Normally synonymous with open hostility, the relationship between India and Pakistan is affected by many discordant factors. In this article I will explore the major ancestors, namely splitting in India and splitting into two states. Emphasizing emerging collective trauma and vulnerable nationalism, subsequent fear and distrust are related to their policies and actions over the past 60 years. The impact will be related to national security and regional ambitions, access to the Kashmiri conflict and its nuclear technology.
Despite the historical, cultural and ethnic connections between India and Pakistan, the relationship between India and Pakistan has been plagued by long distrust and doubt since the Indian division in 1947. The main cause of the conflict between India and its western countries is the Kashmiri conflict. Following the invasion of Pashtun's tribal members and Pakistan paramilitary forces, Hindu al-Khalil Singh and Jammu and his Muslim prime minister Sheikh Abdullah of Kashmir's Doma signed a letter of accession to New Delhi . The first Kashmir war began after the Indian army entered the capital of Srinagar and confirmed that the area was protected from invading troops. The war ended in December 1948, and the control line divided the old kingdom into areas managed by Pakistan (North and West) and India (South, Central and Northeast). The war of 5 weeks put out thousands of casualties on both sides.
The foreign relations between India and Pakistan are only nervous at the most. Ongoing discussions in the Kashmir area caused war on the Indian subcontinent. The area caused three wars (1947, 1965, 1971), and the tension continued between the two countries (Indian foreign relations, 2005). Recently, India tried to bridge the gap with Pakistan. India offers unilateral MFN status to Pakistan, but unfortunately Pakistan has not yet been refunded. This may be India's move to normalize relations and some may think that this time will give political support from the UN Security Council.
The Kashmiri conflict is still a major issue of discussion between Pakistan and India, and three out of their four wars took place in this territory. Pakistan maintains a close political relationship with Turkey and Iran because of its difficulty in relation to geopolitical rival India, both of which are the focus of Pakistan's foreign policy. Saudi Arabia also maintains a fine position in Pakistan's foreign policy. Pakistan is a powerful member of the IAEA as a non-signatory country of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. In a recent incident, Pakistan shuts down the international treaty restricting fissile material and insists that this treaty will cover Pakistan in particular. Pakistan's nuclear deterrent program in the 20th century focused on the fight against Indian ambition for nuclear development, but India's nuclear test will eventually maintain geopolitical equilibrium and become Pakistan's It led to correspondence.