Gulf Today

India, Pak threatened missile attacks

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The sparring between India and Pakistan last month threatened to spiral out of control and only interventi­ons by US officials, including National Security Advisor John Bolton, headed off a bigger conflict, five sources familiar with the events said.

At one stage, India threatened to fire at least six missiles at Pakistan, and Islamabad said it would respond with its own missile strikes “three times over”, according to Western diplomats and government sources in New Delhi, Islamabad and Washington.

The way in which tensions suddenly worsened and threatened to trigger a war between the nuclear-armed nations shows how the Kashmir region, which both claim and is at the core of their enmity, remains one of the world’s most dangerous flashpoint­s.

The exchanges did not get beyond threats, and there was no suggestion that the missiles involved were anything more than convention­al weapons, but they created consternat­ion in official circles in Washington, Beijing and London.

Reuters has pieced together the events that led to the most serious military crisis in South Asia since 2008, as well as the concerted diplomatic efforts to get both sides to back down.

The simmering dispute erupted into conflict late last month when Indian and Pakistani warplanes engaged in a dogfight over Kashmir on Feb 27, a day ater a raid by Indian jet fighters on what it said was a militant camp in Pakistan. Islamabad denied any militant camp exists in the area and said the Indian bombs exploded on an empty hillside.

In their first such clash since the last war between the two nations in 1971, Pakistan downed an Indian plane and captured its pilot ater he ejected in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

Hours later, videos of the bloodied Indian pilot, handcuffed and blindfolde­d, appeared on social media, identifyin­g himself to Pakistani interrogat­ors, deepening anger in New Delhi.

With Prime Minister Narendra Modi facing a general election in April-may, the government was under pressure to respond.

That evening, Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval spoke over a secure line to the head of Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), Asim Munir, to tell him India was not going to back off its new campaign of “counter terrorism” even ater the pilot’s capture, an Indian government source and a Western diplomat with knowledge of the conversati­ons told Reuters in New Delhi.

 ?? File/ Reuters ?? An Indian policeman aims his gun at protesters in Srinagar.
File/ Reuters An Indian policeman aims his gun at protesters in Srinagar.

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