Bang Galore
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Yes a great deal of "If" and "buts" what I do find curious is that all of these are expressed by one side, don't you think that curious?
Maybe that is because all the compromises that will happen on ground will be made by India. Pakistan will only make compromises on claims that it makes, no real change in ground position is asked for or is on offer. This is how it has been; on Siachen, Sir Creek, Kashmir (as a wider issue), IWT etc. Pakistani mindset see even the offer of MFN as a compromise & India having already given the same MFN as somehow insignificant. Pakistan is believed to have compromised greatly if it does not tom-tom daily the Kashmir issue to uninterested audiences but India's response to the difference in wordplay is expected to be significant concessions on the ground. Take for example, the Siachen issue. India should withdraw from Siachen is the constant chorus (actually both should withdraw is the claim- the fact that Pakistanis are nowhere near Siachen makes that infructuous) and no reason is offered as to why India should bestow such fortune on Pakistan. On the IWT, Pakistanis routinely make charges of water stealing & yet are not able to prove it to any independent authority. They keep complaining about the IWT, probably one of the most generous in terms of the Upper riparian state giving up its rights to the water. Pakistanis have never shown the slightest appreciation that India could disregard the IWT & ask for a new treaty drawn according to accepted international principles on water sharing, something that will get Pakistan a lot less than now. Yet we see Pakistan taking positions that are untenable almost as a routine.
On Kashmir specifically, as it relates to your question, what is Pakistan compromising on actually?