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Chapter 7 - Conflict and Reconciliation: Three Scenarios

from Section II - State Relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2013

Amitabh Mattoo
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
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Summary

There are few regions in the international system whose future seems to have been as difficult to predict as South Asia. Almost all the writings that looked at South Asia, say 50 years ago, were way off the mark. That is true even of the assessments of individual countries. There are several reasons for these inaccurate predictions. Forecasting the future, as we know, is a small industry in the West. Thinking long term is, of course, important, as is identifying the main drivers of change. But most Western analyses of South Asia have suffered from a clear ethnocentric bias. Analysts have predictably, if unfortunately, sought to capsule the region into a preconceived Western mould. “Occidental” attempts at forcing an Eastern intellectual puzzle into preconceived categories have just not worked.

Take the case of the India–Pakistan relationship, arguably the single most critical factor for the region. The conflict between India and Pakistan is easy to describe, but painfully difficult to understand. We have witnessed how apparently well-thought-out prescriptions have failed, even as policy analysts have invented catchy titles for the troubled relationship. “Enduring rivalry,” “sustained conflict,” and “ugly stability,” are terms that form the standard lexicon of South Asia watchers particularly in the United States. But this really is reductio ad absurdum as is evident to almost anyone with more than just a passing sense of history of the region.

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South Asia 2060
Envisioning Regional Futures
, pp. 61 - 67
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2013

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