Indian fighter aircraft hit terror camps in attack across de facto border with Pakistan

Pakistani Army soldiers stand guard at the Line of Control, the de facto border between Pakistani and Indian administered Kashmir in Azad Kashmir, Pakistan, on Feb 23, 2019.PHOTO: EPA-EFE

NEW DELHI, Feb 26, 2019, The Straits Times. India has launched air strikes against terror camps in Pakistan in retaliation for a terror attack in Kashmir that killed 40 paramilitary soldiers, reported The Straits Times.

Early on Tuesday (Feb 26) at around 3.30am, a group of Mirage 2000 – a single engine fighter jet – dropped 1,000kg bombs on terror camps across the Line of Control the de facto border between India and Pakistan, said ANI, a multi media news agency.

Quoting sources, ANI said the India strikes were on Balakot, Chakothi and Muzaffarabad terror launch pads across the Line of Control (LoC) and that JeM control rooms were also destroyed.

India had warned of retaliation against Pakistan since the Feb 14 suicide bombing in which 40 paramilitary soldiers belonging to the Central Reserve Police Force were killed in Pulwama district. India had blamed Pakistan for having a “direct role” in the attack which was carried out by a local youth belonging to the Pakistan based terror group Jaish e Mohammad (JeM).

While there was no official word on the attacks from the Indian government yet, Pakistan military confirmed the airstrikes and said there were no casualties or damage.

“Indian aircrafts intruded from Muzafarabad sector. Facing timely and effective response from Pakistan Air Force released payload in haste while escaping which fell near Balakot. No casualties or damage,” tweeted Pakistani military spokesman Major-General Asif Ghafoor.

Accusing India of violating the Line of Control, he further tweeted that “Pakistan Air Force immediately scrambled. Indian aircraft gone back. Details to follow”.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars over Kashmir and regularly exchange fire across the de facto border in spite of a ceasefire signed in 2003.

India has for years continued to demand action against terror groups like the Lashkar e Tayyaba and Jaish e Mohammad which have carried out multiple attacks in India, including the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks in which 166 people were killed.

In 2016, an attempt to resume foreign secretary level talks was stalled after an attack on an Indian Air Force base in Pathankot. The same year saw an attack on an Indian Army base in Uri in Kashmir – in which 19 soldiers were killed – that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad.

Following the attack on the Army base in 2016, India said; it had carried out surgical strikes on terrorist launch pads along the de facto border with Pakistan.

The air strike on Tuesday gained support across an otherwise deeply fractious political spectrum in India.

While there was no official confirmation from the Indian government, Congress president Rahul Gandhi tweeted: “I salute the pilots of the IAF.”

Some, however, raised questions on where the strikes were carried out.

“If this is Balakote in KPK, it’s a major incursion & a significant strike by IAF planes. However if it’s Balakote in Poonch sector, along the LoC, it’s a largely symbolic strike because at this time of the year forward launch pads, militant camps are empty, non-functional,” tweeted National Conference leader Omar Abdullah, a former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir. KPK is Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

Nevertheless, analysts said that this was the first direct strike in Pakistani territory since 1971. They noted that India had not launched strikes even during the Kargil war, an armed conflict between India and Pakistan that took place between May and July 1999 in the Kargil district of Kashmir.

Speculation also grew within India over whether Pakistan would retaliate. Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had warned that Pakistan would give a befitting reply if attacked.

“Now the ball is on the other side. They have to decide how much they want to escalate. Do they want to go to war? We have struck what does their (Pakistani) Air Force strike here (in India). We don’t have terrorist camps. They can strike military installation that would be act of war,” Air Vice-Marshal (retired) Manmohan Bahadur, additional director-general at the Centre for Air Power Studies, an autonomous defence research and analysis body.

“After Pulwama it was inevitable something had to be done. Message had to be put across,” he said.

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