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"The rivalry between India and Pakistan has proven to be one of the
world's most intractable international conflicts, ever since 1947 when
the British botched their departure from the South Asian subcontinent.
And the enmity is likely to continue for another thirty-five years,
reaching the century mark. This has critical implications for both
countries and the rest of the world. Renowned South Asia expert Stephen
P. Cohen explains why he expects this rivalry to continue in this first
comprehensive survey of the deep historical, cultural, and strategic
differences that underpin the hostility.
In recent years the
stakes have increased as India and Pakistan have each acquired a hundred
or more nuclear weapons, blundered into several serious crises, and
become victims of terrorism, some of it from across their borders.
America is puzzled by the problem of dealing with a rising India and a
struggling Pakistan, and Cohen offers a fresh approach for U.S. policy
in dealing with these two powers.
Drawing on his rich experience
in South Asia to explore the character, depth, and origin of Indian and
Pakistani attitudes toward each other, Cohen develops a comprehensive
theory of why the dispute between New Delhi and Islamabad is likely to
persist. He also describes the terrible cost of this animosity for the
citizens of India and Pakistan, including the region's high levels of
violence and low level of economic integration. On a more hopeful note,
however, he goes on to suggest developments that could ameliorate the
tension, including a more active role for the UnitedStates in addressing
a range of issues that divide the nations. Kashmir is one of these
issues, but as much a consequence as a cause of the rivalry." (Publisher Description)
Current Affairs
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