This is not to say that Hewitt spares India. Published in 1995, the book critically looks at the Indian handling of the Kashmir issue, pointing out the mistakes made over the years, not forgetting the post-1983 state elections, when Farooq Abdullah was sacked by Indira Gandhi's government and an unpopular G.M. Shah appointed in his place as chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir. The elections which followed four years later, were widely believed to have been rigged to favour the National Conference-Congress combine, alienating the Valley, whose long-standing grievance was that New Delhi controlled things in the strategic border state over which India and Pakistan had fought two wars. He goes into detail about the contentious issue of Article 370, arguing that following the 1956 constitution of the state, which declared it to be an integral part of India, New Delhi missed "a golden opportunity to abolish Article 370 and in a period of relative calm integrate the state outright, whatever embarrassment this would have caused internationally". The global ramifications of the Kashmir dispute and the American and western stands are also discussed at length by the author.