Posted on 12/25/2001 7:54:36 PM PST by Mensch
NEW DELHI, Dec. 25 (UPI) -- Both India and Pakistan have moved their missiles close to the border and the line of control that divides the disputed Himalayan valley of Kashmir.
Quoting defense sources several Indian and Pakistani newspapers reported the move in their early Internet editions Wednesday.
"Pakistan has redeployed its strategic units aggressively" close to Indian positions, reported The Times of India. Both the countries use the term 'strategic unit' for troops equipped with ordinary and nuclear tipped missiles.
The Pakistani newspaper -- the Jang -- reported similar deployment on the Indian side, saying that the Indians were preparing for a war.
Officially, both sides deny such reports and blame the other for pushing for the war but the situation has deteriorated rapidly since Dec. 13 when alleged Kashmiri militants attacked the Indian parliament. Nine Indian security men and all five attackers were killed in the fight that followed.
In New Delhi, India's prime minister blamed Pakistan Tuesday of thrusting a war upon India, while Pakistan's president told a crowd in Karachi that his forces were ready for "any Indian adventure."
"We do not want war but war is being thrust on us and we will have to face it," Indian leader Atal Behari Vajpayee told a rally organized by the youth wing of his Bharatiya Janata Party on his 77th birthday.
Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf echoed similar sentiments when he told a rally in the southern port city of Karachi that Pakistan did not want a war but "is capable of defending itself if forced to fight."
Although talking tough, Pakistan made a little reconciliatory gesture Tuesday when it arrested a fundamentalist leader blamed by India for the suicide attack on its parliament.
Maulana Masud Azhar heads a militant organization called Jasih-i-Mohammed, one of the two groups blamed for the attack. Pakistan also has frozen the accounts of the other militant outfit, Lashkar-i-Toiba and forced its chief, Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed, to resign.
But India described these measures as "too little and too late" and urged Pakistan to disband all militants groups fighting in Kashmir and arrest their leaders.
As politicians exchanged allegations, residents on both sides of the border reported heavy troop-movement.
Even in a major urban center like Karachi, people saw hundreds of military vehicles moving anti-aircraft guns and missiles to sensitive areas to prepare for a surprise Indian attack, as a Pakistani military official said.
A presidential spokesman, Maj. Gen. Rashid Qureshi, described the move as "an appropriate defensive measure against massive troop movement on the Indian side."
Officials told Indian journalists in New Delhi that Pakistan had made "some aggressive deployment along the border and in Kashmir during the last 24 hours."
They said the Pakistanis also had deployed "medium range ballistic missiles at some places."
"Moving missiles to sensitive areas has increased tensions. We are worried these missiles may be used. We are keeping a close watch," an Indian military official told The Times of India.
To counter these moves, the report said, Indian forces have "accelerated mine-laying operations in the border areas."
Residents reported heavy cross border firing in Kashmir during the last 24 hours, killing several villagers on both sides. Both sides also claimed destroying each other's bunkers and military positions along the line of control in Kashmir. A group of journalists who visited Kashmir Tuesday reported a continuous exchange of mortar and heavy machinegun fire between the Indian and Pakistani forces.
Thousands of civilians have already moved away from the border areas.
----------------
Copyright © 2001 United Press International
India is also our ally at present. They are a democracy and we have given them the go ahead to pursue the terrorists who attacked their Parliament last week. Those terrorists came from those outlaw areas of Northern Pakistan.
The US is thus caught between two countries that are our tentative allies. If they go to war, which side do we back? The ideal would be for Pakistan to clean out the terrorists in the North with our help and then get an agreement between India and Pakistan. UN troops in Kashmir might be required. If the Pakistani government is overthrown, the nuclear weapons might fall into the hands of the pro-Bin Laden people if not Osama himself. That would be a nightmare.
The main problem for the entire world is that India and Pakistan both have nuclear weapons. They are old enemies from the time the British partitioned the country between the Muslims (Pakistan) and the Hindus (India). The two sides have been archenemies ever since. They last fought an actual war in 1971. Needless to say, a nuclear war between the two could impact the entire world from the fallout, radiation, etc.
They have plenty of nukes deliverable on fighter aircraft. It's a little unclear what they have in a missle warhead form. But rest assured they have deliverable nukes.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.