Pak never seriously cracked down on militant groups that attack India: NYT

Press Trust of India  |  New York 

has never seriously cracked down on groups that attack India, a leading US daily has said, warning that the threat of nuclear war between the two nations remains as a to the conflict is unlikely without international pressure.

The paper said the relative calm after last week's confrontation between the two nations is a solution.

"As long as and refuse to deal with their core dispute the future of they face unpredictable, possibly terrifying, consequences," it said.

The current crisis started on February 14, when a suicide bomber killed at least 40 CRPF personnel in Pulwama. Pakistan-based group took responsibility for the attack.

While the JeM is on America's list of terrorist organisations and is formally banned in Pakistan, the group has been protected and armed by the service, the paper said.

launched a counter-terror operation in Balakot on February 26. The next day, retaliated and downed a in an aerial combat and captured its pilot, who was handed over to India on March 1.

The situation could have easily escalated, given that the two countries have fought three wars over 70 years, maintain a near-constant state of military readiness along their border and have little formal government-to-government dialogue.

The next confrontation might end so calmly, the paper said.

The two countries have crossed into dangerous territory, with India attacking Pakistan and engaging in aerial duels. The next confrontation, or the one after that, could be far more unthinkable, it said.

Pakistan has never seriously cracked down on groups that attack India.

Pakistani authorities said they detained 121 members of various armed groups, including a brother of Masood Azhar, the of Jaish-e-Muhammrd, and planned to seize assets of militants on the terrorist list.

But Pakistan has rarely followed through on such promises, the paper said.

Without international pressure, a is unlikely, and the threat of nuclear war remains.

is a major ally and lender to Pakistan, and if it stopped blocking moves in the Security Council to add Azhar to the terrorist list, it would signal to Pakistan that it has to curb the militant groups, the daily said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 08 2019. 17:05 IST