This is absolutely not a good idea.
The Windows SDK is the Windows API, in that the SDK provides the documentation, header files, and libraries for developers who want to target the Windows API.
There would be absolutely no advantage in splitting them up, and they are used interchangeably, both on Stack Overflow and in the broader community of Windows programmers.
The Windows SDK is not "MS's line of software packages for application development". That would be Visual Studio (visual-studio) or Visual C++ (visual-c++), the compiler (cl), WinDbg (windbg), and so on. Rather, the Windows SDK provides the necessary, critical components for targeting the Windows API, including, principally, the header and object files. While the Windows SDK does include certain necessary tools, like the compiler and WinDbg, but, as stated, there are already tags for the specific tools, and questions about them should use one of those tags, not a generic windows-sdk tag.
For example, Windows SDK 7.1 Setup failure cannot be tagged "winapi" because it's not about programming at all.
Yes, that question can and should be tagged winapi because getting the SDK installed and set up is a critical component of Windows API programming. It's the same experts who are going to help you.
I'm speaking not as a moderator here, but as one of the top answerers for the [winapi] tag. Hans Passant, another one of the top answerers for this tag, agrees, commenting elsewhere about this very proposal:
That was a very unexciting feature request. I was one of the only 3 that downvoted it. Not unusual, the vast majority of meta visitors don't know the domain well enough and creating new tags always sounds like a good idea to everybody. It is not, winapi experts always know everything about windows-sdk, they have to. And the reason it was voted to be a synonym. Scattering those experts across multiple tags and not giving a chance to answer a question they almost certainly do know how to answer is a pretty bad idea.
So, I'm officially marking this status-declined, irrespective of the number of votes it has received, because those votes didn't come from people who are knowledgeable about the domain or the implications that this would have.
If you want to revisit this, please find at least one of the people on this list to endorse it.