Contemporary South Asia
Introduction
South Asia — India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, the Maldives, and Afghanistan — is a REGION of paradox. Its people share deep CULTURAL, LINGUISTIC, and HISTORICAL ties. Yet it is one of the LEAST INTEGRATED regions in the world. Trade between South Asian countries is MINISCULE compared to Southeast Asia or Europe. India's SIZE and centrality creates both OPPORTUNITY and ANXIETY among its neighbours. This chapter explores India's relations with each neighbour and the promise — and failure — of SAARC.
1. The South Asian Region — Shared Challenges
Despite their differences, South Asian countries face COMMON challenges:
| Challenge | Detail |
|---|---|
| Poverty | Home to the largest concentration of the world's poor |
| Democracy | Mixed records — India and Sri Lanka are established democracies; Pakistan and Bangladesh have alternated between democracy and military/authoritarian rule |
| Conflict | India-Pakistan rivalry is the central conflict of the region |
| Climate Vulnerability | Bangladesh and the Maldives are among the world's most climate-vulnerable countries |
2. India-Pakistan — The Central Conflict
The India-Pakistan relationship has defined South Asian politics since 1947. NO TWO other countries in the region have fought FOUR WARS and remain in a state of permanent hostility.
The Kashmir Dispute
Kashmir is the CORE of the India-Pakistan conflict:
| Event | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Accession of Kashmir | 1947 | Maharaja Hari Singh (Hindu ruler of Muslim-majority Kashmir) acceded to India when Pakistani tribals invaded. India airlifted troops. Ceasefire. Kashmir divided. |
| First Kashmir War | 1947-48 | UN-mediated ceasefire. Pakistan occupies ~1/3 of Kashmir (PoK — Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, called Azad Kashmir by Pakistan). |
| Wars over Kashmir | 1965, 1999 (Kargil) | 1965: Stalemate. 1999: Pakistan infiltrated across the LoC in Kargil; India pushed them back. |
| Current Status | Ongoing | Ceasefire violations. Terrorism. Diplomatic tension. No resolution in sight. |
Beyond Kashmir
| Event | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh Liberation War | 1971 | Pakistan's military crackdown in East Pakistan led to a humanitarian crisis. India intervened. Pakistan was DEFEATED. Bangladesh was BORN. 'The most decisive military victory in Indian history.' |
| Nuclear Tests | 1998 | Both India (Pokhran-II) and Pakistan tested nuclear weapons. 'Two hostile neighbours — both nuclear-armed. The most dangerous dyad in the world.' |
| Peace Attempts | Various | Shimla Agreement (1972). Lahore Declaration (1999). Composite dialogue. ALL stalled — primarily due to cross-border terrorism. |
Why India-Pakistan Relations Remain Hostile
- Kashmir — the core, unresolved territorial dispute
- Cross-border terrorism — India accuses Pakistan of supporting terrorist groups (26/11 Mumbai attacks, 2008; Pulwama, 2019)
- Pakistan's view — India has not treated Pakistan as an equal. Kashmir is an unfinished agenda of Partition
- 'Two nuclear-armed neighbours with a shared history and a deep mutual distrust. The tragedy of South Asia is that India and Pakistan COULD have been partners — instead they are permanent adversaries.'
3. India-Bangladesh
Bangladesh was born in 1971 with INDIAN military support. The relationship, initially warm, has been COMPLEX:
| Issue | Status |
|---|---|
| River Water Sharing | The Ganga water dispute (Farakka Barrage). Teesta river agreement STALLED due to West Bengal's objections. |
| Illegal Migration | A politically sensitive issue — especially in Assam and West Bengal. |
| Land Boundary Agreement | 2015 — HISTORIC agreement. Resolved the 68-year-old border enclave issue. 111 Indian enclaves in Bangladesh and 51 Bangladeshi enclaves in India were exchanged. 'A model of how neighbours CAN resolve disputes.' |
| Economic Cooperation | Growing. Bangladesh is India's largest trading partner in South Asia. Connectivity projects. |
| China Factor | Bangladesh maintains close ties with China — balancing India and China. |
4. India-Nepal
India and Nepal share a UNIQUE relationship — open border (citizens can cross without passports), deep cultural and religious ties, family connections across the border.
| Area | Status |
|---|---|
| Special Relationship | The 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship. Open border. Nepalis serve in the Indian Army (Gurkha regiments). |
| Tensions | Nepal's 2015 Constitution — Madhesi protests (the Madhesi community has close ties to India). Economic blockades. 'Nepal's small size creates a PERPETUAL fear of Indian domination.' |
| China Factor | China is investing heavily in Nepal — BRI infrastructure. 'Nepal is the arena where India and China compete for influence.' Nepal seeks to BALANCE between the two. |
5. India-Sri Lanka
| Event | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Civil War | 1983-2009 | The Tamil minority (concentrated in the North and East) fought an armed struggle (LTTE — Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) against the Sinhala-majority government. |
| Indian Intervention (IPKF) | 1987 | India sent the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) to Sri Lanka under the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord. The mission FAILED — the IPKF ended up fighting the LTTE. India withdrew its forces. 'The IPKF mission was a lesson in the LIMITS of Indian intervention.' |
| Assassination of Rajiv Gandhi | 1991 | Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by an LTTE suicide bomber during an election campaign in Tamil Nadu. |
| After the War | 2009 onwards | The LTTE was militarily defeated. The Tamil question remains — India supports reconciliation, transitional justice, and greater autonomy for Tamils. China has invested heavily in Sri Lankan infrastructure (Hambantota port, Colombo Port City). |
6. SAARC — The Failed Promise
The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) was founded in 1985 with EIGHT members. Its promise was that South Asia — like Europe (EU) and Southeast Asia (ASEAN) — could INTEGRATE economically and politically.
| Reality | Why |
|---|---|
| Meets IRREGULARLY | SAARC summits have been repeatedly postponed — primarily due to India-Pakistan tensions |
| Minimal economic integration | Intra-SAARC trade is ~5% of total South Asian trade (compare: intra-EU trade is ~60%) |
| India-Pakistan HOSTILITY paralyses SAARC | 'SAARC is held HOSTAGE to the India-Pakistan relationship.' |
| Sub-regional cooperation BYPASSES SAARC | BBIN (Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal) and BIMSTEC (Bay of Bengal) work around Pakistan |
7. Exam Focus
| Question Type | Marks | Likely Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Long Answer | 6 | Evaluate India's relations with its South Asian neighbours |
| Short Answer | 4 | India-Pakistan — Kashmir conflict, wars, peace attempts |
| Short Answer | 2 | What is SAARC? Why has it failed? |
| Short Answer | 2 | India-Bangladesh relations — 1971 to Land Boundary Agreement 2015 |
Self-Test
Q1. Describe INDIA-PAKISTAN relations since 1947. Why have peace attempts failed? A1. India and Pakistan have fought FOUR wars (1947-48, 1965, 1971, 1999) and remain in permanent hostility. CORE ISSUE: Kashmir — both claim it. Pakistan occupies ~1/3 (PoK). Wars over Kashmir: 1947-48, 1965, 1999 (Kargil). 1971: Bangladesh Liberation War — India defeated Pakistan, Bangladesh was born. Nuclear tests by both in 1998 — making this the world's most dangerous bilateral relationship. PEACE ATTEMPTS: Shimla Agreement (1972), Lahore Declaration (1999), composite dialogue — ALL stalled. PRIMARY REASON: cross-border terrorism (26/11 Mumbai, 2008; Pulwama, 2019). India's position: no dialogue while terrorism continues. Pakistan's position: Kashmir must be addressed. 'Two nuclear neighbours trapped in a cycle of hostility — the central tragedy of South Asia.'
Q2. What is SAARC? Why has it FAILED to achieve regional integration? A2. SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) was founded in 1985 with 8 members. Its goal: economic and political integration of South Asia — like the EU or ASEAN. WHY IT FAILED: (1) INDIA-PAKISTAN HOSTILITY paralyses SAARC — summits are repeatedly postponed. (2) India's SIZE creates anxiety among smaller neighbours — they fear Indian domination. (3) Intra-SAARC trade is only ~5% of total South Asian trade (vs. ~60% for the EU). (4) Sub-regional groupings like BBIN and BIMSTEC have bypassed SAARC — working around Pakistan. 'SAARC exists on paper. It has not delivered on its promise.'
