apologies to engage in distracting you further : you provide interesting insights into exactly the problems within ourselves that has led to this mess.
For the moment let us assume that it disturbed the "peace" of states like WB in 71, and created "huge" social problems in WB. So what is your objection if it creates "huge" social problems in a compared to WB, minuscule population in the Valley part of J&K? WB did not remain disturbed for long and socially problematic for long, did it? Why should we care much if the Kashmiri Muslims have some disturbances for a while in the Valley because they have been responsible for creating a lot of disturbances outside the state in India and not been able to control their own homegrown terrorists without whose help foreign infiltrators would have been dead-meat?the last time a "forced migration" was attempted was in 1971, during the B'desh crisis..Again India was "prepared", given that our boys were all over B'desh with the Mukti Bahini...still we were pretty much overwhelmed...And even in a "peaceful" state like West Bengal, it created huge social problems, despite the fact that most people expected these refugees to go back...
By the way, an equal social disaster happened after the 47 Partition on the WB border. How many indidents of violence targeting the "refugees" can you report in both periods for the refugees disappointing the "going back" expectations? The tragedy occured away from WB, in the Dandakaranya area, where local and external business interests were involved in exploiting the rehabilitants. Those who travelled to Aandamans did and are doing just fine. There is a wonderful Malayali film by a famous film-maker that covers exactly such a fictionalized history of migration.
It is risky making such comparative analysis. Please be careful next time!
Scientists formulate "grand strategies" based on fantasies? Artist"e"s? Well yes scientists do - and that is how we learnt to dream of landing on the moon or on planets, and what a surprise, we ultimately did.Nations dont formulate grand strategies on fantasies - scientists have that luxury, artistes do, not nation states..Grand strategy have to be based on hard facts - a hard nosed SWOT analysis....A misunderstanding over land allocation to a religious trust creates immense troubles in J&K, a wrong analysis, surely part of a psywar, on a murder causes problems, something in line with what you suggest will make Kashmir a few times more intractable than Beirut or Ramallah...
As for SWOT, I am involved in a dozen of them as part of academic admin duties every year. Just between you and me, they are all b***S***. After doing all those exercises, we simply go on working out our "grand strategies", and that is how we both individually and organizationally flourish. Breaking our own targets, limitations imposed by ourselves, we enrich both individually and collectively university wide and beyond.
Your views crucially highlight the fundamental weakness in our thought process - the lack of will. The lack of understanding even, of the role of individual and collective will at crucial junctures in a nations history. By looking up to small men we have become smaller ourselves. Each state is unique, each rashtra is unique - there is a limit to comparisons - there is no point in not doing what is necessary, in particular for solving the J&K problem as part of the larger TSP-problem. Any shying away from doing the necessary is a sign of weakness that we should get rid of immediately.
It is time we learnt to distinguish between fancy and vision. The former is the refuge of those who are fearful, and the latter is the vehicle for those who want to shape the future.Surely the destiny of India cannot be mortgaged for a few decades for a "final solution" of fanciful proportions in Kashmir..