Los Angeles Times

Attack in India threatens talks

Negotiatio­ns with Pakistan are in doubt after militants storm a base, leaving three soldiers dead.

- By Shashank Bengali shashank. bengali @ latimes. com Twitter: @ SBengali Special correspond­ents Parth M. N. in Mumbai and Aoun Sahi in Islamabad, Pakistan, contribute­d to this report.

MUMBAI, India — Militants wearing army uniforms stormed an air force base in northern India early Saturday, setting off a daylong battle that left f ive assailants and three soldiers dead and cast serious doubt over Indian- Pakistani talks due to begin this month.

Four attackers were killed by Indian security forces and a f ifth was gunned down more than 12 hours after the attack began about 3: 30 a. m. at the air base at Pathankot, about 270 miles north of New Delhi.

Indian officials said they had “credible informatio­n” that the attack was carried out by militants from Pakistan and described it as an attempt to derail Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s efforts to engage his rival neighbor in peace talks. Modi made a surprise visit to Pakistan on Christmas Day to build momentum for a planned meeting this month between the two countries’ top diplomats.

Previous steps toward talks have also been met with violence, leading Indian officials and analysts to argue that some elements inside Pakistan’s powerful military and intelligen­ce agencies are empowering mili- tant groups in a bid to scuttle dialogue.

“That was quick,” Omar Abdullah, former chief minister of the Indian border state Jammu and Kashmir, tweeted after the attack. “Here’s the f irst major chal- lenge to the PM Modi’s bold Pakistan gambit.”

Pakistan denied any role in the violence. After Saturday’s attack, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement condemning the “terrorist incident.”

“We extend heartfelt condolence­s to the government and people of India and the bereaved families and wish the wounded speedy and full recovery,” the statement read.

This was the second at- tack in seven months in the Indian border state of Punjab that Indian authoritie­s have blamed on Pakistanba­sed extremists.

The previous one, in which four policemen and three civilians were killed, followed a meeting between Modi and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on the sidelines of a summit in Ufa, Russia, that helped pave the way for a resumption of long- delayed comprehens­ive peace talks.

Saturday’s attack “follows a similar pattern,” said Nitin Gokhale, an Indian national security analyst. “Every peace move — even if symbolic — is followed by an audacious attack.

“The message is that a section of the Pakistani army, egged on by the ISI, will not give up its anti- India campaign,” Gokhale said, referring to Inter- Services Intelligen­ce, Pakistan’s premier spy agency.

Indian security officials, speaking to news media, said that the suspected attackers hijacked the car of a senior police official along a highway outside Pathankot after midnight Saturday. According to Indian accounts, the assailants used the official’s cellphone to place a call to Pakistan that was intercepte­d by Indian intelligen­ce, which issued an alert.

Indian officials said that because of the alert, security forces responded immediatel­y after the militants entered the air base, about 30 miles from the Pakistani border. The attackers were contained within an administra­tive block of the base and were not able to penetrate a secure area where fighter jets and Mi- 35 attack helicopter­s are housed, officials said.

“Through timely and prompt action by all agencies, the likely plan of the terrorists to destroy valuable assets of the air force has been foiled,” the Indian government said in a statement.

The raid was blamed on militant group Jaish- e- Mohammed, which was partly responsibl­e for a 2001 assault on the Parliament building in New Delhi that left 14 people dead, including f ive attackers. The incident prompted a major military buildup by both sides along the countries’ disputed border.

India accuses Pakistan’s security establishm­ent for supporting groups such as Jaish- e- Mohammed, a claim Pakistan denies.

Security was tightened in New Delhi, the capital, after the attack, with additional forces deployed to the airport, railway stations, bus stops and other key installati­ons, the Press Trust of India reported.

The fate of the talks between the national security advisors, tentativel­y set for mid- January, was not immediatel­y clear. The meeting is seen as significan­t in part because of the appointmen­t of a retired general, Nasser Khan Janjua, as Pakistan’s new national security advisor, a sign that the Pakistani army was taking control of — and tacitly endorsed — the peace process.

In India, Modi has faced opposition to his efforts to engage with Pakistan, including from some hard- liners inside his conservati­ve Bharatiya Janata Party.

In 1999, after the two countries conducted tit- fortat nuclear tests, the party’s standard- bearer, then-Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, visited Pakistan and the two sides signed the Lahore declaratio­n aimed at deterring nuclear warfare. But further progress was stopped after a Pakistani military incursion prompted the two- month Kargil conf lict, the fourth war between the two countries since they gained independen­ce from Britain in 1947.

India’s home affairs minister, Rajnath Singh, said that while India wants peace with Pakistan, “if there is any terror attack on India, we will give a befitting reply.”

 ?? Narinder Nanu AFP/ Getty I mages ?? I NDIAN police off icials keep watch outside an air base in Pathankot during an attack by militants wearing army uniforms. The battle in the northern Indian state of Punjab left f ive assailants and three soldiers dead.
Narinder Nanu AFP/ Getty I mages I NDIAN police off icials keep watch outside an air base in Pathankot during an attack by militants wearing army uniforms. The battle in the northern Indian state of Punjab left f ive assailants and three soldiers dead.

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