I have lived in all of the four areas of concern and interacted as much as I could with the local population, well in fact been around most of the places in India of concern due to my dads job, and then been around the rest of her due to my job, my opinions are based singularly on my experience “I too say it like I see it”, and they are quite clearly different than yours, I have for the last 7 years gone back to my village just to participate in the elections by voting, not just for the heck of it but because of the very culture i grew up in.Well, no offense intended, but I say it like I see it. There is a lot of Ghandi mystique, but behind the scenes there was a lot of party and faction machinations since before the British left (even before WW2), and this trend has continued. I'm not saying that the Indian society is completely corrupt like its neighbours, and not even that most of the Indian political leadership is corrupt, but the way Indian democracy works is not quite how it works in the 'West'. I have talked to quite a few Indians on the subject, and they largely confirm this.
In the case of India again the case is unique. In fact India has four very different security challenges that require very versatile and flexible approach.
These are (starting in the North and going clockwise):
Kashmir - high altitude conflict with poor surface communications
Eastern border that is very difficult to secure due to the nature of terrain, but can pose direct threat to Indian society and economy.
The South - this is a socio-political issue that is thousands of years old due to the separation of Hindu and Tamil societies. I don't see a military solution.
And of course the Indo-Pakistani border that has its own challenges, but I don't see a political solution (as much as I wish there could be one).
An added challenge is Bangladesh, and what will happen to this nation and ts people if the sea levels do rise due to global climate change in the next 50 years. It may not pose a military threat to India, but it would create a socio-economic challenge which the Government will invariably attempt to solve by using the military in the same way South Africa is trying to cope with influx of illegal economic refugees from the North.
Yes Indian Democracy will never be like let us say any other one (by the way what do you mean by western democracy?) place on earth as very few will face the same situations, that is why i said different solutions for different places (for example Iraq or Afghanistan will require unique political solutions), however solutions none the less.
however I can not retort to your previous 2 posts anymore as this is the worst place to do so.
On a political solution to the problem of the western neighbor, and more specifically the state of Jammu and Kashmir (and not just Kashmir), political solutions are being worked it will take another 30-40 years and efforts to become effective, again things I will not discuss here and waste your time.
I stand with the statement I made about military being the tool and not the solution, even in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is a leadership at village/city-block level in all places no matter if they are in a war torn nation or a rich beyond imagination nation.
The role of the military should be to provide enough room for political leaders to maneuver and find solution and to provide room to their supporters to rally behind them, the military should get orders and the freedom to operate in order to fulfill them, if one expects military to bring about peace alone, I hope the generals are damn good in politics.
The situation in both Iraq and Afghanistan or any place where the military has to oversee the security (occupy in other words) can be resolved by providing political tools to the people for the resolution of the problem, with the military being the tool to do so.
As to what the political solution is, well i am at an obvious disadvantage to comment on that, i do not even know names of even ten roads in Iraq/Afghanistan let alone the true nature of political situation/complexity of the place.
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