> Kashmiris on the Indian side are citizens (unlike in "colonies")
Since when has that prevented any government from negotiating borders?
> the issue is too good to give up for (religion-based) politics and (military-industrial) businesses, on both sides of the border
Yup. I’d add that the citizens of both countries legitimately despise each other. Not genocidally, for the most part, but dismissively to each others’ humanity. So it’s not like you have to go full manufactured consent to develop jingoism.
> I'd add that the citizens of both countries legitimately despise each other
I've been to towns on both sides throughout the years and this isn't the case everywhere. Though, disagreements do run deep, as contrasting narratives are in fact mainstream talking points.
Hopefully, in my lifetime, the countries resolve their differences & cast aside the hateful fringe like they should.
> negotiating borders
That's a very different thing to "decolonisation".
India is 1.6bn people and even if 7% disagree, that's a 100mn people (and the number is far greater than 7%). Not everyone is a right-wing nationalist, though, the ruling parties and the now-compromised MSMs are.
Since when has that prevented any government from negotiating borders?
> the issue is too good to give up for (religion-based) politics and (military-industrial) businesses, on both sides of the border
Yup. I’d add that the citizens of both countries legitimately despise each other. Not genocidally, for the most part, but dismissively to each others’ humanity. So it’s not like you have to go full manufactured consent to develop jingoism.