As Afghanistan endgame looms, India-Pakistan tensions rise.(Reuters).
"The 'legions of Peace' are assembling."
By Frank Jack Daniel and Sanjeev Miglani
BARAMULLA/NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) – Pakistan-based militants are preparing to take on India across the subcontinent once Western troops leave Afghanistan next year, several sources say, raising the risk of a dramatic spike in tensions between nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan.
Intelligence sources in India believe that a
botched suicide bombing of an Indian consulate in Afghanistan, which was
followed within days last week by a lethal cross-border ambush on Indian
soldiers in disputed Kashmir, suggest that the new campaign by Islamic militants
may already be underway.
Members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant
outfit in Pakistan, the group blamed for the 2008 commando-style raid on Mumbai
that killed 166 people, told Reuters they were preparing to take the fight to
India once again, this time across the region.
And a U.S. counter-terrorism official, referring
to the attack in Afghanistan, said “LeT has long pursued Indian targets, so it
would be natural for the group to plot against them in its own backyard”.
Given the quiet backing – or at least blind eye –
that many militant groups enjoy from Pakistan’s shadowy intelligence services,
tensions from a new militant campaign are bound to spill over. Adding to the
volatility, the two nations’ armies are trading mortar and gunfire across the
heavily militarized frontier that divides Kashmir, and accusing each other of
killing troops.
Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan have
fought three wars since independence in 1947 and came close to a fourth in 1999.
The tension now brewing may not escalate into open hostilities, but it could
thwart efforts to forge a lasting peace and open trade between two countries
that make up a quarter of the world’s population.Read the full story here.
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