Finding a common ground

The US has hinted that it is trying to work out a common ground for the two arch rivals India and Pakistan and is trying out to figure out peace between them. The US statement came at a time when the two nations are engaged in heightened tensions amid air strikes carried out by both the countries on each other following the Pulwama attack that led to the killing of 45 CRPF troopers.
The two arch rivals, India and Pakistan seem to be in no mood to improve the strained relations that has been taking a heavy toll on both the countries and the people of Kashmir in particular.
The two nations are the main players in South Asian politics, as the two constitute 86% of its population and control over 80% of the land area. When these two are at peace with each other the whole region by and large maintains calm and when their relations witness a troubled phase, the entire region remains on tenterhooks.
Peace has been elusive to the region because of hostilities between India and Pakistan over the past many decades now. Both the nations have been fighting it out in the open and any incident be that Pulwama or Uri attack, triggers a fresh wave of anger and war euphoria.
Though India blames Pakistan for all its ills but the ground situation reflects a different situation altogether. The two neighbours have much in common in terms of history, culture, language and religions. Both the countries were parts of a single political entity until mid August 1947. Despite these close affinities psychologically both the countries have always been living two poles apart.
Since their inception both the countries have grown ever further apart and their policies both domestic and international have evolved increasingly in divergent directions. During the seven decades of their existence, the two countries fought three full fledged conventional wars and a war like situations emerges almost every second day on the border.
The dominant issue that has led to the heightened tensions is proving to be Kashmir issue which has been on the forefront of the troubled chapter of India-Pakistan history. Kashmir has been an outstanding security pre-occupation as much to Pakistan as to India and a potential destabilizer of the entire geo- strategic balance of the whole sub- continent.
For both the countries Kashmir issue has proved to be an attention diverter towards the key issues that the governments of both the countries are faced with. In India presently the crisis that is staring the country is the failed experiment the BJP led NDA government has proved.
The failure to wrest power in three hindi heartland states and the crumbling economy has got the BJP worried and it is desperate now to play the Kashmir card to the hilt and try to divert the focus of the aggrieved commoner from all these issues.
Similarly in Pakistan where the state has almost failed on bringing the economy and political order back on tracks is using Kashmir to get its people side with the government despite its failure and back track on all the major promises made to the electorate.
However, what is more important that Kashmir and its people have been on the receiving end and no one cares for their betterment. Kashmir has been witnessing killings and the mayhem can turn worse if the two countries continue to live in animosity and hatred. It will be in the better interest of the people in the entire region if a common ground is found and a solution worked out so that peace prevails and the war mongering sees an end.