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PM Modi met NSA Doval amid tensions over the Pahalgam terror attack, which killed 26 people, mostly civilians. High-level meetings since then have accelerated talk of military action against the Pakistan-backed terrorists.
New Delhi:
Prime Minister Narendra Modi met National Security Advisor Ajit Doval Tuesday morning amid continuing tension and speculation over India’s military response to the Pahalgam terror attack.
This is the second time the Prime Minister has been briefed by the NSA in the past 48 hours, and it comes a day before state governments will conduct mock security drills – for the first time since the 1971 war with Pakistan – for “effective civil defence in the event of a hostile attack”.
Mr Modi has held multiple high-level meetings – with Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, NSA Doval, Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan, and the Army, Navy, and Air Force chiefs – over the past few days, accelerating talk of military action against the Lashkar terror group.
Last week the Prime Minister met Mr Doval and General Chauhan, and gave the armed forces ‘complete freedom to decide on the mode, targets, and timing’ of India’s military response.
READ | PM’s Free Hand To Forces To Respond To J&K Attack: Sources
The April 22 Pahalgam attack – in which 26 people, mostly civilians – were killed was the worst terrorist incident in India since the 2019 Pulwama attack, in which 40 soldiers were killed.
The Resistance Front, a known proxy of Pakistan-based Lashkar, claimed the attack.
In addition, Delhi has also said it has proof the Pakistan deep state – frequently called out for support of cross-border terrorism – was once again involved in planning a terror attack on India.
The Pakistan government has denied any connection with the Pahalgam attack, and demanded an independent, international investigation into India’s claims.
Islamabad has also sought to drum up support from the global community – which had condemned the attack and backed India – at a closed-door meeting of the United Nations Security Council this week.
READ | ‘LeT Involved?’: UN Security Council Blasts Pakistan Over Pahalgam
However, the UNSC seemed disinclined to offer Pak support, news agency ANI said, instead asking tough questions over the involvement of the Lashkar-e-Taiba. The Council reportedly also questioned Pakistan over the targeting of civilians and tourists in Pahalgam.
At the meeting Pakistan also reiterated its “commitment to peaceful, cooperative relations with all our neighbours, including India” and called for “mutual respect and sovereign equality”.
Nevertheless, since the attack there has been continuous and unprovoked firing – for 12 consecutive days – from the Pakistan side of the Line of Control, to which Indian forces responded with proportion.
In its first round of responses India announced diplomatic restrictions, including revoking visas for Pakistan nationals and suspending the 65-year-old Indus Waters Treaty, or IWT.
NDTV Explains | Indus Waters Treaty, Partition, Planning, Pak Impact
Suspension of the IWT was a critical step since the Indus and two of its tributaries irrigate nearly 80 per cent of Pakistan’s farms. The IWT also prohibited India from constructing additional storage facilities that, in theory, could be filled to cut off, fully, all water supply to Pakistan.
However, now that this treaty is on hold, India has begun increasing storage levels, building new dams, and creating additional hydroelectric projects, all of which will reduce, or affect, supply.
READ | Reservoir Flushing, 6 Projects: India Acts After Indus Treaty Suspended
Pakistan responded by suspending visas to Pakistan and suspending the 1972 Simla Agreement, and warning India that putting the IWT on hold would be viewed as an ‘act of war’.
Both countries have also shut border crossings and closed their respective airspaces.
Tension between India and Pakistan has ramped up since Pahalgam. The international community, however, remains hopeful that a non-military solution can still be found.
John Bolton, the US National Security Advisor in Donald Trump’s first term, told NDTV that India is “entitled to retaliate and try to eliminate terrorist threats” to its sovereignty and people.
NDTV Exclusive | “If India’s Retaliation Directed Against…”: Ex US NSA John Bolton
However, it is imperative, he also said, that India set a record for the rest of the world – that it had tried to everything to ensure a peaceful resolution to this long-standing problem.
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