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This question, hungry, Mexico will definitely be elected. India and Pakistan don't care about their business at all. Even if you want to choose a camp, it will definitely follow the choice of the United States.
Distant relatives are not as good as close neighbors, and people are so close to the United States, why should they offend the United States because of two unrelated countries for no reason. According to the thinking of the United States, it will definitely support India, I see some people say that India's influence is very small, this is a bit unrealistic, India's military strength and comprehensive national strength are incomparable to Pakistan, not to mention that they have made great help and contributions to the United States in the IT industry. From a strategic point of view, Pakistan is one of the countries with which China has better relations, and in terms of the balance of power in the region, it is impossible for the United States to support Pakistan to upset the balance in this complex region.
So I think if India and Pakistan fight, Mexico will definitely be on India's side. Over
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Mexico, of course, is neutral.
Two cats fight, which position do you think the dog will stand on?
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Definitely India.
Unless the two have a special geopolitical relationship with certain countries (for example, China, the United States, and Russia will be biased towards India and Pakistan).
Otherwise, in the eyes of some disinterested countries, India's status is definitely higher than that of Pakistan. India is at least one of the BRIC countries and a military power in the world. And what about Pakistan?! In the eyes of some disinterested countries, he is nothing.
So India and Pakistan are fighting, and Mexico will definitely support India.
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Actually, in reality, almost all of them are neutral, and if you have to add a precaution, I think Mexico will stand on the side of Pakistan, because China is firmly on the side of Pakistan, and Mexico is very happy to stand on the same position as China, if India and Pakistan really fight, if it involves the vote on the relevant resolutions of the United Nations, if Mexico wants to become a regional power, if it wants to do something in the United Nations, it is necessary to support Pakistan and gain China's trust. China is a permanent member of the UN Security Council and has considerable influence in Latin American countries and in the third world. India's international influence is very small, and even in South Asia, it is constantly being surrounded by China.
So will Mexico give up a wide range of interests elsewhere for the sake of a small benefit in South Asia??? Definitely not ...
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In August 1947, the Muslim princely state of Punthay in Kashmir rebelled and declared "Free Kashmir"** to join Pakistan. The Pakistani side readily accepts this. But the Maharaja of Jammu immediately adopted a heavy-handed policy against Ponchi, causing 500,000 Muslims to flee across the border into Pakistan.
On October 20, the "Free Kashmir" rebels approached Srinagar, the capital of Kashmir, and the princely states of Kashmir asked for help from India. On the 27th, Indian paratroopers landed in Srinagar, and the First Indo-Pakistani War broke out.
The First Indo-Pakistani War used almost all the conventions in the world at that time**. During the war, the Pakistan Air Force frequently flew over the Karakoram Mountains to support the Army, and the Indian Air Force flew along the river valley at night to support troops fighting in Kashmir. The war ended with Pakistan occupying 2 5 territories of Kashmir and India occupying the remaining 3 5 territories.
In August 1965, Muslims in Indian-administered Kashmir resumed armed struggle against India**. After the uprising, Muslims formed a "Revolutionary Committee" and issued a manifesto calling on the Kashmiri people to "shake off the yoke of the Indian army" and demanding that Kashmir** release the detained leaders of the Kashmiri independence movement. On September 6, India and Pakistan renewed war over Kashmir.
Later, after the Soviet Union and the United States put pressure on India and Pakistan respectively, and UN Secretary-General U Thant mediated it, the two sides signed the Tashkent Agreement in January of the following year, and each returned to the pre-August 1965 Line of Control.
On November 21, 1971, war broke out again between India and Pakistan. In December, the war expanded to West Pakistan and developed into a full-scale war. On December 7, the United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution calling for a ceasefire and withdrawal of troops between India and Pakistan.
The Indian army continued its offensive and captured Dhaka on 16 December. On December 17, the Third Indo-Pakistani War, which lasted 27 days, ended with a ceasefire on all fronts of Pakistani defenders. The war resulted in the dismemberment of Pakistan, which greatly weakened India's biggest rival in the South Asian subcontinent.
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India and Pakistan were originally the same country, both British colonies, and later, after the British agreed to India's independence, they used a conspiracy to propose to divide the autonomous regions according to Islam and Hinduism before leaving! The conspiracy carried out the secession of India!
In August 1947, India and Pakistan were formally divided. Pakistan declared its independence on 14 August and became a Dominion of the British Commonwealth (the territory includes both East and West Pakistan), and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan was established on 23 March 1956. The Dominion of India was established on 15 August 1947 and declared the Republic of India on 26 January 1950, remaining a member of the British Commonwealth.
India and Pakistan became independent, ending 190 years of British colonial rule in India. In 1961, India reclaimed Goa.
Later most of the princely states joined India. However, the ownership of Kashmir, the former northern princely state, is undecided. As a result, India and Pakistan were the scene of two large-scale armed conflicts, between October 1947 and January 1949 and September 1965.
The leaders of the two countries have also met on several occasions and affirmed that "the solution should be made in accordance with the wishes of the people of the state". But because India insists that Kashmir is an "integral part of the Union of India", it remains an open case and has not been resolved.
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Kashmir has always been a headache for both countries because it is caused by history.
Originally, India and Pakistan were British colonies before independence, but in fact they were one country, because Britain could no longer control the situation because of independence, but it still wanted to create an impact on the future situation, so it put forward a proposal to divide India into two, that is, a country that believes in Islam and a country that believes in Hinduism. However, Kashmir's internal religion is complicated, because there was civil strife in which country it belongs, and each country has the secret support of India and Pakistan, and even a war, Kashmir is actually a historical legacy of that time, and it has not yet been resolved.
I'm typing too slowly, so that's all I can say, you can check the relevant information again.
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Kashmir is a contested region between the two countries, and the two countries are mainly engaged in conflicts over territory.
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India and Pakistan were originally a country in the nineteenth century was a British colony, when India sought independence, in order to ensure the colonial interests of the British, Britain forcibly divided India into two countries, namely India and Pakistan, the divided India and the current India and Pakistan on both sides of the current India were East Pakistan and West Pakistan (East Pakistan and now Bangladesh), and the presiding over the border demarcation was a British knight, who was very irresponsible or may have deliberately made the border demarcation very simple, Two straight lines were drawn directly on the map with a grid ruler, completely ignoring the complex ethnic and religious issues in the locality, so a large number of people in India who originally belonged to the Pakistani Islamic sect were assigned to the east side of the straight border to forcibly separate them from their relatives on the west side of the border, and a large number of people who originally belonged to the Hindu sect were assigned to Pakistan on the west side of the straight border, resulting in resentment on both sides of the border. In both countries, the infidels of the minority suffered a lot of unfair treatment, which led to the outbreak of conflict with the local **, and the area of the outbreak of conflict is now Kashmir.
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It is four times, known in history as the Middle East War, which we only learned in the third year of junior high school, for a variety of reasons, history, religion, resources, the involvement of major powers, and the importance of geographical location.
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The main reason is because of the territorial dispute in Kashmir, and secondly, there are religious and other historical issues. In 1947, Britain divided British India into India and Pakistan according to the Mountbatten Plan, and deliberately left Kashmir as a clear demarcation when demarcating the border, and because most of India believes in Hinduism, there are about 100 million people who believe in Islam like Pakistan, and a small number of Buddhists, which directly led to disputes between the two countries after independence. Especially after the independence of East Pakistan (Bangladesh), Pakistan and India have been inseparable.
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The British colonizers divided the united India into two dominions, India and Pakistan, in order to facilitate the policy of colonial rule.
After the Second World War, in the context of the rising anti-British struggle of the British people in British India, the British colonists promulgated the Mountbatten Plan in June 1947 and adopted it against India"Divide and conquer"The policy provides for the division of India into two dominions, namely Hindustan (predominantly Hindu) and Pakistan (predominantly Muslim) according to the religious beliefs of its inhabitants. The princely states have the right to decide whether to participate in the former or the latter, but cannot be self-governing.
India's main political parties at the time, the Congress and the Muslim League, agreed. On August 14 and 15, India and Pakistan established Dominions and formally implemented partition. India and Pakistan were declared independent republics in 1950 and 1956.
The Mountbatten plan is the "India-Pakistan partition" plan. It was named in June 1947 by Louis Mountbatten, the last British Viceroy in India.
After the Second World War, British imperialism, under the strong pressure of the Indian national liberation movement, put forward a "divide and rule" program.
Main contents: According to the religious beliefs of the residents, British India is divided into two dominions, the Union of India and Pakistan, which establish autonomy respectively**;
Pakistan is made up of East Pakistan and West Pakistan; Princely states enjoy independent status after the "transfer of power" and can negotiate their membership in any of the Dominions of India and Pakistan separately.
This proposal was accepted by the main political parties of the time, the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League. On August 15, 1947, Britain handed over power in India to the Indian National Congress Party and the Pakistan Muslim League.
British colonial rule in India came to an end. Britain's economic interests in India remained largely unaffected, and the provisions of the Indian Independence Act created a number of disputes between India and Pakistan, the most serious of which was the Kashmir issue, which laid the groundwork for a long conflict between India and Pakistan in the future.
India is one of the four great ancient civilizations in the world. The Indus civilization was created between 2500 and 1500 BC.
Around 1500 B.C., one of the Aryans originally living in Central Asia entered the subcontinent, conquered the local indigenous people, established a number of small slave states, established the caste system, and Brahmanism arose.
The Mauryan Empire, which rose in the 4th century BC, unified India, with a large number of small states and the rise of Hinduism in the Middle Ages.
In 1600, the English invaded and established the East India Company. It became a British colony in 1757. On August 15, 1947, India and Pakistan were partitioned and India became independent. On January 26, 1950, the Republic of India was established as a member of the British Commonwealth.
India is the second most populous country in the world and has a rich cultural heritage and tourism resources.
India is one of the BRICS countries and one of the fastest-growing countries in the world, and has become an important exporter of global software, finance and other service industries. However, it is also a developing country with an extremely uneven distribution of social wealth, and the problem of the caste system is more acute.
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Briefly recounts the story of the partition of India and Pakistan and British India after the British withdrawal.
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It was the British who divided the two plots of land, not India itself.
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With so many blind answers, a group of netizens who failed elementary school history, when did India and Pakistan become a country? Britain pinched hundreds of small countries together and then split them into India and Pakistan. India was almost never united, and the short-lived Mauryan Empire did not unify south of the Ganges.
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It's the same country, the same language, and India doesn't want Pakistan to become independent.
1. Britain has colonized India and Pakistan for a long time. After World War II, Britain was weakened and unable to administer the Indian peninsula. Proposed partition of India and Pakistan.
2. The partition of India and Pakistan refers to the historical events that occurred in the Indian subcontinent on August 14 and 15, 1947, when British India under the rule of the British Empire was dissolved, and two new states were born, the Union of India and the Dominion of Pakistan. Since the partition clause at that time only dealt with the division of the two countries of India and Pakistan in modern times, it was often called "the partition of India and Pakistan" in Chinese.
3. Originally, there were India, East Pakistan and West Pakistan, which was actually a means for Britain to divide Pakistan, and later East Pakistan became independent and called Bangladesh. Since India has always wanted to annex East Pakistan, the contradictions between the two countries have intensified.
4. In terms of religion, India believes in Hinduism, and Pakistan believes in Islam, and there are religious conflicts.
The Indus River, now in Pakistan, flows through a tropical desert climate zone with tropical desert vegetation.
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