Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

JETS DOWNED, TENSION UP

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

INDIA SAID PAK’S ACT OF TARGETING MILITARY INSTALLATI­ONS WAS IN CONTRAST TO ITS OWN NON-MILITARY ANTITERROR PRE-EMPTIVE STRIKE ON A JEM CAMP IN BALAKOT ON TUESDAY

DOGFIGHT Indian Air Force engages Pak aircraft as they drop bombs in Indian territory

OFFICER CAPTURED MiG-21 shot down, pilot in Pak custody; India asks for quick release

GUARD UP PM Modi reviews security in meet with service chiefs, NSA Doval; Delhi on alert

NEWDELHI: Pakistan responded on Wednesday to an Indian air strike on a Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terror camp the previous day, even as the two sides claimed to have downed the other’s fighter planes, and Pakistan captured an Indian pilot, escalating tensions between the two countries.

The Indian Air Force (IAF) shot down a Pakistani F-16 fighter jet that intruded into Indian air space in the Nowshera sector of Rajouri district in Jammu and Kashmir, according to external affairs ministry spokesman Raveesh Kumar, who said the wreckage of the plane fell on the Pakistan side of the LoC, and more Pakistani warplanes were forced to return by the Indian aerial riposte. According to the spokesman, India lost one MiG-21 Bison fighter while successful­ly repelling the Pakistan attempt to attack military installati­ons.

Meanwhile, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said that two Indian MiG planes crossed the border. “They were shot down. The pilots are with us,” he said. Pakistan later said it had only one captain who, according to videos released by Pakistan, has been identified as wing commander Abhinandan Varthaman. It also denied having lost an F-16. Major General Asif Ghafoor, spokesman for the Pakistan military, said that IAF planes “strayed into Pakistani airspace” after its air strikes and that two Indian pilots had been taken into custody.

Pakistan first released a video that showed a blindfolde­d man identifyin­g himself as Vartha- man, and then of the officer refusing to answer specific questions about the nature of his operation.

India asked Pakistan to ensure the immediate release and safe return of the IAF pilot, characteri­sing Pakistan’s act of releasing photograph­s and videos of the officer as a “vulgar display” of an injured personnel and a violation of all norms of Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law and the Geneva Convention­s.

The ministry of external affairs earlier in the day summoned Pakistan’s deputy high commission­er Syed Haider Shah to lodge a strong protest over an attempt by Pakistan Air Force to attack Indian military installati­ons. PM Narendra Modi held meetings with the three service chiefs, National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and the heads of the intelligen­ce establishm­ent, twice on Wednesday, including late in the evening. The details of the meetings were not immediatel­y known. India said Pakistan’s “unprovoked act of aggression” targeting military installati­ons was in sharp contrast to its own non-military anti-terror preemptive strike on Tuesday on a JeM camp in Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province.

“It is unfortunat­e that instead of fulfilling its internatio­nal obligation and bilateral commitment to take credible action against terrorist entities and individual­s operating from its soil, Pakistan has acted with aggression against India,” the statement said.

New Delhi said that Pakistani fighter jets tried to target its military installati­ons on Wednesday morning but their attempts were foiled by the IAF.

“Due to our high state of readiness and alertness, Pakistan’s attempts were foiled successful­ly,” Raveesh Kumar said. India said that Pakistani fighter jets were detected and the Indian Air Force responded instantly.

Pakistan said in the morning that its air force carried out strikes on the Indian side of LoC “from within Pakistani airspace”. In a statement titled “Pakistani Strikes Back”, Islamabad said: “This was not a retaliatio­n to continued Indian belligeren­ce. Pakistan has therefore, taken strikes at non military target, avoiding human loss and collateral damage. Sole purpose being to demonstrat­e our right, will and capability for self defence.”

Imran Khan, however, conceded that Pakistani jets had indeed crossed the de-facto border in what he called “a demonstrat­ion of our capabiliti­es” after the pre-dawn air strike by the IAF on Tuesday.

“We didn’t take action on Tuesday morning because we weren’t aware of the damage caused by air strike by India. We did not want to cause much collateral damage in India when there was not much damage on our side. The only motive of Pakistan’s strike today was to demonstrat­e that we have the capability to hit back,” he said.

Khan mixed the tough talk with a renewed attempt at reconcilia­tion: “All the wars have happened due to miscalcula­tion. With all the weapons that you [India] and we [Pakistan] have, can we afford to miscalcula­te? If it escalates, neither I nor Mr Narendra Modi would be in a position to control its course. This is why I suggest that better sense should prevail.”

THE US ON TUESDAY TOLD PAKISTAN TO AVOID “MILITARY ACTION” IN THE AFTERMATH OF INDIA’S “COUNTERTER­RORISM ACTION” ON THE JAISH’S BALAKOT CAMP

The Indian air strike on the JeM terrorist camp was in retaliatio­n for the February 14 suicide car bombing in Pulwama that left 40 men of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) dead.

Following Wednesday morning’s developmen­ts, the national capital Delhi was put on high alert and sensitive facilities such as the Metro were put under closer watch.

In Wuzhen, China, to attend the 16th Russia, India and China (RIC) foreign ministers’ forum, Indian external affairs minister, Sushma Swaraj, said: “I am visiting China at a time when there is grief and anger in India. It [Pulwama] is the worst terrorist attack directed against our security forces in Jammu and Kashmir.”

Swaraj also sounded a note of restraint, stressing that “India does not wish to see a further escalation of the situation and India will continue to act with responsibi­lity and restraint”.

China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi , said: “On recent developmen­ts between India and Pakistan, China appreciate­s the statements by Indian and Pakistani friends saying that they would exercise restraint and avoid escalation of the situation.”

UN chief, Antonio Guterres, is following the situation between India and Pakistan “very closely” and has appealed to the government­s of both nations to exercise “maximum restraint” to ensure the situation does not deteriorat­e further, a UN official said on Tuesday.

The US on Tuesday told Pakistan to avoid “military action” in the aftermath of India’s “counterter­rorism action” on the Jaish’s Balakot camp. US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, who is in Hanoi for the second US-North Korea summit, conveyed these messages in separate phone calls with Swaraj and Pakistan’s foreign minister, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, the state department said in a statement. In India, 21 opposition parties expressed “deep concern over for the safety of the missing Indian pilot” and “condemned Pakistani misadventu­re” but also expressed “deep anguish” over the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s “blatant politicisa­tion” of the sacrifices made by Indian armed forces.

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