The Tashkent Declaration is often discussed in Jammu and Kashmir through the lens of what it did not do—particularly its failure to address the Kashmir dispute directly. What is less understood is what the agreement was actually designed to achieve, and why its limited scope was deliberate rather than accidental.
The Tashkent Declaration was not a political settlement. It was a conflict-termination document, shaped by the reality that the 1965 war had reached a point of exhaustion without producing decisive gains for either side.
Ending a War, Not Settling a Dispute
By September 1965, fighting between India and Pakistan had spread beyond Jammu and Kashmir and drawn international concern. The war ended through a United Nations–mandated ceasefire, not through battlefield victory. The task before diplomats was therefore narrow but urgent: prevent a renewed outbreak of hostilities and restore stability.
Tashkent addressed this task directly. Its provisions focused on:
Withdrawal of forces
Restoration of diplomatic relations
Commitment to non-interference
Normalisation of communication
What it did not include were territorial changes, political concessions, or recognition of altered claims. This absence was intentional. Agreements that follow victory usually codify gains. Tashkent codified restraint.
Why Kashmir Was Not “Solved” at Tashkent
For many in Jammu and Kashmir, the absence of a Kashmir-specific political clause has long been a source of confusion. Yet the structure of the agreement reflects the circumstances under which it was signed. The war had not altered the ground situation in a way that could sustain a political settlement.
More importantly, earlier attempts at international mediation on Kashmir had already stalled because foundational conditions—particularly demilitarisation—were never fulfilled. Tashkent did not attempt to revive those failed frameworks. Instead, it accepted the reality that stabilisation had to precede any broader political discussion.
India’s Approach and Military Context
From India’s perspective, Tashkent aligned with a broader pattern of state conduct. The Indian Army had demonstrated its ability to respond to escalation and secure territory. Once stability was restored, New Delhi chose diplomatic closure rather than prolonged conflict.
This decision is sometimes misread as concession. In reality, it reflected confidence in India’s strategic position and an understanding that extending a war without clear political benefit would serve neither security nor regional stability.
How the Narrative Shifted
Over time, the limited scope of the Tashkent Declaration was reframed in some quarters as evidence of lost opportunity or diplomatic failure. This narrative often ignores the context in which the agreement was reached: a war that had produced no decisive outcome and international pressure to de-escalate.
For Jammu and Kashmir, this reframing obscured an important truth. Tashkent did not foreclose a political solution; it merely acknowledged that such a solution could not be imposed through an inconclusive war.
Reading Tashkent Clearly
Understanding the Tashkent Declaration as a war-ending instrument rather than a political bargain restores clarity to its place in history. It explains why the agreement focused on stabilisation and why it avoided issues that the conflict itself had failed to resolve.
For local audiences, this distinction matters. It helps separate realistic expectations from retrospective myths—and places responsibility for unresolved disputes where it belongs: on the conditions that prevented earlier processes from succeeding.
(Hailing from Kashmir and based in New Delhi, Mehak Farooq is a journalist specialising in defence and strategic affairs. Her work spans security, geopolitics, veterans’ welfare, foreign policy, and the evolving challenges of national and regional stability.)