"By Aaron Sheldrick
Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari sought to ease tensions with India after a standoff over last month’s terrorist attack on Mumbai raised the prospect of war between the nuclear-armed neighbors.
“The solution to the problem of the region, the solution to the problem of Pakistan, is politics, is dialogue( PLEASE ),” Zardari said live on Geo Television Network at a memorial service for his late wife, former Prime Minister Shaheed Benazir Bhutto.
The attack on Mumbai from Nov. 26 to Nov. 29 brought to a halt five years of reconciliation started after India and Pakistan went to the brink of a fourth war( THAT'S RIGHT. THREE WARS IN 60 YEARS ) since independence. Zardari said he’s committed to fighting terrorist networks that may be trying to force Pakistan’s hand( LET'S HOPE HE IS ).
“We have non-state actors. Yes, they are imposing an agenda on us( AS IN THE MIDDLE EAST ),” Zardari said at the memorial service yesterday. “We ourselves have accepted we have a cancer. We will cure this cancer ourselves.”
Pakistan on Dec. 25 began diverting troops from tribal areas near Afghanistan to the border with India, the Associated Press reported, citing Pakistani intelligence officials. The Pakistan army’s 14th division is being sent to the towns of Kasur and Sialkot, AP said.
The number of troops being redeployed may be as high as 20,000, according to domestic and foreign media reports.
The deployment was a response to a build-up by Indian ground and air forces near the border, the U.K.’s Independent newspaper reported on its Web site, citing Pakistani military and government officials it didn’t identify.
Calming Fears
Pakistan “can’t ignore certain developments on the ground and in the air,” Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told the Independent today.
That said, Pakistan is “pursuing a policy of defusing tensions,” Qureshi was quoted as saying. “We do not want to escalate the situation. Pakistan has no aggressive designs.”
India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence in 1947, two of them over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, divided between the two and claimed by both.
Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Nov. 26 that he had spoken with several foreign ministers, including U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Yang Jiechi of China and Iran’s Manouchehr Mottaki, since Dec. 25 to persuade their governments to ask Pakistan to tackle terrorist groups.
Building Consensus
India has been seeking to build a global consensus on action against terrorism since the Mumbai attack, which killed 164 people. India blamed the assault on “elements” in Pakistan, and Pakistan has asked for evidence to back up that accusation.
“We have indicated to them that there is ample evidence -- from log books to satellite phone records -- that elements from Pakistan were responsible,” Mukherjee said.
India and Saudi Arabia on Nov. 26 called for global coordinated action against terrorism.
“Global terrorism has to be dealt with by joint action among all countries,” Mukherjee said at a briefing in New Delhi with his Saudi Arabian counterpart, Prince Saud al-Faisal. “We agreed that whatever action has to be taken should be taken without delay.”
India’s foreign ministry advised its nationals not to travel to Pakistan following reports that several Indians were arrested in Lahore and Multan and had been accused of being terrorists.
The Indian government said that the detention of its nationals may be the work of organizations outside civilian control, without elaborating.
The U.S. called on both nations to lower tensions.
“We continue to be in close contact with both countries to urge closer cooperation in investigating the Mumbai attacks and in fighting terrorism generally,” White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said in an e-mailed release. “We hope that both sides will avoid taking steps that will unnecessarily raise tensions during these already tense times.”
This is no joke.
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