Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf yesterday vowed not to initiate war, condemned attacks in India as "terrorist attacks," but promised to maintain his nation's support for what he called Kashmir's "freedom struggle."
"We do not want war. Pakistan will not be the one to initiate war. We want peace in the region," Musharraf said in a televised speech to the nation.
PHOTO: REUTERS
However he vowed continued Pakistani support for an insurgency in Kashmir that has killed more than 60,000 people since it began in 1989 by militants demanding either outright independence for the Himalayan state or union with Islamic Pakistan. Divided between the two South Asian neighbors, Kashmir has been the flashpoint of two previous wars and has today brought the two nuclear neighbors to the brink of war.
"Pakistan will always be with the Kashmiris in their struggle for independence," said Musharraf appearing on television in his army uniform. "We are not the sort of people who will be cowed by our enemies."
He said he has publicly condemned the attacks in December against India's Parliament and this month against an Indian army camp in Indian-ruled Kashmir as "terrorist attacks." He called for international pressure on India to open negotiations, reduce tensions along the border.
He interrupted his Urdu-language speech to briefly speak in English promising the international community not to start a war.
Also in English he said that Pakistan was not allowing cross-border incursions by militants into Indian-ruled Kashmir, a charge that has been leveled by India as well as several world leaders, including US President George W. Bush.
Immediately following Musharraf's speech Indian foreign ministry spokeswoman Nirupama Rao said, "What you see is not what you get as far as Pakistan is concerned."
She refused to elaborate or say more.
Musharraf, meanwhile, said Pakistan has taken "bold steps" referring to his speech of Jan. 12 when he banned five Islamic militant groups.
He accused India of failing to reciprocate.
"Unfortunately we have not seen any positive response from the Indian side. I urge the world community to ask India to move toward normalization of relations," Musharraf said in an English-language plea.
He offered a formula.
He called for a "de-escalation of tensions on the border, initiation of a process of dialogue, cessation of atrocities being perpetuated on the people of Kashmir, allowing international media and aid organization to enter Kashmir and see the situation on the ground."
"Islam is a religion of peace, but if war is thrust upon us, every Muslim is bound to respond in kind. That is the kind of situation we face right now. We are being threatened with war," he said.
"The armed forces are ready to respond, and we are aware of every move that India makes."
This weekend, Pakistan tested two missiles -- a medium-range and a short-range ballistic missile -- both capable of carrying conventional and nuclear warheads.
While Pakistan said the tests had nothing to do with the current situation and India said it wasn't bothered by them, they drew criticism from much of the world.
Musharraf also has come under increasing world pressure to stop cross-border incursions. Bush said that he wanted to see Musharraf make good on his promise to curb militants.
On television yesterday, Musharraf flatly denied cross-border incursions were occurring
Britain's foreign secretary Jack Straw, who is expected in Pakistan later yesterday, also called for an end to cross-border terrorism "in all its guises and disguises" as a first step to defusing the crisis over Kashmir.
At a news conference in Berlin, Straw played down expectations of what outside diplomacy could achieve as he prepared to head to Pakistan and India.
‘A SERIOUS THREAT’: Japan has expressed grave concern over the Strait’s security over the years, which demonstrated Tokyo’s firm support for peace in the area, an official said China’s military drills around Taiwan are “incompatible” with peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Takeshi Iwaya said during a meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi (王毅) on Thursday. “Peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait is important for the international community, including Japan,” Iwaya told Wang during a meeting on the sidelines of the ASEAN-related Foreign Ministers’ Meetings in Kuala Lumpur. “China’s large-scale military drills around Taiwan are incompatible with this,” a statement released by the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday cited Iwaya as saying. The Foreign Ministers’ Meetings are a series of diplomatic
URBAN COMBAT: FIM-92 Stinger shoulder-fired missiles from the US made a rare public appearance during early-morning drills simulating an invasion of the Taipei MRT The ongoing Han Kuang military exercises entered their sixth day yesterday, simulating repelling enemy landings in Penghu County, setting up fortifications in Tainan, laying mines in waters in Kaohsiung and conducting urban combat drills in Taipei. At 5am in Penghu — part of the exercise’s first combat zone — participating units responded to a simulated rapid enemy landing on beaches, combining infantry as well as armored personnel. First Combat Zone Commander Chen Chun-yuan (陳俊源) led the combined armed troops utilizing a variety of weapons systems. Wang Keng-sheng (王鏗勝), the commander in charge of the Penghu Defense Command’s mechanized battalion, said he would give
‘REALISTIC’ APPROACH: The ministry said all the exercises were scenario-based and unscripted to better prepare personnel for real threats and unexpected developments The army’s 21st Artillery Command conducted a short-range air defense drill in Taoyuan yesterday as part of the Han Kuang exercises, using the indigenous Sky Sword II (陸射劍二) missile system for the first time in the exercises. The armed forces have been conducting a series of live-fire and defense drills across multiple regions, simulating responses to a full-scale assault by Chinese forces, the Ministry of National Defense said. The Sky Sword II missile system was rapidly deployed and combat-ready within 15 minutes to defend Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport in a simulated attack, the ministry said. A three-person crew completed setup and
The Philippines is working behind the scenes to enhance its defensive cooperation with Taiwan, the Washington Post said in a report published on Monday. “It would be hiding from the obvious to say that Taiwan’s security will not affect us,” Philippine Secretary of National Defense Gilbert Teodoro Jr told the paper in an interview on Thursday last week. Although there has been no formal change to the Philippines’ diplomatic stance on recognizing Taiwan, Manila is increasingly concerned about Chinese encroachment in the South China Sea, the report said. The number of Chinese vessels in the seas around the Philippines, as well as Chinese