Chattanooga Times Free Press

How India moves forward after the Kashmir explosion

- BY ASHOK SHARMA

NEW DELHI — With India’s general election barely months away, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is under heavy pressure from his supporters to punish archrival Pakistan for a suicide attack on an Indian paramilita­ry convoy that killed at least 41 soldiers in disputed Kashmir.

India placed the blame for Thursday’s bombing squarely on neighborin­g Pakistan, which India accuses of supporting rebels in Kashmir, a charge that Islamabad denies. A look at some of the retaliator­y steps India is likely to consider:

DIPLOMATIC ISOLATION

India’s first public reaction to the attack was to withdraw the most-favored nation trade status given to Pakistan and take all possible diplomatic steps “to ensure the complete isolation from internatio­nal community of Pakistan.” New Delhi insists “incontrove­rtible evidence is available of [Pakistan] having a direct hand in this gruesome terrorist incident.”

The Greater Kashmir newspaper reported that the militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed, headquarte­red in Pakistan, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. India’s foreign ministry on Friday briefed New Delhi-based diplomats from key countries, including China, which has in the past blocked India’s proposal to list Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar as a designated terrorist by the United Nations. The ministry demanded Pakistan take “immediate and verifiable action against terrorists and terror groups operating from territorie­s under its control to create conducive atmosphere in the region free of terror.”

Pakistani Foreign Secretary Tehmina Janjua rejected allegation­s about Pakistan’s involvemen­t in the attack, saying Saturday that it was part of New Delhi’s “known rhetoric and tactics” to divert global attention from human rights violations.

MILITARY STRIKES

After a 2016 attack on an Indian army base that killed 19 soldiers, India’s army said it carried out a campaign of “surgical strikes” against militants across the highly militarize­d frontier that divides the Kashmir region between India and Pakistan. Pakistan dismissed the reports that India’s military had targeted “terrorist launch pads” inside the Pakistan-controlled part of Kashmir. Islamabad said instead that two of its soldiers were killed in “unprovoked” firing by India across the border.

Following the latest attack — the worst attack against Indian government forces in Kashmir’s history — Modi warned that those behind it would pay a heavy price and that security forces have been given a free hand to act against terror. The Times of India newspaper reported Saturday that the military options — short of two nuclear-armed rivals going to war — could range from “shallow groundbase­d attacks and occupation of some heights along the Line of Control [cease-fire line] to restricted but precision airstrikes against non-state targets in Pakistanoc­cupied Kashmir.”

G. Parthasart­hy, India’s former high commission­er to Pakistan, said a possible military response can’t be discussed in public. “We have said that Pakistan will pay a price,” he said. “For obvious reasons we are not going to spell out how that cost would be imposed.”

Paul Staniland, a political science professor and South Asia expert at the University of Chicago, said Pakistan’s army is assuming it will be attacked and that Indian forces are preparing for a serious incursion of some sort.

DOMESTIC PRESSURE

Indian analysts say no political party can afford to neglect public opinion ahead of India’s election. Already, protesters chanted “Attack Pakistan” and fiery debates on television channels demanded retaliatio­n.

“I think the situation is extremely tense,” said Amitabh Mattoo, professor of internatio­nal studies at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University. “The mood in the country is extremely angry at what has happened. And moreover, there are elections in the offing. No party could afford to neglect public opinion.”

Staniland said the stakes are too high for India to do nothing at all. “Modi is in a tricky position,” he said. “Indian forces are quite capable, but it’s not obvious what kinds of strikes would accomplish the core goal. Kashmir and Pakistan are among the few foreign policy topics that have real electoral resonance.”

The general election is scheduled to be held before May.

U.S. RESPONSE

The U.S. singled out Pakistan in a statement condemning the attack and said it had strengthen­ed U.S. resolve to bolster counterter­rorism cooperatio­n with India. To improve India’s military capabiliti­es, the U.S. has offered to sell it unarmed Guardian surveillan­ce drones, aircraft carrier technologi­es and F-18 and F-16 fighter aircraft. There are sticking points, however, including the purchase by India of Iranian oil and the Russian S-400 ground-toair missile system, which could trigger U.S. sanctions on India.

THE HIMALAYAN PUZZLE

Indian-controlled Kashmir has remained a challenge for India’s policymake­rs ever since the Himalayan territory was split between India and Pakistan shortly after the two archrivals gained independen­ce in 1947. The territory has been at the heart of India’s two wars out of four the country fought against Pakistan and China. Human rights groups say India has been responding to public protest with disproport­ionate force while treating the Kashmiri struggle for selfdeterm­ination as Islamabad’s proxy war against New Delhi.

New Delhi initially grappled with largely peaceful anti-India protests. However, a series of political blunders, broken promises and a crackdown on dissent led to Kashmir’s eruption into a full-blown armed rebellion against India in 1989 for a united Kashmir, either under Pakistani rule or independen­t of both countries. Indian forces largely crushed the rebellion in the mid2000s. But the conflict intensifie­d after Modi came to power in 2014 amid rising attacks by Hindu hard-liners against minorities in India, further deepening frustratio­n with New Delhi’s rule in Muslim-majority Kashmir.

Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party-led government has toughened its stance both against Pakistan and Kashmiri separatist­s. Policy experts say such an approach is intended to project the party as strong and uncompromi­sing. But Modi’s policies have also had the unintended consequenc­e of strengthen­ing the resolve of those fighting for an end to India’s rule in Kashmir.

THE VIEW FROM PAKISTAN

After Imran Khan took over as Pakistan’s prime minister last August, he promised to take two steps forward for India’s one step to forge friendly ties. He said Kashmir was at the core of their difference­s, and that the countries have to end the tit-for-tat accusation­s. But the peace initiative remained a nonstarter, with violence rising in the Indian portion of Kashmir and India asking Pakistan to stop supporting insurgents.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ RAJESH KUMAR SINGH ?? Shanti Devi, center, mother of paramilita­ry soldier Mahesh Yadav, who was killed in Thursday’s explosion in Kashmir, mourns at her home Saturday in Tudihar, nearly 35 miles east of Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh state, India. The death toll from a car bombing on a paramilita­ry convoy in Indian-controlled Kashmir has climbed to at least 40, becoming the single deadliest attack in the divided region’s volatile history, security officials said Friday.
AP PHOTO/ RAJESH KUMAR SINGH Shanti Devi, center, mother of paramilita­ry soldier Mahesh Yadav, who was killed in Thursday’s explosion in Kashmir, mourns at her home Saturday in Tudihar, nearly 35 miles east of Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh state, India. The death toll from a car bombing on a paramilita­ry convoy in Indian-controlled Kashmir has climbed to at least 40, becoming the single deadliest attack in the divided region’s volatile history, security officials said Friday.
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