about
its own role in what happened in Pulwama. Still, this moment demands a broader
look at the Kashmir conflict, and more importantly, at how Pakistan has
repeatedly been played—by the West, by its own military, and by the false promises
of power through war.
Pakistan has, for decades, acted as a pawn in a game designed
by others. When the Pakistani ambassador admitted recently that the country had
harbored terrorists for the West over the last 30 years, he was telling the
truth—but only part of it. The deeper truth is this: Pakistan's military was
given the green light by Western powers to sideline its civilian governments,
control the state, and pursue regional conflicts under the illusion of
strategic alignment with the West.
This wasn’t about helping Pakistan. It was about keeping
India in check. That’s the through line. From partition to today, the West’s
policies have consistently aimed at stopping India from rising too far, too
fast. And Pakistan was the convenient tool.
India wasn’t supposed to progress the way it did. The British
may have left, but they didn’t expect India—fractured, impoverished, and
recovering from colonial exploitation—to emerge with such intellectual and
developmental ambition. But India had a stroke of luck: leadership that
understood nation-building.
Nehru focused on education, agriculture, infrastructure,
science, health, and diplomacy. He signed peace deals, avoided early wars, and
laid the foundation for long-term growth. While Pakistan bought weapons and
planned battles, India built dams and launched satellites.
By 1974, India had conducted a successful nuclear test. It
had launched Bhaskaracharya into space. And just three years earlier, in 1971,
it had helped split Pakistan in two—despite the West arming and financing
Pakistan’s military effort. That war wasn’t just Pakistan’s loss; it was a
strategic defeat for the West. Their investment didn’t even last 10 days of
actual combat.
From that point on, the West wasn’t licking old wounds—they
were recalibrating their strategy. India’s rise had caught them off guard, and
they were determined not to let it go unchecked.
Today’s Kashmir violence is just the latest excuse. Modi will
act, and few will object given the circumstances. But Pakistan needs to be
honest with itself. It has spent decades chasing a fantasy, supporting
extremist proxies, and letting its military dominate national policy. All while
believing that it had Western support for a cause the West never truly
endorsed.
What should Pakistan do now? Stop. Not just the fighting, but
the delusion. Acknowledge the damage done—not just to others, but to your own
people. Admit that chasing Kashmir through violence was never a path to
progress. And most importantly, stop being a client state used to destabilize
your neighbor.
Go to the UN, not with threats, but with transparency. Say
what the ambassador finally began to say. Tell your people the truth: that for
too long, your nation was sacrificed to serve foreign agendas. That the army's
grip must be broken. That Pakistan will no longer be used to host training
camps or wage unwinnable wars.
This isn’t about supporting Modi. It’s not about excusing
violence on either side. It’s about understanding the forces that shaped this
mess, and breaking the pattern. The Indian army believes it fights on the side
of Dharma—that when you're right, you win. That belief has power, and Pakistan
should learn from it.
The way forward isn’t through war. It’s through reckoning,
reform, and rebuilding—with honesty at the core.
Good analysis of the conflict including the undeniable influence of the west.
ReplyDeleteAgree that should Pakistan should stop and step down
ReplyDelete