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India launches strike against Pakistan in wake of tourist massacre

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    Welcome to the brief.
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    I'm Jim Sciutto in New York.
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    We begin early today
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    with breaking news,
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    India launching a military operation
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    targeting what it calls
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    terrorist infrastructure inside Pakistan
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    and Pakistan administered Kashmir.
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    Those are the sounds of explosions.
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    During those strikes,
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    India says it struck nine targets,
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    adding that none of them are Pakistani
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    military facilities.
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    A Pakistani military
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    spokesperson says the country
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    will respond to those attacks,
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    adding that at least
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    three people have been killed
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    in the Indian strikes.
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    This comes after gunmen killed twenty six people
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    in Indian administered
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    Kashmir last month.
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    India blamed Pakistan for those attacks.
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    Nic Robertson is live now in Islamabad,
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    and it's worth reminding our viewers
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    that these are two nuclear
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    armed nations
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    that have fired at each other before.
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    Tell us what the situation is
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    now and concerns about escalation now.
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    There's a real concern about escalation.
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    Pakistan vowed that if India attacked
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    that they would respond.
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    That was part of their military doctrine.
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    They believe,
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    and I've been speaking over the past
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    few days with very senior, very senior
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    security officials here.
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    And they believe
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    that this incident inside
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    Indian controlled
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    Kashmir, where twenty six civilians were killed,
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    that India blamed on Pakistan,
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    that Pakistan denied,
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    they believe that this had now come up.
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    The relations with India
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    had now come to a moment,
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    a defining moment
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    where Pakistan
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    needs to take a definitive stand
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    because India has threatened
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    to cut off water supplies coming down
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    three major rivers.
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    Vital existential
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    security officials describe
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    the water from those rivers.
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    So this is the sort of context to why
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    that this is at a moment of extreme
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    potential escalation.
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    Pakistani security
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    officials are saying that they are
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    right now
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    that Air Force right now is in the
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    in the throes of delivering
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    what they describe as a crushing blow
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    to India as a response for this strike.
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    Previously, when I've spoken
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    with Pakistani officials
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    over the past few days,
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    they've said that
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    if India's retaliatory strike,
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    which they thought was coming.
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    They said if it just came in
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    Pakistan administered Kashmir,
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    that would be something
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    that would be more easily tolerable
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    than striking
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    Pakistan proper, if you will.
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    At least two of the strikes
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    we understand this evening
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    and we're getting
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    these early details
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    are in Pakistan proper.
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    This tells me, from what
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    the officials have been speaking about,
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    that this will demand
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    from the Pakistani side
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    a much higher level of response.
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    Again, this speaks to the potential
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    for escalation.
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    How does India respond to this?
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    One of those strikes in Muridke inside
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    Pakistan proper was literally
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    just about twenty miles from the border
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    with India.
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    So for their fighter jets,
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    if that's what it was
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    to come over and strike,
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    that was a relatively easy operation.
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    However,
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    if these
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    strikes have been on the audible,
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    if you will, outskirts of Islamabad.
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    Our cameraman here with me, Javid,
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    his house is about an hour
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    from where we are
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    in the center of Islamabad.
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    His house shook.
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    There were two loud explosions,
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    he said,
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    and his house shook
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    from those explosions.
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    So that gives you an idea
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    how close some of the strikes
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    have been to Islamabad,
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    perhaps about fifty, sixty, seventy kilometres away.
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    The other explosions
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    I was describing that have happened
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    elsewhere in Pakistan
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    have also been near
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    the major city of Lahore,
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    the sort of very outer reaches of that.
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    So again,
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    these are very strong signals,
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    if you will, that the
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    that the Indian military
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    is sending to the Pakistani government.
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    Again, it speaks
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    to the potential for escalation,
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    and we have to wait and see what
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    Pakistan's response is, what it's been.
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    They describe it as crushing.
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    We don't have details yet.
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    And what and and therefore
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    what India may do after that. Jim.
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    Nic,
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    I wonder, given that India's strikes
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    and this is notable to your point, struck
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    both inside
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    Pakistan controlled
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    Kashmir and inside Pakistan proper.
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    Is it reasonable to expect
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    that crushing blow,
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    as Pakistani officials are describing
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    it might do the same in kind
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    that is strike inside
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    Indian administered Kashmir,
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    but also perhaps inside India itself?
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    I think there's a genuine
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    potential for that.
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    And the military here
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    have released pictures
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    of some of the victims
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    of the overnight attack from India.
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    And the first assessment of the Pakistani
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    military here
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    is that
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    they only have civilian casualties.
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    And some of the images they released show
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    women and children,
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    bloodied and, inside a hospital.
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    So again,
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    that the fact that women and children
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    have been injured, beyond, military age
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    males is going to,
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    if you will, ratchet up
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    the potential for response now
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    and the Pakistan's military
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    is describing the casualties
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    that they've seen so far
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    as civilian casualties.
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    it's unclear to me whether Pakistan
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    would strike back at military targets
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    or if they would strike back beyond that.
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    if they strike back at military targets,
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    there's a potential
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    the escalation doesn't,
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    doesn't get out of hand.
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    But this is
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    the tensions have been hugely high
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    that that Pakistani
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    security officials
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    believe this is an existential moment.
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    The fact that the water to the country
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    that that that powers
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    a lot of the electricity generation
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    here is absolutely vital,
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    is vital for agriculture.
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    They feel
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    that is an existential issue
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    and therefore their response
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    was going to be accordingly strong
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    from that perspective.
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    it's it's very unclear to me
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    where it will go from here,
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    but the language, has been very,
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    very clear if you track it.
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    And I've been coming here for about
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    well over twenty five years.
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    I first came here
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    when Pakistan and India were fighting
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    another one of their major skirmishes,
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    which killed thousands of troops
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    high in the Himalayan mountains
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    inside of Kashmir.
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    The,
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    the the Kargil battle
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    that lasted several months.
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    The language has become much harder
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    and tougher in Pakistan
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    from the military since then.
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    This is an army, remember,
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    that has been fighting an insurgency
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    on their western border
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    that has actually become
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    increasingly ferocious
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    as the security situation
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    in Afghanistan
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    is deteriorated
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    and Islamist
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    militants have used Afghanistan as a base
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    and attacked into Pakistan with ferocity
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    that the army here over the past
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    couple of decades has become
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    tougher and stronger
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    militarily in their ethos,
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    in their outlook,
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    and one can even say in that leadership.
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    So there is a very strong
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    and toughened
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    military from the Pakistan's perspective,
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    but also from that
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    the way the leadership,
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    evaluates
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    the battlespace
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    and relation with neighbors.
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    It's quite and military terms.
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    It's a tough leadership right now.
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    And, Nick, drawing on your experience
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    of previous high points in tensions,
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    just personally,
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    I remember being in India and Pakistan
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    some twenty years ago in the two-thousands
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    when there was concern,
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    that there might be an escalation
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    even to a nuclear exchange.
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    granted, just concern.
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    And of course, that didn't come to be
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    but place this current standoff
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    in recent historical context in terms
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    of how severe the tensions are today.
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    To give
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    it a sort of
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    I'll try to give it a simple context here,
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    you have a tougher
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    and, if you will, more forward
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    leaning military.
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    You have a military that,
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    in the estimation
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    of most Pakistani civilians,
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    has a big influence
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    in the running of the country.
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    So there's that perspective.
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    it's a tougher,
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    more forward leaning,
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    more robust outlook.
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    And national security decisions
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    would reflect that,
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    that this, that this tension
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    has been growing,
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    as you say, is unresolved for seventy five years
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    since the dispute over
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    Kashmir left
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    unresolved in nineteen forty seven after the, British,
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    empire shot,
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    you know, basically divided
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    into two countries, Pakistan and India.
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    Pakistan, of course, Muslim
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    majority India, Hindu majority
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    they fought three major wars,
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    in in the intervening period,
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    seventy one was one of the biggest,
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    and various skirmishes
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    as recently as two thousand nineteen
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    and more subsequently.
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    But in the, in the, in the outlook of, of
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    of where the situation is,
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    it is
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    the fact that India has decided
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    to shut off water from these three
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    major rivers
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    that feed Pakistan's agriculture.
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    Therefore, economy, therefore,
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    to to more than two hundred million population
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    and power generation,
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    which is vital,
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    particularly in the summer
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    when it gets extremely hot,
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    it's needed for air conditioning
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    running industry.
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    So these these are existential issues
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    for Pakistan at the moment.
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    And that's I think,
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    that will underpin the thinking
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    and has been expressed to me
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    by very senior security officials here
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    that the water issue is key.
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    And I think just to give a little bit
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    of additional background on the water,
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    this is something
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    that was being litigated
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    in courts in recent months.
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    And the Pakistani perception is
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    that India had been looking
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    for a legal way
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    to abrogate the terms
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    of that Indus water
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    Treaty, signed in nineteen sixty,
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    had been looking for a legal way
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    to do that in recent months,
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    and had taken this particular
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    killing of twenty six civilians as a rationale
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    and reason to immediately
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    jump to that position.
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    So this is something that Pakistan
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    has seen coming,
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    and therefore they believe that this is
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    this is not just a sudden decision
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    by India.
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    It's something that pushing
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    for brewing for some time.
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    Nic Robertson, thanks so much.
Title:
India launches strike against Pakistan in wake of tourist massacre
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Video Language:
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Duration:
10:34

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