India was partitioned in 1947 based on religious lines to create Pakistan, following the ideology of Muslim nationalism propagated by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the All India Muslim League. The Partition was a result of growing tensions between the Muslim and Hindu communities in colonial India, and the demand for a separate Muslim-majority nation. This form of nationalism led to the division of the subcontinent into two separate countries, India and Pakistan, to address the aspirations of the Muslim population for a separate homeland.
On May 28, 1998, Pakistan became a nuclear power when it successfully carried out five nuclear tests at Chaghai, in the province of Baluchistan. This was in direct response to five nuclear explosions by India, just two weeks earlier. Widely criticized by the international community, Pakistan maintains that its nuclear program is for selfdefence, as deterrence against nuclear India. A former Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, offered justification for Pakistan's nuclear program when he said that if India were to produce a bomb, Pakistan would do anything it could to get one of its own. It has always been maintained by Pakistan that a nuclear threat posed to its security can neither be met with conventional means of defense, nor by external security guarantees.
The Kashmir conflict mainly affects the region of Jammu and Kashmir, which is a disputed territory between India and Pakistan in South Asia. This region has been a source of tension and conflict between the two countries for many decades.
Ang India ay nahati noong 1947 sa pamamagitan ng proseso ng partition, kung saan itinatag ang India at Pakistan bilang dalawang magkahiwalay na bansa. Ipinamahagi ang lupaing Muslim-majority sa Kanlurang Bahagi ng India sa itinatag na Pakistan, samantalang nanatili naman ang Hindi-majority na bahagi bilang India.
Pakistan's foreign policy is influenced by its relations with key powers like China, the United States, and neighboring India. Additionally, security concerns, especially related to Afghanistan and the threat of terrorism, play a significant role in shaping Pakistan's foreign policy decisions. The country's historical rivalry with India and the quest for Kashmir also have a major impact on its foreign policy choices.
Yes, Rajouri district in Jammu and Kashmir shares a border with Pakistan, not China. The Line of Control (LoC) separates Rajouri from Pakistan-administered Kashmir to the west. China borders India in the northeast, primarily in the regions of Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh.
India was partitioned and Pakistan was created out of religious nationalism. Pakistan created a country for Muslims who were living in majority-Hindu India.
licking each others buttwhole
India and Pakistan
it was PAKISTAN THAT WAS PARTITIONED from India in 1947.
pakistan.....
Pakistan and Bangladesh were formed.
It was India, which when granted independence from the British Empire in 1947 was partitioned into India (mostly Hindu) and Pakistan (mostly Muslim). The isolated part of Pakistan in the east of India (East Pakistan) later became the free nation of Bangladesh.
MRT. has written: 'Pakistan and Muslim India. Nationalism in conflict in India'
India and Pakistan. (Initially, Pakistan was split geographically into the larger West Pakistan and the smaller East Pakistan. Today, West Pakistan is now called just Pakistan, and East Pakistan became an independent country in its own right, Bangladesh.)
BRITISH partitioned India and Pakistan which led to a war between both nations which continues even today
The British-ruled areas of the Indian subcontinent were partitioned into India and Pakistan in the year 1947 under the Indian Independence Act.
Muslims and Hindus .