RamaY,
>>I noticed this pattern in all western strat-e-getic literature. Very little mention/projection of India, its capabilities and its future.
Partly a fall-out of the cold war boss. In those days were were considered an appendage of USSR, and therefore no positive possibilities were considered (and a good dose of negative wishful thinking was added to the mix as well).
>>All their games/models predict a sure fragmentation of India that too in near term (10-20 years). This has been happening since 1947. At the same time their models predict a strong and surging paquistan due to its religious glue.
Same as above.
>>Their not correcting their models even after 60 yrs means only one thing -
Actually, this is not correct. They are correcting. Virtually any article these days about India refers primarily, but not only, to its great economic/strategic future. This is a problem of a different kind, by the way. If you look carefully at the number of positive articles written about India today (compared to, say, 25 yrs ago), the situation is incomparable.
>>"There is an active and ongoing effort to fragment India by these very models. And various pieces in the regional game are nothing but pieces to that singular objective."
Where did you get this quote from?
>>Why is this western obsession with a fragmented India; one can only guess.
It is not only India. It is any potential peer competitor, only the means are different. And, something we must never forget, it is not only a "western" obsession.
In these realities there is plenty of room for us to manoeuvre for advantage and secure it, bit by bit. We are doing it, maybe not optimally, and certainly it is not always a pretty sight (May 1998s don't come by that often

)... but it's happening.