Realist-Constructivism and The India - Pakistan Conflict: A New Theoretical Approach For An Old Rivalry
Realist-Constructivism and The India - Pakistan Conflict: A New Theoretical Approach For An Old Rivalry
Realist-Constructivism and The India - Pakistan Conflict: A New Theoretical Approach For An Old Rivalry
Arndt Michael
The India–Pakistan conflict, one of the oldest unresolved interstate conflicts in the world,
began in 1947 and has shown no signs of abating. Both realist and constructivist
interpretations have offered several differing explanations as to the roots and persistence of
this conflict. The article argues that a realist-constructivist approach as suggested by Samuel
Barkin provides a new and better angle for explaining the genesis, evolution, and persistence
of the India–Pakistan conflict, in addition to allowing prediction of future developments.
Importantly, realist-constructivism combines several different analytical dimensions: It looks
at the way in which power structures affect patterns of normative change in international
relations and, conversely, the way in which a particular set of norms affects power structures.
Both these dimensions have been overlooked as variables that can explain why it will be
difficult to come up with lasting solutions for the India–Pakistan conflict.
Key words: realist-constructivism, international relations theory, Indian foreign policy, Kashmir,
Pakistan foreign policy
DOI: 10.1111/aspp.12365
Asian Politics & Policy—Volume 10, Number 1—Pages 100–114
V
C 2018 Policy Studies Organization. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Realist-Constructivism and India–Pakistan Conflict 101
El conflicto entre India y Paquistan, uno de los conflictos interestatales mas viejos
sin resolver en el mundo, empez o en 1947 y no ha mostrado se~ nales de mermar.
Tanto las interpretaciones constructivistas como las realistas han ofrecido diferentes
explicaciones para las raıces y persistencia de este conflicto. El artıculo argumenta
que un acercamiento realista constructivista como lo sugiere Samuel Barkin provee
un nuevo y mejor angulo para explicar la genesis, evoluci on y persistencia del
conflicto entre India y Paquistan, adem as de permitir la predicci
on de los futuros
desarrollos. Importantemente, el realismo constructivismo combina varias
dimensiones analıticas diferentes: Examina la forma en que las estructuras de poder
afectan los patrones del cambio normativo en las relaciones internacionales y,
conversamente, la forma en que un set particular de normas afecta las estructuras
de poder. Ambas dimensiones han sido ignoradas como variables que pueden
explicar por que sera difıcil encontrar soluciones duraderas para el conflicto entre
India y Paquistan.
F ollowing the 1947 partition of British India into the two separate states of
India and Pakistan, the latter two have enjoyed an uneasy relationship.
Until 2017, the two states have fought three major wars (1947–1948, 1965, 1971)
and a minor one (1999), as well as having experienced uncountable bilateral
politico-economic crises. This very conflict has now turned into one of the lon-
gest existing interstate conflicts in the world.
Overall, the factors that most scholars have used to explain the India–Paki-
stan conflict are either based on territory, identity, religion, or ideology.
According to explanations focusing on territory, the chief cause of this conflict
is the inability of the two countries to agree on a mutually acceptable settlement
over the state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), a former princely state that origi-
nally acceded to India in 1947. Another explanation for the India–Pakistan con-
flict posits that the two countries’ national identities and religious belief
systems are mutually incompatible and in a state of virtual competition. India’s
identity is based on democratic and secular beliefs, whereas Pakistan’s identity
is based on a nonsecular, Islamic, and authoritarian identity. Related to this,
another argument forwarded is that the India–Pakistan conflict is based on dif-
fering images of nationalism and statehood. The Indian nationalist movement
and postindependence constitution were based on secular and civic national-
ism, while Pakistan was founded based on religious and ethnic nationalism, a
consequence of the “two-nation theory” that argued that Hindus and Muslims
were essentially two completely different nations, both of whom deserved their
own state (Cohen, 2005, pp. 28–31).
The analytical state of affairs of this conflict can be described mostly as
atheoretical, with a focus rather on the roots and historical developments
(Basrur, 2010). To be sure, there are countless realist—and to a lesser degree
neo-realist—interpretations of the India–Pakistan conflict (Chellaney, 1999;
Dixit, 2002, 2003; Ganguly, 2001; Ganguly & Hagerty, 2005; Majumdar, 2004;
Nanda, 2001; Nayar & Paul, 2004; Rajagopalan, 2005), but these are mostly
102 Asian Politics & Policy—Volume 10, Issue 1—2018
constructing the social world takes place in a way that allows those who live in
it to comprehend it; their world is also based on material entities. The latter can
be construed as concepts which receive meaning by the very ideas which are
held about those same entities (Jackson & Sorensen, 2003, pp. 254–255). Impor-
tantly, the beliefs of individuals and/or peoples about sovereignty, statehood,
or national identity are crucial features that ultimately need to be taken into
consideration (Jackson & Sorensen, 2003, p. 255).
In terms of cultures of international politics, Wendt (1999) identified three
different (macro-)levels which he termed Hobbesian, Lockean, and Kantian.
First, the Hobbesian culture defines the international system in anarchical terms;
it implies power competition and a perpetuation of the images of mutual
enmity held by neighbors. Conversely, and secondly, the Lockean culture
defines order in terms of entitlements and rights and creates prospects of peace
among like-minded and similar states. And third, the Kantian culture of demo-
cratic rationalism can be a genuinely pacifist culture if it is universalized
through the system. Consequently, these three distinct cultures fit with three
unique roles which a state can assume, namely that of an enemy, a rival, and a
friend. Significantly, these cultures are distinctive also in terms of how states
visualize one another. There is always a possibility of change in those images,
and of transformation.
In short, the nation-state for constructivists is constituted through beliefs of a
group of people which are organized as and into a nation. This state is contin-
gent and ideologically constructed. It is based on a belief by the people that
they have constituted a sort of “national community” which has a specific, dif-
ferent identity. Here, states are still unitary actors which possess special identi-
ties and interests and have the capacity for institutionalized collective action.
However, a state articulates and defines such interest based on changeable and,
most importantly, endogenous identities. Identities evolve through basic social
processes. The pursuit of power as well as self-interest is socially constructed
and contingent. In the final analysis, the distribution of capabilities is consti-
tuted by the distribution of interests in the system; those interests, in turn, are
basically ideas. As an important consequence, power, and interests are hence
culturally constituted.
The idea of intersubjectivity has important ramifications, in two distinct
ways: If a community of people (e.g., a nation-state) harbors a positive image of
a (perceived) sense of collective identity, this leads to a process of looking at the
“other.” Taking such a perspective already has the seed of contrasting one’s
own identity with the “other.” Therefore, identities have the power to bind, yet
they can also separate. Constructivism, thus, examines possibilities of coopera-
tion and how to create and possibly sustain relations in the social or political
sphere, despite existing differences toward the “other.” In sum, all ideational
frameworks are necessarily contingent, distinctively historical, and intersubjec-
tively constituted. For constructivist research, it is of utmost significance to take
empirically observable categories of IR—such as trade, commerce, general
capabilities, or institutions—and to examine the role of shared norms, beliefs,
and intersubjective understanding which form the bedrock of these.
Regarding conflicts (interstate, domestic, etc.), these are conceptualized in
normative terms; they can be based on disagreements, disputes, or lack of
Realist-Constructivism and India–Pakistan Conflict 105
communication. Conflicts are first and foremost ideational, not material; they
might be traceable to diverging interpretations of facts. In a constructivist anal-
ysis, causality which underlies conflicts is contested and takes a backseat vis-
a-vis opposing or dissenting perceptions. In short: conflicts are intimately
related to such perceptions. Politics of identity classify and determine enemies,
friends, or neutrals. Anarchy, as realists argue, is no longer the determining fac-
tor. In concrete terms, the following security-related examples demonstrate the
different emphases of constructivists: National security is analyzed by looking at
the influence of identity, norms, and culture on security-related policies. Simi-
larly, the preconditions and parameters of military intervention are determined
normatively and/or by institutional arrangements. And nuclear weapons and
their related doctrines/policies are evaluated by looking at the parameters of a
specific strategic culture or norms that either prescribe or condition their use.
In sum, realist and constructivist explanations of power and conflict are
based on fundamentally differing perspectives and interpretations. Naturally,
both approaches provide quite different answers to the question of how order
can be upheld or conflicts be solved. Following this general outline of major
tenets of realism and constructivism, the next section will examine major
phases and/or events of the Indo–Pakistani conflict and then continue with a
synthesis of both approaches using the Indo–Pakistani conflict as the matrix of
analysis.
on December 31, 1948. Six years later, the Constituent Assembly of J&K offi-
cially ratified the state’s accession to India in 1954, and the Constitution of J&K
was then adopted finally in November 1956. India formalized this accession of
J&K on January 26, 1957 (Gupta, 1966). What followed was a period of uncer-
tainty, marked by regular small-scale clashes along the border as well as regu-
lar unsuccessful attempts by Pakistan to internationalize the conflict.
Because of international mediation and assistance by the World Bank, the
Indus Waters Treaty was nonetheless concluded between India and Pakistan in
1960 (Sahni, 2006), symbolizing the success of cooperative efforts and defusing
one of the major problems still stemming from the partition. At the same time,
a strategic partnership developed between China and Pakistan in the 1960s,
also a reaction to the Indo–China war of 1962. In 1965, the second Indo–Paki-
stani war took place, leading to the Tashkent Declaration. The situation
between the two countries remained tense, and India subsequently felt com-
pelled to seek the support of the Soviet Union, leading to the Indo–Soviet treaty
of Friendship in August 1971. The third Indo–Pakistani war which took place
shortly afterward, from December 3 to 15, 1971, had a devastating effect on
Pakistan, resulting in a complete military defeat and the separation of the east-
ern wing of its territory, concomitantly leading to the birth of Bangladesh.
However, this secession of East Pakistan in a way consolidated Pakistan’s mili-
tary in the West, essentially narrowing down the capability asymmetry with
India along the international border and in Kashmir. After this war, the Shimla
Agreement was signed in July 1972. It was meant to end the hostilities and pro-
vide for a set of rules governing the relationship. It explicitly ruled out interven-
tion by third parties on the Kashmir issue, and both sides agreed to refrain
from the threat or use of force in violation of the Line of Control (LoC). Clause 4
(II) of the agreement for example states that in J&K and Kashmir the LoC result-
ing from the ceasefire of December 17, 1971 shall be respected by both sides
without prejudice to the recognized position of either side. This clause adds
that “neither side shall seek to alter it unilaterally irrespective of mutual differ-
ences and legal interpretation” (Government of India, 1972, pp. 192–193).
The period after the Shimla Agreement saw a slight improvement in bilateral
relation, with diplomatic relations effectively being restored in the second half
of the 1970s during the Janata government. To improve the relations between
the two countries, then Indian foreign minister A. B. Vajpayee officially visited
Pakistan, which led to widespread criticism on both sides and was especially
criticized as the Janata regime lending legitimacy to military rule in Pakistan
which began in 1977. Subsequently, Pakistan suggested a no-war pact in the
early 1980s, but this was rejected by India as it felt that the pact would essen-
tially dilute the Shimla Agreement. The Indian government, in turn, suggested
a treaty of peace, friendship, and cooperation, which was rejected by Pakistan.
Later, a formal agreement on the establishment of a joint commission and sub-
sidiary commissions was signed by the foreign ministers in March 1983. Fol-
lowing this, India–Pakistan relations did not show any significant
improvements for over a decade despite changes of governments in both coun-
tries (Dixit, 1996, pp. 113–140). Pakistani interference in Kashmir and its role in
organizing insurgency in the state continued unabated, and secretary-level
talks were discontinued in 1994.
Realist-Constructivism and India–Pakistan Conflict 107
In the early 1990s, there were intense consultations between Pakistan and the
United States to find a mutually acceptable compromise that would allow the
United States to resume military and economic assistance to Pakistan, which
had been stopped earlier. Regarding Kashmir, Pakistan attempted time and
again to internationalize the conflict. It tabled a resolution on Kashmir in the
UN Commission for Human Rights at Geneva in February 1994 and sought to
involve the political committee of the UN General Assembly in the Kashmir
issue, but failed.
The India–Pakistan conflict dynamics also affected other issues in the region,
particularly the South Asian regional cooperation efforts in the form of the
South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), founded in 1985
after seven years of protracted negotiations between seven states of South Asia,
and a related South Asian Preferential Trade Agreement (Michael, 2013, pp. 57–
112). On the bilateral front, attempts at continuing the secretary-level dialogue
proved difficult and experienced permanent up and downs. In 1996, then Prime
Minister Dewe Gowda suggested the resumption of the secretary-level talks
that had been discontinued since 1994. A meeting took place on June 23, 1997
with several areas for dialogue having been identified, including J&K. These
talks already broke down in September 1997. In January 1998, a Tripartite Sum-
mit then took place in Dhaka. Then Prime Minister I. K. Gujral and Nawaz Sha-
rif agreed over new modalities of the dialogue, but no follow-up action took
place.
The nuclear tests conducted by the National Democratic Alliance govern-
ment, led by the Bharatiya Janata Party, on May 11 and 13, 1998, and similar
tests conducted by Pakistan shortly afterward on May 28, changed the strategic
landscape for both countries, again bringing the question of Kashmir into new
focus. India subsequently announced a unilateral moratorium on tests, fol-
lowed by an offer of an agreement on a no-first use of nuclear weapons and
expressed its willingness for nuclear confidence building measures at the bilat-
eral level (Government of India, 1998). Pakistan rejected the Indian proposal for
a no-first use of nuclear weapons agreement.
The much-awaited next meeting between the prime ministers of India and
Pakistan took place on July 29, 1998 and it was agreed to resume the dialogue
process stalled in June. The foreign secretaries held two rounds of talks on July
29, 1998, but failed to reach any sort of conclusion. After the failure of the talks
at the level of the foreign secretaries on the sidelines of the 10th SAARC Sum-
mit in Colombo on July 31, 1998, the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers met
again during the Non-Aligned Movement Summit in Durban early September
to work out the modalities of resuming the bilateral dialogue. An agreement
was later drafted to resume the dialogue under a “two plus six” formulation of
the agenda. There was also an important agreement to start a bus service
between New Delhi and Lahore. This was followed by then Indian Prime
Minister Vajpayee’s famous and much publicized bus trip to Lahore and the
ensuing signing of the Lahore Declaration on February 21, 1999—an attempt to
dramatically improve, if not completely restart bilateral relations, basically
following the ideas expressed in the Shimla Agreement and hence focusing on
solving the Indo–Pakistani problems bilaterally, without third party mediation.
The Lahore Declaration, the joint statement, and the Memorandum of
108 Asian Politics & Policy—Volume 10, Issue 1—2018
while India was using 3.32% of its GNP on defense (US$3.3 billion). Through
the rest of the decade, Pakistan’s defense spending of 5% of its GNP remained
nearly twice as high as India’s. In the 1980s, India’s defense expenditures hov-
ered consistently around 3% of its GNP, while Pakistan raised its defense bud-
get to more than 6%. Indian defense spending has since stayed below 3% of its
GNP through most of the 1990s, but Pakistan’s defense expenditures have
remained at the same level through the 1990s, that is, around 6% of its GNP. In
the period 2010–2014, India spent approximately 2.4% of its GNP on defense,
whereas Pakistan, according to the World Bank and Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute spent 3.4% (World Bank, 2015).
Summing up, the above account and overview shows that the India–Pakistan
conflict has been shaped by a multitude of different and differing factors,
including ideology, territory, the role and actions of neighbors and external
actors such as the United States and the former Soviet Union, differences in
internal and external capabilities and the acts and special role of individual
leaders, to name but a few. The following section will now use these findings
and look at different interpretations of the conflict by realists and constructi-
vists respectively.
formation, deterrence, and other instruments of power, that is, either by the
threat or even the use of force.
The exponentially growing arms budget of the two states and their nuclear
and missile programs, for realists, are a confirmation for the relevance of
“power” as the most important parameter. Regarding nuclear weapons, their
acquisition merely changed balancing capabilities. The bilateral conflict is also
located in the wider strategic setting, namely alliances. India and Pakistan will
thus continue to balance each other militarily. These actions have repercussions
for the capabilities of both states, for example, in terms of the interconnected
structural dynamics in an anarchical international order. India wants to be a
great power on the same level as the United States (or, for that matter, China).
Hence, India will invest and continue to constantly upgrade its military and
increase its military budget for two reasons: to check Pakistan and to eventually
attain the status of a great power. As the logic of anarchy and continuous
attempts to increase one’s power dictate, the India–Pakistan relationship will
remain subject to continuous threats and, if possible, changing alliances.
For a constructivist such as Alexander Wendt (1999), “the deep structure of
anarchy is a cultural or ideational rather than material phenomenon” (p. 43).
Regarding the India–Pakistan relations, cultural interpretations come into play.
Importantly, the respective state elites have created norms and beliefs through
a long-term process of socialization. In turn, this process has made these cul-
tural norms become embedded, and hence durable. For constructivists, the hos-
tility between India and Pakistan is not exogenously determined; instead, the
state policies are constitutive of each other’s images and beliefs. Accordingly,
the conflict is the result of a specific “cultural” interpretation of the origins of
statehood. The rivalry has a relatively strong foundation, as the different claims
of what constitutes nationhood has put both states on completely contradictory
trajectories, in a way leading to a cultural “antithesis.” Territorial differences,
then, are essentially cultural differences. For constructivists, India and Pakistan
are different by definition, for example, of their mutual threats.
It is important to note that there is no singular Indian or Pakistani construc-
tion of “the other”; a Nehruvian and/or Hindu-nationalist definition of Paki-
stan is quite different from each other. The same holds true for the Pakistani
interpretation of what constitutes India (Cohen, 2005). Still, in terms of its ori-
gins, Pakistan came into being on the assumption that the two-nation theory is
valid: Hindu and Muslim communities are different and cannot exist together
in a single nation (Acharya, 2006, p. 162). Conversely, India is, by and large, an
example for secular nationalism and engages with a Muslim population which
clearly exceeds that of Pakistan. Since independence, a “binary” logic has
arisen, with ensuing images of this permanent “binary” confrontation becom-
ing firmly embedded into the culture of both countries, and hence socializing
the people into a specific way of thinking about the “other.” Change, either in
the form of domestic transformation or maybe seismic outside events, never
had a chance to diffuse. What exists is rather a peculiar state identity which has
until today not been reconciled with the idea of a common cultural heritage,
and it is essentially constitutive of the antagonisms and hostility between India
and Pakistan. The nationalism that followed post-1947 in both countries rein-
forced those differences, while completely ignoring historic parallels that once
Realist-Constructivism and India–Pakistan Conflict 111
as state values, never shown any desire to forego its claim on the Muslim-
dominated Kashmir. Constructivism, conversely, falls short of providing a sat-
isfactory answer to the question why India, despite its unquestionable superior-
ity, has allowed the Pakistan/Kashmir issue to dominate foreign and security
policies and its national security (culture). In terms of capabilities and actual
threat scenarios, Pakistan is no match for India, yet it has become part of India’s
own security outlook and identity.
Accordingly, only the sum of these factors makes the conflict comprehensible
in a much more comprehensive way, with the central assumption to take both
classical realism and constructivism as the appropriate toolbox. According to
Barkin (2010), “constructivism and realism, then, are distinct but compatible
approaches. [. . .] A realist constructivism is a constructivism in which a concern
for power politics, understood as relational rather than structural, is central. It
is also one in which the links to social policy (including, but not limited to, for-
eign policy) are made clear” (p. 169). The synthesis of both approaches hence
looks at power and identity. The contested territorial division—a direct result of
the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947—is the key root of the conflict,
at the crossroads of state power, territory, and identity. Pakistan has clearly ini-
tiated four interstate wars, while over the years India has shown a great deal of
military restraint. Yet, for both countries geopolitics also matters. The Kashmir
valley is of utmost strategic importance for Pakistan’s security, and giving up
its claim on Kashmir would further reduce Pakistan’s territory and Pakistani
access to points of geostrategic and military importance. In terms of power, the
peculiar power asymmetry that has prevailed between the antagonists for half
a century will in the future continue to motivate Pakistan to increase its military
expenditures, because of insecurity and threat perceptions.
From an endogenous standpoint, an identity-based/constructivist explana-
tion provides that Hindus and Muslims have been living together in the Indian
subcontinent for over a millennium. Pakistan contested Kashmir’s accession to
India because most of the population affected was Muslim, and thus, according
to Pakistan’s self-conception, naturally belonged to Pakistan. Conversely, India
was unwilling to give away the part of Kashmir it controlled arguing that such
a concession would be tantamount to a second partition of the subcontinent
based on religion. Today, India cannot afford to give up Kashmir as that could
generate nationalist movement elsewhere in the country. To India, committed
as it has been to a secular democratic state, possession of Kashmir is a virtual
demonstration of the fact that Muslims and Hindus can live together as a peace-
ful community. To Pakistan, possession of Kashmir, with its overwhelming
Muslim population, is vital for the fulfillment of the ideal upon which Pakistan
rests, namely being a state and home for all the Muslims of the subcontinent. At
the same time, Pakistan also cannot compromise as seizing the predominantly
Muslim state from Indian control has been its major foreign policy goal since
the first day of independence, creating an arena of socialization and making
this claim part of its raison d’^etre, inculcated in its population and popular
media since the first Indo–Pakistani war in 1947.
Hence, connecting power and asymmetry arguments with endogenous argu-
ments of identity, domestic state structures, and religion allows for a synthe-
sized interpretation of the India–Pakistan conflict that leaves the narrow
Realist-Constructivism and India–Pakistan Conflict 113
confines of both approaches taken separately and broadens the analytical spec-
trum. Understood thus, the Indo–Pakistani conflict is a prime example of a
clash of differing, irreconcilable identities and opposing religious convictions in
a world in which power (politics) and geo-strategy invariably continue to domi-
nate. In sum, all the above demonstrates the usefulness of such a synthesized
approach for IR theory and showcases the analytical depth and explanatory
power of realist-constructivism.
References
Acharya, Amitav. (2006). Kashmir in the international system. In Waheguru Pal Singh Sidhu,
Bushra Asif, & Cyrus Samii (Eds.), Kashmir. New Voices, New Approaches (pp. 157–170). Boul-
der, CO: Lynne Rienner.
Barkin, J. Samuel. (2003). Realist constructivism. International Studies Review, 5(3), 325–342.
Barkin, J. Samuel. (2010). Realist constructivism: Rethinking International Relations theory. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Basrur, Rajesh M. (2010). India-Pakistan relations: Between war and peace. In Sumit Ganguly (Ed.),
India’s foreign policy. Retrospect and prospect (pp. 11–31). New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Brecher, Michael. (1959). Nehru: A political biography. Bombay: Jaico.
Brines, Russell. (1968). The Indo-Pakistan conflict. London: Pall Mall Press.
Chatterjee, Shibashis. (2008). Intra-state/inter-state conflicts in South Asia. The constructivist alter-
native to realism. In N. Chadha Behera (Ed.), International Relations in South Asia. Search for an
alternative paradigm (pp. 177–208). New Delhi: Sage.
Chellaney, Brahma. (1999). The regional strategic triangle. In Brahma Chellaney (Ed.), Securing
India’s future in the new millennium (pp. 141–222). Hyderabad: Orient Longman.
Cohen, Stephen P. (2005). The idea of Pakistan. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Dixit, Jyotindra N. (1996). My south block years: Memoirs of a foreign secretary. New Delhi: UBH
Publishers.
Dixit, Jyotindra N. (2002). India-Pakistan in war and peace. New Delhi: Books Today.
Dixit, Jyotindra N. (2003). India’s foreign policy: 1947–2003 (Updated ed.). New Delhi: Picus Books.
Ganguly, Sumit. (2001). Conflict unending: India-Pakistan tensions since 1947. New York: Columbia
University Press.
Ganguly, Sumit, & Hagerty, Devin T. (2005). Fearful symmetry: Indo-Pakistan crisis in the shadow of
nuclear weapons. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Gilpin, Robert. (1986). The richness of the tradition of political realism. In Robert O. Keohane (Ed.),
Neorealism and its critics (pp. 301–321). New York: Columbia University Press.
Government of India. (1972). Foreign Affairs Record, May. New Delhi: Ministry of External Affairs.
Government of India. (1998). Foreign Affairs Record, May. New Delhi: Ministry of External Affairs.
Government of India. (1999). Foreign Affairs Record, February. New Delhi: Ministry of External
Affairs.
Government of India. (2002). Annual Report 2001–2002. New Delhi: Ministry of External Affairs.
Gupta, Sisir. (1966). Kashmir: A study in India-Pakistan relations. Bombay: Asia Publishing House.
Jackson, Robert, & Sorensen, Georg. (2003). Introduction to International Relations: Theories and
approaches (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
Jalal, Ayesh. (1995). Democracy and authoritarianism in South Asia. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Kargil Review Committee. (2000). From surprise to reckoning. New Delhi: Sage.
Katzenstein, Peter. (1996). The culture of national security. New York: Columbia University Press.
Kratochwil, Friedrich. (1989). Rules, norms, and decisions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Majumdar, Anindyo J. (2004). Lethal games: Nuclear security, arms control and leadership in Indo-Pak rela-
tions. New Delhi: Lancer’s Books.
Menon, V. P. (1985). Integration of the Indian states. Hyderabad: Orient Longman.
Michael, Arndt. (2013). India’s foreign policy and regional multilateralism. Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan.
Michael, Arndt. (2017). Cooperation is what India makes of it – A normative inquiry into the origins
and development of regional cooperation in South Asia and the Indian Ocean. Asian Security,
Epub ahead of print. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/14799855.2017.1347636.
Morgenthau, Hans J. (1947). Politics among nations: The struggle for power and peace. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf.
Morgenthau, Hans J. (1948). Scientific man versus power politics. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
Nanda, Ravi. (2001). Kashmir and Indo-Pak relations. New Delhi: Lancer’s Books.
114 Asian Politics & Policy—Volume 10, Issue 1—2018
Nayar, Baldev R., & Paul T.V. (2004). India in the world order: Searching for major powers status. New
Delhi: Cambridge University Press.
Onuf, Nicholas. (1989). World of our making. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Papanek, Gustav F. (1967). Pakistan’s development: Social goals and private investment. Cambridge: Har-
vard University Press.
Paul, T. V. (Ed.). (2005). The India-Pakistan conflict: An enduring rivalry. Cambridge: Cambridge Uni-
versity Press.
Paul, T. V. (2006). Why has the India-Pakistan rivalry been so enduring? Power asymmetry and an
intractable conflict. Security Studies, 16(4), 600–630.
Rajagopalan, Rajesh. (2005). Neo-realist theory and the India-Pakistan conflict. In Kanti Bajpai & Sid-
dharth Mallavarapu (Eds.), International Relations in India: Theorizing the region and the nation (pp.
142–172). Hyderabad: Orient Longman.
Russett, Bruce. (1993). Grasping the democratic peace. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Sahni, Hamir K. (2006). The politics of water in South Asia: The case of the Indus Waters Treaty.
SAIS Review of International Affairs, 26(2), 153–165.
Snyder, Glenn H. (2002). Mearsheimer’s world-offensive realism and the struggle for security. Inter-
national Security, 27(1), 149–173.
Waltz, Kenneth W. (1988). The origins of war in neorealist theory. Journal of Interdisciplinary History,
18(4), 615–628.
Wendt, Alexander. (1999). Social theory of international politics. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Wohlforth, William C. (2008). Realism. In Christian Reus-Smit & Duncan Snidal (Eds.), The Oxford
handbook of international relations (pp. 131–149). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
World Bank. (2015). Military expenditures (% of GDP). Retrieved from https://data.worldbank.
org/indicator/MS.MIL.XPND.GD.ZS.