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Why Kashmir Matters           04/25 06:34

   

   NEW DELHI (AP) -- India and Pakistan have intensified their hostilities over 
the hotly contested Kashmir region following a massacre of 26 mostly Indian 
tourists, which New Delhi linked to Pakistan.

   Pakistan denies it was behind Tuesday's attack by gunmen on a group of 
tourists in Kashmir. Both sides have since escalated the tensions by exchanging 
diplomatic and trade sanctions against each other and raising fears of a 
military conflict.

   Here are five reasons why a flare-up between India and Pakistan matters:

   The Kashmir attack can lead to an armed conflict between two neighbors

   Under intense domestic pressure, India has hinted at the possibility of a 
limited military strike on Pakistan in response to what it called the "terror 
attack" with "cross-border links." Pakistan made it clear that it will respond 
militarily to an attack.

   This raises fears that an escalation by any one side can lead to a wider 
war. The last time the two nations came to blows was in 2019, when a suicide 
car bombing killed 40 Indian soldiers in Kashmir.

   In 2021, the sides renewed a ceasefire agreement along their border, which 
has largely held. That relative calm was broken on Thursday after a brief 
exchange of fire between their armies.

   Kashmir is a nuclear flashpoint between the archrivals

   Both India and Pakistan are armed with nuclear weapons. There are fears that 
any conventional war or skirmish between them could potentially turn into a 
nuclear exchange.

   India and Pakistan have fought two major wars, in 1965 and 1971, but in 
1974, India conducted its first nuclear tests, raising the stakes in any 
military conflict. It triggered a nuclear race and Pakistan reached that same 
milestone in 1998.

   Since then, India and Pakistan have had one major border skirmish in 1999 
that killed at least 1,000 combatants. The fighting only stopped after U.S. 
intervened.

   A conflict could drag in China

   India and China are geopolitical rivals whose armies clashed along the 
disputed Himalayan border in 2020. Ties between the Asian giants have improved 
since but they still maintain large numbers of troops on their borders. Their 
borders are also contiguous to Pakistan's, making it the world's only three-way 
nuclear junction.

   Beijing also controls part of the Kashmir region that New Delhi says belong 
to India.

   On the other hand, China is also a main ally of Pakistan and has helped 
advance its missile programs, creating additional military concerns for New 
Delhi. Meanwhile, India maintains strong defence ties with the U.S., which has 
long sought to limit Beijing's rise in the India-Pacific region.

   Experts say any conflict between India and Pakistan is unlikely to stay 
strictly between them, as their strategic partners are likely to get involved.

   Kashmir tensions can lead to a war over water

   In response to the massacre, India suspended a crucial treaty that governs 
the flow of river waters into Pakistan. Pakistan said it would consider any 
attempt to stop the flow of water from India an "act of war."

   Under the Indus Water treaty, India is obliged to let six rivers flow freely 
to Pakistan. If India follows through and restricts the flow, it can have a 
devastating impact on Pakistan's agriculture as it battles acute water 
shortages.

   It's also also a major environmental issue. Water insecurity is a big 
concern in both India and Pakistan due to rapidly growing populations and 
climate change.

   Attacks by militants and rights abuses in Kashmir test world's response

   Rights groups -- including the U.N. -- have blamed New Delhi for rights 
violations including civilian killings and arbitrary arrests in 
Indian-controlled Kashmir as a result of an intense crackdown by Indian forces. 
It has hurt India's human rights record and raised concerns that global powers 
are not doing enough to pressure New Delhi and hold it accountable.

   Militants fighting against Indian rule have also killed scores of civilians, 
including Hindu pilgrims.

   India has used military response against militants as part of its efforts to 
eradicate "terrorism," saying it threatens regional stability.

    

 
 
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