India launches airstrikes on Pakistan across Kashmir border

India has carried out aerial
bombing over the disputed ceasefire line in Kashmir for the first time since it
went to war with Pakistan in 1971, and claims to have hit a large militant
training camp.
The country’s foreign
secretary, Vijay Gokhale, said in a briefing that Delhi had received credible
intelligence that the militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), which killed 40
Indian security personnel in a suicide bombing this month, was training
fighters for similar attacks.
“In the face of imminent
danger, a pre-emptive strike became absolutely necessary,” Gokhale said.
The attack was celebrated in
India, but it was unclear on Tuesday whether anything significant had been
struck by the fighter jets, or whether the operation had been carefully
calibrated to ease popular anger over the 14 February suicide bombing without
drawing a major Pakistani reprisal.
Pakistan, which was the
first to announce the incursion of Indian fighter jets early on Tuesday
morning, said the war planes made it up to four miles inside its territory
before they were rebuffed, dropping their payloads without casualties or
damage.
Pakistan’s armed forces
spokesman, Maj-Gen Asif Ghafoor, tweeted on Tuesday morning that the Indian
jets had dropped their bombs in an empty forested area. “No infrastructure got
hit, no casualties,” he wrote.
Imran Khan, the Pakistani
prime minister, said India’s claim that it had hit a terrorist training camp
was “a self-serving, reckless and fictitious claim”.
“This action has been done
for domestic consumption in the election environment, putting regional peace
and stability at grave risk,” Khan said, referring to India’s general election
which starts in two months.
He said foreign and local
journalists would be taken to the site of the alleged bombing “to see the facts
on the ground”. The army had been advised “to prepare for all eventualities”,
Khan added.
The attacks overnight
followed nearly a fortnight of sabre-rattling between the nuclear-armed
neighbours over the 14 February suicide bombing, in which India has claimed
Pakistan had a “direct hand”. JeM is based in Pakistan but Islamabad has
rejected any responsibility for the attack.
Gokhale said Indian jets
struck JeM’s largest training camp in the Balakot area in the early hours of
Tuesday. “A very large number of JeM terrorists, trainers, senior commanders
and groups of jihadis being trained for fidayeen [suicide] action were eliminated,”
he said.
He said the training
facility, which he described as being in thick forest on a hilltop, was far
away from any civilian settlements, and was overseen by the brother-in-law of
the JeM chief, Masood Azhar.
Significantly, Balakot is in
the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, about 50 miles from the line of control and
well into accepted Pakistan territory. An attack there would represent an
escalation from previous Indian reprisals, analysts said.
“It changes the game
significantly by raising the costs for Pakistan,” said Khalid Shah, a research
fellow at the Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation.
Pakistan’s foreign minister,
Shah Mahmood Qureshi, told a media briefing that Pakistan was planning its
response. “This is an aggression against Pakistan and Pakistan will respond,”
he said.
Islamabad released pictures
on social media showing uprooted trees and cratered soil, which it claimed was
the extent of the damage from the Indian bombing.
The conflicting narratives
over the attack echo the September 2016 “surgical strikes”, in which India
claimed to have sent special forces to destroy militant facilities over the
ceasefire border – an attack that Pakistan still maintains never happened.
The varying positions
allowed India to trumpet its reprisal against Pakistan without forcing
Islamabad to respond in a way that might spiral into a larger conflict.
Indian ministers lauded the
airstrikes on Tuesday morning. “It was an act of extreme valour,” said Prakash
Javadekar, the human resources development minister, in the first official
acknowledgement of the operation.
Another minister, Vijay
Kumar Singh, posted a picture on Twitter of an eagle with a snake in its
talons. “They say they want to bleed India with 1,000 cuts,” he wrote. “We say
that each time you attack us, be certain we will get back at you, harder and
stronger.”
Though Pakistan downplayed
the attacks, Khan, whose successful election campaign last year featured
strident promises to stand up to India, could still face popular pressure to
respond.
“Strategically, it is a
disaster for Pakistan that India can keep doing this,” said Mosharraf Zaidi, a
political analyst and columnist, referring to both Tuesday’s attack and the
September 2016 strikes. “What does it say about Pakistan’s red lines that
countries like India can keep violating our airspace or claim they have carried
out surgical strikes?”
Sherry Rahman, a Pakistani
senator and former ambassador the US, said the attack was aimed at Indian PM
Narendra Modi’s re-election. “India is giving its own people a message with
these strikes; this is for their electorate, the domestic voters,” Rahman said.
The Indian news agency Asian
News International quoted Indian air force sources claiming 12 Mirage fighter
jets had struck “a major terrorist camp” over the border with 1,000kg of
explosives. The attack took place at about 3.30am, the agency claimed.
While exchanges of artillery
and light weapons over the line are very common, intentional incursions by
aircraft have not been publicly acknowledged since the two countries fought a
war in 1971.
Military planes could be
heard over Srinagar, the capital of Indian-controlled Kashmir, in the early
hours of Tuesday morning. There has been a large troop buildup in the region in
recent days and doctors have been advised to cancel leave and stockpile
medicines.
Several convoys of trucks
carrying heavy artillery were being transported on highways to northern Kashmir
towards the line of control.
More than 300 separatist
activists have been detained in recent days. Hours after the attack on Tuesday
morning, officers from the National Investigation Agency raided the Srinagar
homes of two veteran separatist leaders, Yasin Malik, who was among those detained
at the weekend, and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq.