Which actually proves nothing at all, but just semantics to obfuscate the deliberate pussyfooting by Govt of Pakistan
It establishes the fact that the requirement of unilateral demilitarization placed upon Pakistan was superseded by subsequent UNSC Resolutions that realized how unfeasible and unfair a unilateral demilitarization would be to the party required to implement it, and removed that requirement. It doesn't appear that you saw the relevant sections of Resolution 80 so here they are again, without the other text that appeared to distract you from the central point of the resolution:
"to prepare and execute within a period of five months from the date of this resolution a programme of demilitarization on the basis of the principles of paragraph 2 of General McNaughton's proposal or of such modifications of those principles as may be mutually agreed;"
The resolution clearly states in the excerpt above that the 'program of demilitarization' was to be 'prepared and executed' on the 'basis of the principles of paragraph 2' of the McNaughton proposal - and here is what the relevant section of para 2 of the proposal states:
"There should be an agreed programme of progressive demilitarisation ..."
India never agreed to the sensible and fair proposals of a bilateral and simultaneous withdrawal of forces, even though India would have been allowed to retain a small token force of a few thousand 'for the purposes of maintaining law and order".
Sure could have been done through a plebiscite provided the pre-requisites would have been met as agreed upon by
the *RESOLUTION 98 (1952) ADOPTED BY THE SECURITY COUNCIL AT ITS 611TH MEETING ON 23 DECEMBER, 1952. (DOCUMENT NO. S/2883, DATED THE 24TH DECEMBER, 1952)".
Have you actually read the Resolution? Here are the salient points, which, again, establish my point that the requirement of unilateral withdrawal/demilitarization was superseded:
"3. Notes that agreement on a plan of demilitarization of the State of Jammu and Kashmir has not been reached because the Governments of India and Pakistan have not agreed on the whole of paragraph 7 of the twelve- point proposals;
4. Urges the Governments of India and Pakistan to enter into immediate negotiations under the auspices of the United Nations Representative for India and Pakistan in order to reach agreement on the specific number of forces to remain on each side of the cease-fire line at the end of the period of demilitarization, this number to be between 3,000 and 6,000 armed forces remaining on the Pakistan side of the cease-fire line and between 12,000 and 18,000 armed forces remaining on the India side of the cease-line, as suggested by the United Nations Representative in his proposals of 16 July 1952, such specific numbers to be arrived at bearing in mind the principles or criteria contained in paragraph 7 of the United Nations Representative's proposal of 4 September 1952;"
Again, India was the irritant in implementing these proposals because it opposed any kind of sensible and fair solution of a 'bilateral withdrawal' under which the concerns of both parties would be addressed.
The point here is that the UNSC Resolutions on Kashmir were no longer demanding a unilateral withdrawal from Pakistan - the international community and the UN had determine (correctly) that any solution involving a unilateral withdrawal from territory claimed by two States, at war with each other over said territory, would be inherently unfair to the side withdrawing first.
This part of your post was self defeating as it just blew your obfuscation of the resolutions for the readers here wide open.....
Ok lets review What resolutions of 13 Aug 1948 and 5th Jan 1949 says
Those resolutions were superseded by subsequent UNSC Resolutions on the Kashmir Dispute that, as explained above, did not demand an unconditional and unilateral withdrawal from Pakistan. Continuing to regurgitate the text of those resolutions (with respect to their content on demilitarization) serves no purpose since subsequent UNSC Resolutions elaborated on that requirement and did so in favor of the Pakistani position of a bilateral withdrawal.
Reality on ground was this that majority of Indian Muslims were against the partition and Pakistan was having problems with Intregration of the princely states mainly in NWFP and Balouchistan.
That is irrelevant to my comment regarding the fact that the accession of the State of Junagadh to Pakistan was in accordance with the rules of partition governing accession.
Pasthun tribes of NWFP were not willing to join Pakistan and majority of them were behind Khan Abdul Ghafar Khan , Khudai Khidmatgar and they were more for the merger with Afghanistan.
Was those really Pashtun tribesmen or the mercenaries backed by the Pakistan military ? I think it was mainly PR to name that Pashtun tribesmen invaded Kashmir.
Again, this comment is completely irrelevant to my point that you need to provide credible studies establishing deliberate demographic change in Ak and GB.
Plebiscite was possible that time when Pakistan would have remove its military but that never happened and
Shortly after the 1962 war between India and China. Pakistan ceded Kashmir land to China in March 1963 and complicated the Kashmir issue more and by 1964 the Chinese have conducted the Nuclear test.
As I pointed out in my response to milspec above, the UNSC recognized how irresponsible, unfeasible and unfair the solution, of requiring one State to unilaterally withdraw her troops from disputed territory that the two States were at war over, was. The UNSC Resolutions subsequent to the first ones addressed this issue and called for an agreement on bilateral withdrawal of forces.
Only a State that wants to use a unilateral withdrawal to her advantage and occupy territory vacated by the withdrawing State would oppose such a solution, and India is that State.