Description
The armed insurgency that erupted in Kashmir in 1989 is often portrayed as a sudden rupture—an explosion of violence without warning. In reality, it was the culmination of decades of political miscalculation, contested identities, foreign intervention, and steadily radicalism in disillusionment. Shadows in Paradise strips away simplistic explanations to reveal how Kashmir’s descent into insurgency was not inevitable, but engineered through a complex and deeply human chain of events.
In this first volume, Abhas Verma traces the roots of the Kashmir conflict from the mid-1960s to the eve of full-scale militancy. He examines the interplay between regional politics, New Delhi’s interventions, and Pakistan’s long-term strategic designs, showing how electoral manipulation, factional rivalries, and the erosion of democratic legitimacy created the conditions in which armed movements could flourish. From the early underground networks and hijackings of the 1960s and 1970s, through the politicisation of identity in the 1980s, to the watershed of the contested 1987 elections, this book reconstructs the slow unravelling of the Valley’s fragile political order.
Unlike many accounts that begin with the gun, Shadows in Paradise begins with the ballot box, the backroom deal, and the street protest. Verma explores the rivalry between the National Conference and Congress (I), the rise of religious and separatist organisations, and the increasing role of Pakistan’s intelligence services, situating Kashmiri militancy within both local grievances and wider regional dynamics. The book also confronts uncomfortable truths, challenging romanticised narratives of “freedom struggle” by documenting the realities of intimidation, terror, and coercion that accompanied the insurgency’s emergence.
Richly illustrated with rare photographs, detailed maps, and original colour artwork, this volume combines rigorous political analysis with vivid human detail. Uniforms, weapons, vehicles, and security forces are depicted alongside insurgents and civilians, providing a layered understanding of how conflict manifested on the ground as well as in policy rooms.
Shadows in Paradise Volume 1 is an essential foundation for understanding the modern history of Kashmir. Meticulously researched and clearly argued, it is indispensable reading for historians, security professionals, and anyone seeking to comprehend how one of the world’s most enduring conflicts was shaped long before the first shots of 1989 were fired.

