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Le Monde
Le Monde
24 Apr 2025


Images Le Monde.fr

India hit Pakistan with a raft of mostly symbolic diplomatic measures on Thursday, April 24, after a deadly attack it blames on its arch-rival, but analysts warn a military response may yet come.

New Delhi suspended a water-sharing treaty, announced the closure of the main land border crossing with Pakistan, downgraded diplomatic ties and withdrew visas for Pakistanis on Wednesday night, just over 24 hours after gunmen killed 26 men in Indian-administered Kashmir.

And then on Thursday, New Delhi said it had suspended visa services "with immediate effect" and ordered all Pakistani nationals to leave the country, with the exception of remaining diplomats.

Experts say that a military response may still be in the pipeline, with some speculating that a response may come within days while others say weeks.

New Delhi accuses Islamabad of supporting "cross-border terrorism" – claims Pakistan denies – and police in Kashmir identified two Pakistani nationals among the three alleged gunmen. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed on Thursday to punish all those responsible "to the ends of the Earth."

Relations between the nuclear-armed neighbors have sunk to their lowest level in years and some fear New Delhi's diplomatic moves may just be an opening salvo. Pakistan held a rare national security meeting on Thursday after New Delhi's punitive diplomatic measures.

The killings have shocked India because they were a dramatic shift targeting civilians and the area's vital tourism industry, rather than more common smaller-scale attacks against Indian security forces. Hindu pilgrims have been targeted in the past, but direct attacks on the tourist trade that underpins much of the local economy are much rarer.

For New Delhi, the 3.5 million tourists who it says visited Kashmir in 2024 – mostly domestic visitors – illustrated what officials called "normalcy and peace" returning to the troubled region after a massive crackdown in 2019. The 2019 crackdown followed Modi's decision to cancel Kashmir's partial autonomy and impose direct control from New Delhi.

The worst attack in recent years in Indian-run Kashmir was at Pulwama in 2019, when insurgents rammed a car packed with explosives into a police convoy, killing 40 and wounding 35. Indian fighter jets carried out air strikes on Pakistani territory 12 days later, a raid that came against the backdrop of campaigning for India's general elections.

The now-suspended Indus Water Treaty shares critical water between the two countries – but is more a paper agreement and India has no major means of restricting flow downstream to Pakistan. The closure of the border crossing at the Attari-Wagah frontier is also significant, although there are rarely large numbers who cross.

The border crossing hosts a hugely popular evening ritual, where crowds gather to cheer on soldiers as they goose-step in a chest-puffing theatrical show that has largely endured through innumerable diplomatic flare-ups.

Le Monde with AFP