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ID119382
Title ProperGreat Britain and Kashmir, 1947-49
LanguageENG
AuthorAnkit, Rakesh
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 1953, a book on Jammu and Kashmir titled The Grim Saga (Dasgupta & Co. Ltd.) came out in Calcutta, India. Its author, S. N. Shivpuri, lamented "the triple tragedy of Kashmir-local, subcontinental and international." Almost five decades since then, a great deal has been written about the local and subcontinental tragedy(s) in Kashmir. This article instead turns its gaze towards the international aspects that accompanied the evolution of the first India-Pakistan conflict over Kashmir from 1947-49, which sowed the seeds of the enduring dispute between the two countries. Focusing on the British policy towards Kashmir during this period, it contends that the impact of three wider, over-lapping contexts of international geopolitics, namely, British fears about unrest in the north-west of Indian subcontinent along the border with Afghanistan, British involvement in the Middle East, and British plans against the former Soviet Union, affected the official interpretation of British interest in Kashmir. These contexts, in turn, were created by the two themes of decolonization in South Asia and the Cold War in that pivotal year of 1947.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 12, No.1; Jan-Mar 2013: p.20-40
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol. 12, No.1; Jan-Mar 2013: p.20-40
Key WordsJammu and Kashmir ;  India - Pakistan Conflict ;  British Policy Towards Kashmir ;  International Geopolitics ;  Afghanistan ;  Soviet Union ;  Middle East ;  Decolonization ;  South Asia


 
 
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