The Prague Post - Furious India eyes response to Pakistan after Kashmir attack

EUR -
AED 4.178094
AFN 80.660838
ALL 98.620985
AMD 442.81052
ANG 2.050119
AOA 1037.406639
ARS 1323.548457
AUD 1.782369
AWG 2.047514
AZN 1.936072
BAM 1.953658
BBD 2.295063
BDT 138.107337
BGN 1.953169
BHD 0.428707
BIF 3380.393055
BMD 1.137508
BND 1.490752
BOB 7.854387
BRL 6.46036
BSD 1.136644
BTN 96.94284
BWP 15.560799
BYN 3.719988
BYR 22295.149099
BZD 2.283276
CAD 1.576574
CDF 3272.609072
CHF 0.939342
CLF 0.027909
CLP 1070.974491
CNY 8.289035
CNH 8.293358
COP 4893.842103
CRC 572.966647
CUC 1.137508
CUP 30.143952
CVE 110.144216
CZK 24.975123
DJF 202.41625
DKK 7.465351
DOP 67.455435
DZD 150.530901
EGP 57.967725
ERN 17.062614
ETB 151.48415
FJD 2.567807
FKP 0.858034
GBP 0.854877
GEL 3.117175
GGP 0.858034
GHS 17.221115
GIP 0.858034
GMD 81.330736
GNF 9843.119485
GTQ 8.754323
GYD 237.817119
HKD 8.825364
HNL 29.468426
HRK 7.533257
HTG 148.505843
HUF 407.262067
IDR 19165.353793
ILS 4.147654
IMP 0.858034
INR 97.060794
IQD 1489.05401
IRR 47903.288019
ISK 144.895596
JEP 0.858034
JMD 180.062543
JOD 0.806724
JPY 162.126117
KES 147.091207
KGS 99.324201
KHR 4549.970495
KMF 494.24449
KPW 1023.692616
KRW 1632.653167
KWD 0.348669
KYD 0.947253
KZT 587.420669
LAK 24581.827421
LBP 101848.612626
LKR 340.953113
LRD 227.338701
LSL 21.212452
LTL 3.358764
LVL 0.688067
LYD 6.220179
MAD 10.542746
MDL 19.636294
MGA 5115.345533
MKD 61.465435
MMK 2387.74812
MNT 4030.323332
MOP 9.083459
MRU 45.036217
MUR 51.531147
MVR 17.523332
MWK 1971.021247
MXN 22.283194
MYR 4.974301
MZN 72.800375
NAD 21.212452
NGN 1833.002813
NIO 41.833757
NOK 11.83058
NPR 155.109906
NZD 1.902521
OMR 0.437964
PAB 1.136644
PEN 4.194963
PGK 4.704799
PHP 64.217422
PKR 319.496131
PLN 4.275141
PYG 9097.943198
QAR 4.14352
RON 4.976825
RSD 117.090569
RUB 94.233029
RWF 1623.20572
SAR 4.266897
SBD 9.483381
SCR 16.208892
SDG 683.071875
SEK 10.911303
SGD 1.492228
SHP 0.893902
SLE 25.877833
SLL 23852.947296
SOS 649.581957
SRD 41.917193
STD 23544.110848
SVC 9.946093
SYP 14790.043117
SZL 21.202749
THB 38.038825
TJS 12.07735
TMT 3.992652
TND 3.393279
TOP 2.664159
TRY 43.582478
TTD 7.712542
TWD 36.985836
TZS 3059.895608
UAH 47.394411
UGX 4167.393393
USD 1.137508
UYU 47.677298
UZS 14639.817249
VES 94.767943
VND 29637.760703
VUV 136.272965
WST 3.153487
XAF 655.23271
XAG 0.033986
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.074171
XDR 0.818078
XOF 655.23271
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.973029
ZAR 21.289302
ZMK 10238.937064
ZMW 31.969661
ZWL 366.276985
  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.53

    +0.32%

  • CMSC

    0.1900

    22.35

    +0.85%

  • BCC

    1.5450

    94.875

    +1.63%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    9.83

    +0.81%

  • RIO

    1.0600

    61.26

    +1.73%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    42.46

    -0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    21.99

    -1.05%

  • NGG

    0.4500

    72.16

    +0.62%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • GSK

    0.2850

    37.315

    +0.76%

  • CMSD

    0.1700

    22.46

    +0.76%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    9.8

    +3.06%

  • AZN

    0.8900

    69.4

    +1.28%

  • RELX

    0.1580

    52.858

    +0.3%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    9.28

    -0.22%

  • BP

    0.2650

    28.865

    +0.92%

Furious India eyes response to Pakistan after Kashmir attack
Furious India eyes response to Pakistan after Kashmir attack / Photo: Arun SANKAR - AFP

Furious India eyes response to Pakistan after Kashmir attack

India has hit Pakistan with a raft of mostly symbolic diplomatic measures after a deadly attack it blames on its arch-rival, but analysts warn a military response may yet come.

Text size:

New Delhi suspended a water-sharing treaty, announced the closure of the main land border crossing with Pakistan, downgraded diplomatic ties and withdrew visas for Pakistanis on Wednesday night, just over 24 hours after gunmen killed 26 men in Indian-administered Kashmir.

And then on Thursday, New Delhi said it had suspended visas services "with immediate effect" and ordered all Pakistani nationals to leave the country, with the exception of remaining diplomats.

Experts say that a military response may still be in the pipeline, with some speculating that a response may come within days while others say weeks.

New Delhi accuses Islamabad of supporting "cross-border terrorism" -- claims Pakistan denies -- and police in Kashmir identified two Pakistani nationals among the three alleged gunmen.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed on Thursday to punish all those responsible "to the ends of the Earth".

Relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours have sunk to their lowest level in years and some fear New Delhi's diplomatic moves may just be an opening salvo.

"This attack is going to take... relations a long way back to the dark days," said International Crisis Group analyst Praveen Donthi.

"Given the Narendra Modi government's security approach, they might resort to kinetic (military) measures in the next couple of weeks, because they believe in projecting a strong security state."

Pakistan held a rare national security meeting on Thursday after New Delhi's punitive diplomatic measures.

- 'Escalation' -

The killings have shocked India because they were a dramatic shift targeting civilians and the area's vital tourism industry, rather than more common smaller-scale attacks against Indian security forces.

Hindu pilgrims have been targeted in the past, but direct attacks on the tourist trade that underpins much of the local economy are much rarer.

"A major attack in a tourist area does constitute a break from the past," said Ajai Sahni, a counter-terrorism expert at the New Delhi-based Institute for Conflict Management.

Sahni suggested there had been "an unwritten contract" not to attack the general tourism trade "because virtually everyone" in Kashmir is directly or indirectly dependent on tourism.

For New Delhi, the 3.5 million tourists who it says visited Kashmir in 2024 -- mostly domestic visitors -- illustrated what officials called "normalcy and peace" returning to the troubled region after a massive crackdown in 2019.

"One of the reasons this attack might have happened is because the government started linking the numbers of tourists... to this narrative of normalcy," Donthi said.

"The militants finally changed their attack. Usually, they don't attack tourists and civilians... And this is going to mark an escalation in the conflict."

The 2019 crackdown followed Modi's decision to cancel Kashmir's partial autonomy and impose direct control from New Delhi.

US-based analyst Michael Kugelman said he believed the shift meant India would therefore also likely respond with military force.

"I would argue that the combination of the scale of this attack as well as the targeting -- the fact that civilians were hit -- that suggests to me that there is a strong likelihood of some type of Indian military retaliation," he said.

"I don't necessarily think that such a response would come quickly. I suspect that New Delhi will want to take some time, some days to review a range of possible retaliations."

- 'Covert options available' -

India has taken its time to respond to past attacks.

The worst attack in recent years in Indian-run Kashmir was at Pulwama in 2019, when insurgents rammed a car packed with explosives into a police convoy, killing 40 and wounding 35.

Indian fighter jets carried out air strikes on Pakistani territory 12 days later, a raid that came against the backdrop of campaigning for India's general elections.

Action taken by India so far is limited.

The now-suspended Indus Water Treaty shares critical water between the two countries -- but is more a paper agreement and India has no major means of restricting flow downstream to Pakistan.

The closure of the border crossing at the Attari-Wagah frontier is also significant, although there are rarely large numbers who cross.

The border crossing hosts a hugely popular evening ritual, where crowds gather to cheer on soldiers as they goose-step in a chest-puffing theatrical show that has largely endured through innumerable diplomatic flare-ups.

Sahni said any potential military response was "ill-advised".

"There have been military responses in the past," he said.

"They have been drummed up to have been these great successes. They had not achieved any significant outcomes -- and there is a wide range of covert options available."

F.Vit--TPP