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archive: Heightened conflict

Heightened conflict

Editorial
The Times of India
May 28, 1999


    Title: Heightened conflict
    Author: Editorial
    Publication: The Times of India
    Date: May 28, 1999
    
    The shooting down of an IAF fighter aircraft by a surface to air
    missile adds a dimension to the massive Pakistani intrusion into the
    Kargil sector.  It also confirms the charge that the Pakistani
    incursion is being backed by that country's armed forces.  'Rough the
    Indian Prime Minister had spoken to Pakistan's Nawaz Sharif, and the
    director general of military operations of India has also been in
    contact with his opposite number, the Pakistani information minister
    has called for a despatch of the UN Secretary General's special envoy
    to the region.  That would indicate that this may have been an
    elaborate scheme to create tension to internationalise the Kashmir
    dispute and involve the UN.  This is presumably the Pakistan army's
    response to what was deemed as Mr Nawaz Sharifs compromise at Lahore
    when Kashmir was not referred to as a 'core issue' in the memorandum
    of understanding.  India's response to this escalation has to be both
    re-strained and firm.  The sooner the Pakistani intruders within
    Indian territory are cleared by the combined air and ground action,
    the better the chances of limiting further conflagration.  While the
    loss of the aircraft highlights the need for exercising extra care,
    the military operation has to be pressed with full vigour.  The
    communication at political and military levels in both countries has
    to be maintained to ensure that there are no avoidable
    misunderstandings on either side.
    
    Even as the operations are being pursued, adequate attention has not
    been paid to the handling of information.  Pakistan gained some
    advantage in publicising the downing of the aircraft first.  There
    ought to have been prompt and adequate explanation on our part about
    the circumstances in which the aircraft came down in Pakistani
    territory, together with an assurance that India would not act beyond
    its border.  The inter-national media keeps referring to the
    'disputed' territory of Kashmir.  India has not highlighted that,
    irrespective of the Kashmir dispute, the line of control is the
    subject of a bilateral treaty: The Shimla agreement has been
    acknowledged by the UN and the international community.  The present
    intrusion is clearly an act of aggression: Well-armed, well-trained
    men, acclimatised to operate in high altitudes in inhospitable terrain
    could not have reached this area without access through communication
    lines controlled by the Pakistan Army.  The evidence for concluding
    that Pakistani intruders are from regular forces should have been
    presented early.  India should focus on the cost of this aggression to
    the Pakistani market and currency and its long-term impact on
    Pakistan's economy.  The inadequacy of political control over the
    Pakistani army and its adventurist tendencies should be projected to
    the international audience.  The Prime Minister should meet the
    leaders of all parties and brief them comprehensively.  This is not
    the time for the opposition parties to play politics.  Like all other
    citizens, they should demonstrate total national solidarity in support
    of our jawans and airmen.  They should do well to remember the
    Pakistani army leadership is tempted to act whenever they sense
    political weakness in this country.
    



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