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Radical Islam Attacks
Indian air and missile forces on
war footing, Pakistani armored
units diverted from Afghan border
DEBKAfile Special Report
DEBKAfile's military sources report that on Sunday, Nov. 30, Asia's two
nuclear powers, India and Pakistan, took their first steps towards a
conventional war. India, claiming evidence of Pakistan's involvement in
the Islamist terrorist assault on Mumbai, placed its air and missile
units on war preparedness, while Pakistan, disclaiming the charge,
diverted its armed divisions from the Afghan border to its frontier with
India.
Military experts fear a full-blown war could spill over into combat with
tactical nuclear weapons.
For the Indian government, the last straw was the admission by Azam Amir
Kasab, aged 21, the only terrorist known to have been captured by Indian
forces, that Lashkar e-Taiba was behind the assault which claimed 174
lives, injured hundreds and devastated India's financial capital.
This Kashmiri group has links to both al Qaeda and the Pakistani
Inter-Services Intelligence agency.
From its outset on Wednesday, Nov. 26, the scale, coordination and
clockwork targeting of the assault clearly betrayed the hand of a major
national intelligence agency. Evidence also mounted that the attackers
had reached Mumbai by boat from Karachi.
Five months ago, Taliban suicide killers attacked the Indian embassy in
Kabul, claiming 60 lives including that of the Indian military attaché.
The New Delhi government then found leads to Pakistan's clandestine
service as the prime mover behind the outrage. Washington came up with
the same proofs.
The Manmohan Singh government sees the Mumbai assault as a second,
escalated Pakistani act of war-by-terror and cannot afford to avoid a
strong, immediate response - particularly with a general election around
the corner next May. If Singh braves the media and public howls for
Pakistani blood and shows the same restraint as he did after the Kabul
attack, he will lose his seat.
Domestic opinion is goading the New Delhi to act tough after what is
perceived as the poor, slow and unprofessional performance of the police
and special forces in quelling the terrorists. Indian commandoes were
brought in 10 hours after the terrorists took over and it took them 60
hours to finally gain control of the three hostage sites Saturday, Nov.
29. Sunday, home minister Shivraj Patil resigned in response to the
clamor followed by national security advisor MK Narayanan.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars and barely avoided a fourth in
2001.
President George Bush and his successor Barack Obama cannot hope for
much headway in defusing Indian-Pakistan tension. With only a few weeks
left in the White House, Bush does not have much leverage and Obama even
less for pulling the two adversaries apart. While campaigning, the
president-elect pledged to work to mend the fences between India and
Pakistan and broker their Kashmir conflict. In the present climate,
neither is looking for a mediator.
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