The international community of diplomats, journalists and academics loves to discuss Kashmir with a rather condescending sense of equanimity. The recent piece by Rohini Hensman is a prime example of this lecturing and moralising. Yes Kashmir is a troubled part of India and yes, as the Government of India’s own interlocutors have acknowledged, there is a dispute with Pakistan over Kashmir, but to call Indian actions in Kashmir genocide as the separatists do, or oppression of a nationality as Hensman does, is to complete abdicate one’s sense of historical and moral responsibility. Genocide is what the Nazis did to the Jews. Oppression of a nationality is what China has done in Tibet. To invoke these terms in the Indian experience of Kashmir either betrays a profound ignorance of history or a desire to act as wilful propagandists for religious and ethnic bigotry. To advocate, as Hensman does, that Kashmir could perhaps become part of a “South Asian union with open borders, based on equality and democracy both within and between its constituent states, would create the possibility of an independent Kashmir that is not cut off from either India or Pakistan” is wishful thinking in the extreme. India and Pakistan are, despite their respective dysfunctional attributes, on totally different trajectories. An egalitarian and democratic Pakistan seems a far fetched possibility, at least in our lifetime. As the Wikileaks expose and other sources acknowledge, the prognosis of an imploding Pakistan is widely shared in the international community and yet India and Pakistan must be dealt with on an equal footing when it comes to Kashmir? A union between a democratic, secular, economically ascendant India, and a military-mullah combine led Pakistan where power is evenly distributed between overlapping clans of feudal landlords, warlords and drug lords, just so that Geelani and his ilk can enact their fantasy of ‘Independent Kashmir’? Thank you, Ms Hensman, but no thank you