India鈥檚 Modi accuses Pakistan of waging a proxy war. Will it deter peace talks?
Stern remarks from India鈥檚 prime minister could hurt efforts to restart peace talks over Kashmir, which are scheduled for later this month.
Stern remarks from India鈥檚 prime minister could hurt efforts to restart peace talks over Kashmir, which are scheduled for later this month.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday accused Pakistan of waging a 鈥減roxy war鈥 and vowed to strengthen his country鈥檚 armed forces in a speech during a rare visit to disputed Kashmir.聽
But Mr. Modi also stressed the need for reconciliation with Pakistan. What does he really want? Unclear. But the tough side of his talk on Kashmir, disputed by India and Pakistan for over 60 years, indicates a breakthrough isn't imminent.
Modi said that Pakistan was聽using militants to attack India and foster unrest. Pakistan 鈥渉as lost the strength to fight a conventional war but continues to engage in the proxy war of terrorism,鈥 he told Indian soldiers in Kashmir's Leh District.聽
The prime minister's comments come聽before meetings later this month in Islamabad between the foreign secretaries of both countries aimed at a renewed peace effort. Some analysts suggest that Modi is striking a tough pose before talks begin.聽
"It is a message that for talks to succeed India needs a commitment that Pakistan" stop supporting terrorism, C. Uday Bhaskar, director at the Society for Policy Studies in New Delhi, told Bloomberg Businessweek.聽
The strong warning was a departure for Modi, who invited Pakistan鈥檚 Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to his inauguration in May, sparking hopes of an improved relationship between the two countries, which were partitioned in 1947.聽
Pakistani officials declined to comment on Modi鈥檚 remarks Tuesday, according to Reuters. India has long accused the Pakistani government of training militants in Kashmir to carry out attacks in India, a charge Islamabad denies.聽
Modi's visit to the area also comes before assembly elections later this year in which his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is seeking to extend its power and members of his party hope to further integrate Kashmir with the rest of the country,聽the Wall Street Journal reports:
The trip was an 鈥渋mportant first step towards bringing these areas back to the centre of national and strategic consciousness,鈥澛燗jai Sahni, executive director at the Institute of Conflict Management think tank in Delhi told Agence France-Presse
This trip marks Modi's second visit to the region since he became prime minister in May, and the first trip in 15 years for an Indian leader to聽Kargil since the conflict there in 1999, when Pakistani troops crossed into the area and over 1,000 people died.
The聽dispute over Kashmir has deep roots聽with India and Pakistan vying for control and some local groups pushing for independence. Since independence in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought three wars, two of which were over Kashmir. Fighting reached a high point in the region in the late 1980s and '90s. A ceasefire signed in 2003 calmed the situation, but both sides have accused the other of breaking it.
As the Monitor reported last year, flare-ups along the Line of Control (LoC) that separates Indian and Pakistani-controlled areas, have occurred for decades.
Both sides accused the other of cease-fire violations before Modi鈥檚 visit.