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STATEMENTS | |
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7.2003– Kashmir
- Prospects for Peace The recently announced steps to normalize relations by India and Pakistan are a positive development and offer a window of opportunity to move forward. ![]() |
1.2003 – Security Implications
of Livingston Proposal on Kashmir: Curbing Nuclear War Risks, the Arms
Race, and Defense Burdens A settlement of the Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan would remove the prime cause for war between the two states. Now that both states are nuclear-armed, a settlement in Kashmir also would greatly reduce the risks that residual military tensions over other bilateral disagreements might escalate into a nuclear war with incalculable consequences. ![]() |
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1.2003 – AN AGENDA FOR PEACE
IN KASHMIR AND SOUTH ASIA May I, at the outset, express my thanks to the organizers of this conference for inviting me to participate and record my appreciation for the important work being done by the Landau Network - Centro Volta to promote world peace and a healthy global environment ![]() |
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1.2003 – U.S. Government
Approaches to the Kashmir Problem I thought I might begin by sketching out for you Washington's approach to the Kashmir problem. This will provide a useful background for the activities of the Kashmir Study Group and the way they have been viewed by the U.S. Government. ![]() |
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PRESS RELEASES | |
1.2004 – The Kashmir Study
Group Commends India and Pakistan on Resuming Peace Talks The Kashmir Study Group (KSG), consisting of academics and foreign policy specialists, and prominent U.S. legislators announced today that they welcome the decision of the leaders of India and Pakistan to resume the dialogue between their two nations and seek to resolve the issues, including the future status of Kashmir, that have for too long poisoned their relations ![]() |
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4.2003 – KashmIr Study Group
and Center for Strategic and International Studies to launch study on
economic dimensions of peace in Kashmir The Kashmir Study Group (KSG), working with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, has announced the two institutions will undertake a study of the economic dimensions of peace in Kashmir. ![]() |
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6.2002 – The India-Pakistan
Confrontation The world is watching in horror as India and Pakistan maneuver on the brink of a war that could all too easily turn into a nuclear holocaust, no matter whether governments think it can be avoided. The Kashmir Study Group strongly supports the efforts of the U.S. and other governments, including China and Russia, and those of thoughtful people in the Subcontinent to move these long-term rivals away from a potential catastrophe. ![]() |