Title: K a s h m i r
1K a s h m i r
- United Nations Mediation
- 1948 - 1953
- Manas Nigam
2UNMOGIP -United Nations Military Observance
Group in India and Pakistan-
- Mission
- Monitor ceasefire line between India and Pakistan
in State of Jammu and Kashmir - Strength (31 January 2007)
- 44 military observers, supported by 23
international civilian personnel and 49 local
civilian staff - All from Chile, Croatia, Denmark, Finland, Italy,
Republic of Korea, Sweden and Uruguay - Duration 1949 Present
Why has the United Nations had to remain in Jammu
and Kashmir for so long?
Chief Military Observer Dragutin Repinc (Croatia)
3Kashmir -A Focus on the Area in
the 1940s-
- Boundaries Afganistan, China, Russia, Pakistan,
and India - Area 84,471 square miles
- The Population 4, 021, 616
- 77.11 Muslim, 20 Hindu, 1.6 Sikh
- All Ruled Autocratically by Maharajah Sir Hari
Singh - Pervasion of Indian Nationalism
- Three Groups Maharajah and Pro-Autocratic rule,
Pan-Islamist for Pakistan Accession, National
Conference for Indian Accession)
Why Have Kashmir?
The State possesses a tremendous strategical
advantage for both countries in terms of defense.
4Makings of a Conflict Independence from Great
Britain-
- June 3, 1947 British Plan for Indias Partition
- Different Princely States of India could either
accede to India or Pakistan - Kashmir Standstill Agreement With India and
Pakistan - Pakistan, determined to force accession of
Kashmir put various pressures on the Stat - In October 1947, Pakistani Forces, arming
subsidiary Muslim tribesmen/raiders to draw
blame, invaded Kashmir
The Response
- Kashmir, both Maharajah and National Conference,
acceded to appealed for aid from India. (See
www.asiapeace.org/acha/kashmir102.htm) - Invoking the UNs Charters Article 35, India
responded with an appeal to the United Nations.
(See www.asiapeace.org/acha/kashmir105.htm) - Pakistan appealed to the UN similarly
- Both agreed that a plebescite was necessary, yet
disagreed on how to do it.
5Security Council Action Phase 1 1948-
- Resolutions (From Belgium)
- India and Pakistan should improve, not aggravate
conditions - In January, 1948, Commission to Investigate
claims of both nations - April 21, 1948 Focus on establishing plebiscite
- A Bias?
- UN considering Pakistans more than Indias
complaints - On June 3, 1948, UN directed Commission to study
Pakistans charges concerning Jungadh accession
to India - Indias distrust of the United Nations
- NY Times (June 16, 1948) The Pro-Indian
Government of Sheik Abdullah Kashmir is now
unwilling to even accept an impartial plebiscite.
6UNCIP -Phase 2 United Nations Commission on
India and Pakistan July, 1948-December 1949-
A Gradual Climb Progress
- August 13, 1948 Ceasefire Agreement
- UN discovers that Pakistan was extensively
involved with invading raiders in Kashmir - Resolution at asiapeace.org/acha/kashmir108.htm
- Included removal of Pakistani troops India
agreed, but Pakistan refused - Both nations agreed to ceasefire on December 31,
1948 - Secretary General Trygve Halvdan Lie sent
military advisers to observe ceasefire - Successes Exchange of prisoners (Jan), Indian
Regiment Withdrawal (Feb), Plebescite
Administrator appointed (Admiral Chester Nimitz,
March)
7UNCIP -Phase 2 United Nations Commission on
India and Pakistan July, 1948-December 1949-
Under the Facade
- High optimism with truce of ceasefire
- However, each nation disagreed on conditions
necessary for a plebiscite - Should armies move out? Should people move back
in? Which army should oversee the plebiscite? - The UN Response
- Joint Conference in September the issues would
be arbitrated by the Plebiscite Administrator -
Pakistan agreed, India did not - India Why hadnt the UN confronted the
overwhelming question? Nehru Was Pakistan an
aggressor or not? Was it appeasement? - India had always arranged to have a plebiscite
(Or so it says), and did not need the UN
appeasing Pakistan at all in this matter
8Informal Mediation Phase 3 December, 1949-
- General A.G.L. McNaughton (Canada) suggested a
synchronized removal of Indian and Pakistani
troops - India disagreed Kashmir had acceded to them!
- Pakistan continued the contention that India was
invading a heavily Islamic country
A Note
After two years, India and Pakistan are
relentless, neither side willing to
concede. There is still no plebiscite.
9Continued Mediation Phases 4 5 1950s-
- During this period, individual intermediators
have been appointed by Security Council to
negotiate the situation all to no avail - Primarily, Sir Owen Dixon (Australia) from
AprilSeptember, 1950, offered plans for
demilitarization - Followed failed path as last demilitarization
plan - There is, I believe, on the side of India, a
conception of what ought to be done to ascertain
the real will of the Kashmiri people which is
not tacitly assumed by me. Doubtless it is a
conception that Pakistan does not share. - Former Senator Frank Graham (US) had also found
no success from 1951-1953, encountering the same
deadlock with the same issues
GOOD QUOTE!
Enough is Enough...
Pakistan and India pulled the problem out of the
UN in 1953. As of 1953, there is still no
plebiscite.
10Lets Be Serious -Was The UN Successful?-
- The United Nations under Secretary General Trvgve
Lie was seen to have a success with the Ceasefire
of 1949 - Yet
- The Security Councils approach, a timidity of
approach was inadequate The deadlock
consistently remained - The UN never dealt with the Who was the
aggressor? question, as part of the Charter - Can both sides be right? The UN never picked one
nation as more justified than another Source of
deadlock? - Was there a UN bias towards Pakistan? (UN
measures suggest so) - India remained angry that Pakistans invasion
went unpunished
The Biggest Failure
India and Pakistan have been in armed conflicts
since the attempted mediation. Once in 1971 and
again in 1999. Tension remains along the border.
11Currently -Unhappy Times A World in Chaos-
- Currently, as part of UNMOGIP, there are military
observers who report on the state of hostilities,
carry out the UNs instructions, and assist local
military leaders. - UNMOGIP was deployed in January, 1950 to observe
the ceasefire line. - In Kashmir, there has been much dissent.
- There are separatist movements within Kashmir
against India and there is still much violence in
the region. - However, there are peace attempts despite
continued conflict between India and Pakistan.
(Look at Economist article Murder on the
Friendship Express, February 22, 2007,
www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id874289
0)
Unbendable
India and Pakistan continue to remain resilient,
neither letting up. Is the region now so
ideologically involved that politics wont solve
the problem?
12Sources Used
- Josef Korbel, The Kashmir Dispute After Six
Years International Organization, Vol. 7, No. 4.
(Nov., 1953), pp. 498-510. links.jstor.org/sici?si
ci0020-8183281953112973A43C4983ATKDASY3E2.0
.CO3B2-L - Taraknath Das, The Kashmir Issue and the United
Nations. Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 65,
No. 2. (Jun., 1950), pp. 264-282.
links.jstor.org/sici?sici0032-3195281950062965
3A23C2643ATKIATU3E2.0.CO3B2-T - Michael Brecher. Kashmir A Case Study in United
Nations Mediation Pacific Affairs, Vol. 26, No.
3. (Sep., 1953), pp. 195-207 links.jstor.org/sici?
sici0030-851X2819530929263A33C1953AKACSIU3E
2.0.CO3B2-Y - Sylvain Lourie. The United Nations Military
Observer Group in India and Pakistan
International Organization, Vol. 9, No. 1. (Feb.,
1955), pp. 19-31 links.jstor.org/sici?sici0020-81
83281955022993A13C193ATUNMOG3E2.0.CO3B2-2 - United Nations Military Observer Group in India
and Pakistan (UNMOGIP website) www.un.org/Depts/dp
ko/missions/unmogip/index.html - Murder on the Friendship Express. The
Economist, February 2nd, 2007 http//www.economist
.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id8742890