Sunday, September 20, 2015

1965 INDO -PAK WAR : 50 Years After the 1965 War: What Has Changed in India-Pakistan Relations?

SOURCE :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F35WoTC2dko










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1965 INDO -PAK WAR :
   50 Years After the 1965 War: What Has         Changed in India-Pakistan Relations?





 


Published on Sep 10, 2015
 
Stephen Cohen, Shuja Nawaz, and Col. John Gill (Ret.) join Amb. Husain Haqqani to discuss the roots and legacy of the 1965 India-Pakistan War. - Captured Live on Ustream at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/hudson-...


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New Indian War Strategies-Pakistan Worried





Published on Sep 9, 2015
 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWN7bzd9I-0


 
 
 
There is no prospect of India and Pakistan coming to terms and settling their border differences in the foreseeable future, certainly not in the lifetime of the two countries’ present governments and probably not for much longer. Efforts to improve the relationship in other ways will also be precarious and uncertain.

That has been clear for years, but it became even more obvious at the end of last week when planned talks between the two countries’ national security advisers (NSAs) on cross-border terrorism were scuttled in a flood of accusations and counter-accusations.

In the last few days, the war-like rhetoric on both sides from highly placed civil and military officials has assumed alarming proportions. Pakistan has been brandishing the 'nuclear deterrent', while on our side no less a person than the Army chief has spoken of 'short wars'.

"As one who has been witness to all the Indo-Pak conflicts from 1947 onwards, I must sound a note of caution," he said in a statement.

Singh, whose father Maharaja Hari Singh had agreed to accede to India ..

Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/a...

                                                              


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Karan Singh voices concern over 'war-like rhetoric' from Pakistan, India

PTI Sep 3, 2015, 03.02PM IST




 

NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader Karan Singh today expressed serious concern over "war-like rhetoric" from civil and military brass both in Pakistan and India as he favoured talks between the two countries on all outstanding issues, including Jammu and Kashmir.
Singh said any war, howsoever short, would have "disastrous consequences" and wondered why India was always in the "defensive" while deliberating on the issue of Jammu and Kashmir with Pakistan.

"In the last few days, the war-like rhetoric on both sides from highly placed civil and military officials has assumed alarming proportions. Pakistan has been brandishing the 'nuclear deterrent', while on our side no less a person than the Army chief has spoken of 'short wars'. "As one who has been witness to all the Indo-Pak conflicts from 1947 onwards, I must sound a note of caution," he said in a statement.
Singh, whose father Maharaja Hari Singh had agreed to accede to India by signing the Instrument of Accession in October 1947, said India should hold talks with Pakistan on all outstanding issues, including Jammu and Kashmir.
"In my personal opinion, while fully safeguarding national security, I do not see why we should not talk with Pakistan on all outstanding issues including Jammu and Kashmir.
"They are in adverse possession of half of my father's former State, and I fail to understand why we are always on the defensive in discussing this. But for this to happen the sanctity of the LoC and the international border needs to be re-established and peace restored," he said.

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