- MOSCOW — Pakistan will respond with "full spectrum of force",
including nuclear, if it is attacked or its vital water flow disrupted,
Pakistan's ambassador here has warned amid tensions between New Delhi and
Islamabad after the Pahalgam terror attack.
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- Muhammad Khalid Jamali made the comments during an
interview with Russia's state-run TASS news agency on Sunday.
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- Warning that Pakistan was prepared to respond to any
aggression, the ambassador said, “We in Pakistan will use the full spectrum of
force, both conventional and nuclear.”
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- Ties between India and Pakistan plummeted following the
April 22 Pahalgam terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir that killed 26 people,
mostly tourists.
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- Jajamali reiterated Islamabad’s position regarding the
Indus Water Treaty, a key agreement between India and Pakistan, which New Delhi
suspended last week as a part of its diplomatic response to the terror attack.
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- “Any attempt to usurp the water of the lower riparian, or
to stop it, or to divert it would be an act of war against Pakistan and would
be responded to with full force, including nuclear,” he said.
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- The envoy, however, urged de-escalation, noting the
potential danger given that both countries possess nuclear weapons.
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- “As the two countries are two nuclear powers, there is
all the more need to de-escalate the tensions,” he said.
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- Pakistan earlier called for “neutral and credible
investigations” into the Kashmir attack. “I think the role of the international
community comes in. And in this regard, we expect that powers like China and
Russia can participate in those investigations,” Jajamali said.
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- "I believe that the root cause of the problem in
Jammu and Kashmir is the right to self-determination for the Kashmiri people,
which was promised to them by the international community through various UN
Security Council resolutions," he claimed.
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- "This needs to be addressed for a permanent,
sustainable and durable peace," he added.
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- When asked whether Pakistan was preparing a formal appeal
to Russia to take part in the investigation into the terrorist attack, the
ambassador said, "We are open [to it]. We want this investigation to be
conducted and this blame game to stop. There are incidents from time to time,
and without addressing the root causes, Pakistan is blamed for this.”
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- He said Moscow has pointed at the need to address the
"root causes" in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
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- "Similarly, when political disputes fester for a
long time, resentment arises and such incidents are likely to occur. It's
always very easy to blame and make someone a scapegoat," he said.
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- Late Sunday evening, Pakistan's Deputy Prime Minister and
Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar held a telephone conversation with Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov seeking Moscow's help in de-escalating tensions between
the two nuclear-armed neighbours.
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- Following the Pahalgam attack, India, among other
punitive actions, announced the suspension of the 1960 Indus Accord, which
governs water sharing between the two countries.
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- Earlier on April 24, Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed
to punish the terrorists involved in the terror attack and their backers.
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- In a high-level meeting with the top defence brass on
April 29, Modi asserted that the armed forces have “complete operational
freedom” to decide on the mode, targets and timing of India’s response to the
terror attack, according to government sources.