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No Let-Up In Standoff Between India And Pakistan Until Fall: Diplomats

any thaw in Indo-Pak relations will require outside mediation warn diplomats. AFP Photo.

India Approves Strategic Command For Nuclear Arsenal: Report
New Delhi (AFP) Apr 25, 2002 - India's government has approved handing over control of its nuclear arsenal to a strategic panel, which would function under an integrated defence staff, the Hindustan Times newspaper reported Thursday.

The first commander-in-chief of the nuclear command is likely to be from the air force, which has long sought the position as it believes it is more suited to the role of strategic targetting of targets over long distances, the daily said.

It said an elaborate command and control structure for handling nuclear weapons had been worked out under which the final authority would rest with the cabinet committee on security headed by Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee.

Officials were not immediately available to comment on The Hindustan Times report but a defence analyst requesting anonymity said it was credible.


New Delhi (AFP) April 25, 2002
The risk of military confrontation between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan will remain high until at least autumn, with international mediation needed to defuse the crisis, diplomats here said Thursday.

With both governments facing complex domestic political situations and less international attention on the conflict, tensions between the arch-rivals are likely to persist for months, they said.

"There is still a risk of miscalculation by both sides," one diplomat told AFP, stressing "the need for re-engagement by the international community."

Tensions between India and Pakistan have skyrocketed since December 13 when the Indian parliament was attacked by Islamic militants who New Delhi alleges are members of two Pakistan-based groups fighting its rule in Kashmir.

The two sides have deployed about one million troops to their common borders, with little sign from New Delhi it will ease the forward deployment anytime soon, according to diplomats.

US Secretary of State Colin Powell visited Islamabad and New Delhi in January to cool tempers. He remains in close contact with both sides, but US diplomacy has recently shifted focus to the crisis in the Middle East.

Diplomats noted that high-level visits to the two capitals have trailed off. By contrast, a parade of Western diplomats visited South Asia before and immediately after the attack on parliament to secure both countries' support for the US-led military action in Afghanistan.

India says Pakistan has not met one of its key demands: a halt in support for Islamic guerrillas fighting Indian rule in Kashmir. New Delhi contends that the number of rebels crossing the disputed Himalayan border has in fact risen.

The two sides sporadically exchange fire in Kashmir, and Indian forces and separatist militants engage in bloody clashes daily.

Indian officials also deeply distrust Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, who announced a crackdown on January 12 against Islamic extremists, including a ban on the two groups allegedly behind the parliament attack.

However, Musharraf has since allowed the release of several hundred suspected Islamic hardliners. Indian officials have also been outraged by recent remarks by Musharraf that he would be willing to launch a nuclear strike on India in a worst-case scenario.

Pakistan has entered an election period, with a referendum on April 30 deciding whether General Musharraf, who seized power in a bloodless 1999 coup, should stay in power. The country will hold legislative elections in October.

April 30 is also a key day in India, where the parliament is expected to debate a resolution on the government's response to Hindu-Muslim riots in the western state of Gujarat.

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee's Hindu nationalist BJP has come under sharp criticism from the opposition, which says the BJP government in Gujarat has turned a blind eye to attacks on the Muslim minority.

The riots, which have left more than 850 people dead, have also destabilized Vajpayee's coalition of some two dozen parties, with several of them openly criticizing the BJP role in Gujarat.

The BJP has taken a beating in recent elections, in February losing in India's largest state of Uttar Pradesh. Since then BJP members, including Vajpayee, have stepped up their hardline rhetoric.

"We're seeing a weakening, a loss of confidence and a hardening of positions by the government," an analyst said.

"Electoral circumstances and internal politics (in Pakistan and India) mean that the situation will remain at an impasse for at least five months."

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