http://sg.news.yahoo.com/reuters/asia-80387.html
Tuesday December 25, 3:50 AM 
Pakistan military warns of nuclear conflict with India By Raja Asghar 
        
CHAKOTHI, Pakistan (Reuters) - A senior Pakistani army officer said on
Monday continued border clashes with India could spark an uncontrollable
flareup involving nuclear weapons. 
The two neighbours have reinforced positions on either side of their
disputed border in Kashmir since a December 13 suicide attack on the
Indian parliament which killed 14 people. New Delhi blamed two militant
groups based in Muslim Pakistan. 
Local sources said on Monday that Pakistan's army had deployed
anti-aircraft guns and moved most troops from the eastern garrison town
of Sialkot to the border with India. 
Pakistani and Indian troops only watched each other with distrust from
bunkers on either side of a broken bridge at Chakothi in the west of
disputed Kashmir when a group of journalists visited the Pakistani side
of the front line. 
But both sides reported exchanges of fresh mortar and heavy machinegun
fire elsewhere in Kashmir and New Delhi expelled a Pakistani diplomat,
raising tensions between the nuclear-armed adversaries ever higher. 
Pakistani Brigadier Mohammad Yaqub said the situation was "highly
explosive". 
"Because in that situation, that tension, even a small little incident
can result in a chain reaction which nobody will be able to control," he
told Reuters Television at Muzaffarabad, capital of the Pakistani-held
part of Kashmir. 
He said an all-out war between the two nations could "become really
horrific for the entire world". 
Asked if nuclear weapons could be used, Yaqub, giving what he called his
personal view, said: 
"But if there is a war between the two countries and if any country feels
that it comes to its own survival, probably there won't be any hesitation
to use nuclear weapons." 
A brief statement from the military's public relations department said
the top-brass of Pakistan's armed forces met in the garrison town of
Rawalpindi and "discussed matters relating to defence, national security
and professional aspects". 
A source in Sialkot, just a few miles from the border in Pakistan's
eastern Punjab province, said most of the troops had left the cantonment.

"The movement of troops to and from the border has increased. It is more
than in routine times," he said. 
Artillery exchanges have increased recently in the Sharkargarh-Zafarwal
sector of the working boundary, a 220-km (136-mile) stretch of border
between the line of control dividing mountainous Kashmir, and the
frontier that runs down the plains in an eastward direction up to the
Arabian Sea. 
A senior local official in Sialkot said the army movements to and from
the border had "not been very obvious," but declined to go into detail. 
New Delhi accuses Pakistan of fomenting a decade-old revolt in
Muslim-majority Kashmir. Pakistan denies sponsoring the rebellion, saying
it only provides moral and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri struggle
for self-determination. 
Kashmir's main separatist alliance, the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom)
Conference, asked the two nations to exercise restraint in the region,
which has triggered two of the three wars they have fought since
independence from Britain in 1947. 

Reply via email to