A Cold Comparison, Not a Romantic One
There is only one historical analogy worth using when discussing Pakistan “rejoining” India: the Act of Union of 1707 between Scotland and England. Not Rome and Greece. Not Yugoslavia. Not German reunification. And certainly not civilizational nostalgia. The reason is simple. The 1707 Union was not about love, memory, or reconciliation. It was about bankruptcy, security, elite survival, and managed loss of sovereignty without humiliation. That is the only way such a union could ever happen.
Union Is an Elite Exit, Not a Popular Dream
Scotland did not join England because it felt British. It joined because it was broke. The Darien Scheme collapsed. The Scottish state was insolvent. The elite faced personal ruin. England controlled capital, markets, and trade. The Act of Union absorbed Scottish debt, protected elite property, preserved law and church, dissolved sovereignty while preserving status. The public opposed it. It passed anyway. Unions are not plebiscites. They are elite exits under pressure.
Pakistan’s Position Is Structurally Similar
Pakistan today is not Scotland in 1707. But the resemblance is close enough to matter. Pakistan is chronically indebted, permanently IMF-dependent, over-militarised by design, economically capped by scale and FX limits. It is run by elites whose lives are already offshore, Like Scotland, the state is failing faster than rents can be extracted, sovereignty has become expensive, security dominates fiscal policy and there is no credible independent growth path. This is not ideology. It is arithmetic.
Why India Is England in This Analogy
England did not seek union out of affection. It wanted security, alignment, and control of risk. India faces a permanent western security distraction, diplomatic and military overhang and a neighbour whose instability spills outward. A union would benefit India too, but only if India behaves like England did: confident, restrained, and transactional. England demanded alignment. It did not demand cultural victory.
The Military Is Pakistan’s Darien Scheme
Pakistan’s real failure is not economic. It is institutional. The permanent security state crowds out development, weakens civilian rule, replaces productivity with rent-seeking and cannot withdraw without humiliation. A union offers something no treaty can: a face-saving off-ramp. The military would not be defeated. It would be absorbed, reduced, and redeployed, as Scottish regiments once were. Loss of autonomy. Not loss of honour. That difference matters.
Islam Without Existential Burden
Pakistan must constantly perform its reason for being. It must justify its existence, prove Islamic legitimacy and defend borders as theology. Whereas inside a union, Islam stops being existential, Muslim identity becomes social, not geopolitical and Faith survives better without state dependency. Scotland did not stop being Presbyterian in 1707. It stopped needing Presbyterianism to justify sovereignty. That release is power.
Kashmir Is Only Solvable Inside a Union
Outside a union, Kashmir is zero-sum where compromise is betrayal, militarisation is permanent. Inside a union, borders soften, autonomy becomes real and identity detaches from sovereignty. England and Scotland fought for centuries. Union did not erase difference. It made it manageable. Kashmir cannot be won. It can only be domesticated.
Why This Is Not German Reunification
German reunification is a bad analogy because it assumes symmetry. East and West Germany were one nation, one language, one identity and one legitimacy claim (like the Koreas or China\Taiwan). East Germany collapsed. Its population demanded absorption. West Germany replaced its institutions wholesale. Pakistan is not a collapsed twin of India. It is a rival nation built on non-India. It is militarily intact. It is ideologically self-justifying. There is no Leipzig 1989 in Pakistan. German reunification was popular. An India–Pakistan union would be elite-driven and deeply unpopular. Germany absorbed losers anyway, and still carries resentment decades later. Pakistan’s losers would revolt immediately. Scotland negotiated. East Germany surrendered. Pakistan would do neither.
The Absolute Red Lines
Pakistan alas would never join a Hindu civilizational state, a centralized Delhi empire and an “Akhand Bharat” narrative. The Act of Union worked because England avoided humiliation, preserved asymmetry, protected institutions and did not perform victory. Union requires confidence. Not chest-thumping.
The Uncomfortable Truth
Pakistan would not join India because “Partition was a mistake“, shared cultures or that somehow history was misunderstood. It would join because sovereignty is unaffordable, decline costs more than dignity loss and Elites survive better inside than outside. As capital and security lie east, not west, it may be that the Indian Subcontinent assess with an integrated political infrastructure would look and feel like. The Act of Union was not a romance. It was an accounting exercise with swords still warm. If such a union ever happens, it will look the same: cold, negotiated, elite-driven, unpopular, and decisive. That is not a fantasy. It is the only form a union like this has ever taken.

One thing not being taken into account is Kashmiri TFR. Kashmir’s “freedom struggle” will end for the same reason the Native Americans did – they just died out.
Already the blue collar class is from the hindi belt.
Partition is not going to be undone.
There is honestly no desire among Pakistanis to become part of a Hindu-majority country. Similarly, there is no desire among Bangladeshis for Bangladesh to join West Bengal.
Islam is a core part of Pakistani identity. India is also becoming more and more aggressively Hindu. There is no way any type of union can take place under these circumstances. Pakistanis and Indians can barely get along on a blog like this. We cannot be part of the same country.
In the past, I would have been happy to advocate for some kind of a South Asian Union along the lines of the EU. However, subsequent events have shown that that is a non-starter. India and Pakistan barely have diplomatic relations, the borders are closed etc. We need to get to a place where we can behave like normal neighboring states that don’t need to particularly like each other but also are not on the brink of going to war. But that requires India to respect Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. There needs to be some dialogue on Kashmir. Personally, I believe the Musharraf-Manmohan Plan is the best deal either country will ever get.
As long as the Hindu Right is in power things will only get worse not better.
Rather than rejoining, Pakistan would be better off divided with KPK joining Afghanistan and independent Balochistan, Punjab, Sindhudesh existing under Indian suzerainty.
provocative. But third party injections of emergency funding in a post-nuclear subcontinent have taken this possibility off the table. Permanently I think.
Even if Pakistan manages to keep bungling its finances, I do not think there is any appetite any more in India to accept Pakistan back. A …cold co-existence is the best we can visualize at this point. And that is a …slim possibility in the near-term. Thanks to kleptocratic pakmil tightening its grip on Pakistani politics in the way it has recently.
England was a growing empire that had need of Scottish manpower. What does Pakistan have to offer to India?
why would any sane Indian want any part of subsidizing the under-educated, teeming masses of current day Pakistan?
England was a growing empire that had need of Scottish manpower. What does Pakistan have to offer to India?