Jawad Iqbal Jawad Iqbal

India and Pakistan could spiral out of control

Residents evacuate their homes near the site of a strike in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Kashmir (Credit: Getty Images)

India and Pakistan – two nuclear armed states – have a history of fighting wars. Tensions have been growing between the two nations after last month’s deadly terror attack in the Indian-administered part of Kashmir, with the drum beat of a deadly military confrontation growing louder by the day. 

On Tuesday night, India an attack on nine sites in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir. The Indian government said its forces launched ‘Operation Sindoor’, hitting ‘terrorist infrastructure’ in locations ‘from where terrorist attacks against India have been planned and directed’. India said its actions ‘have been focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature’. It pointedly said that no Pakistani military facilities have been targeted and that it had demonstrated ‘considerable restraint’ in its selection of targets. 

The Pakistani military confirmed that three locations had been hit by Indian missiles.

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Written by
Jawad Iqbal

Jawad Iqbal is a broadcaster and ex-television news executive. Jawad is a former Visiting Senior Fellow in the Institute of Global Affairs at the LSE

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