India and Pakistan.
Republic Of India and Islamic Republic of Pakistan
India and Pakistan
Many people claim that the Kashmir dispute is the unfinished agenda of the partition plan. By this they imply that the solution of the Kashmir dispute should be looked in the light of two nations theory under which India was partitioned; or in the light of the UN Resolutions which deny the Kashmir people the right to determine their own future.
The valley situated between Pakistan and India is the Kashmir Valley. It is a region known for its stunning natural beauty, characterized by lush green mountains, rivers, and lakes. The area has been a point of contention between the two nations, leading to ongoing political and territorial disputes. Kashmir is also culturally rich, with a diverse heritage influenced by various civilizations over the centuries.
India and Pakistan have had a longstanding conflict over the region of Kashmir, with both countries claiming it as part of their territory and engaging in multiple wars and conflicts over the region.
Greece and Turkey
Afghanistan and Vietnam
Afghanistan and Vietnam
When a country has effectively become two nations with two conflicting cultures.
In the late 1940s and again in 1972, India and Pakistan fought wars primarily over the disputed region of Kashmir. The conflict arose after the partition of British India in 1947, which led to the division of the two nations and the subsequent claim over Kashmir by both. The first war occurred in 1947-1948 shortly after independence, while the second war in 1971 was linked to the Bangladesh Liberation War, with Kashmir remaining a central issue in Indo-Pak relations. These conflicts have had lasting implications on the geopolitical landscape of South Asia.
Afghanistan and Vietnam