Though the recent cross-border killings in Kashmir represent the most serious incursion since the 2003 cease-fire, both countries say they don't want further escalation.
Indian policemen in anti-riot gear stand guard behind police barricades during a protest against Pakistan in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Jan. 9. India summoned Pakistan's top diplomat in New Delhi on Wednesday to formally complain about an attack on an Indian army patrol in the disputed territory of Kashmir that killed two soldiers and left their bodies mutilated.
Altaf Qadri/AP
EnlargeIndia?denounced?Pakistan?on Wednesday over a firefight in the disputed territory of?Kashmir?in which two Indian soldiers were killed, but the nuclear-armed rivals both appeared determined to prevent the clash escalating into a full diplomatic crisis.
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India?summoned?Pakistan's envoy in?New Delhi?to lodge a "strong protest," accusing a group of Pakistani soldiers it said had crossed the heavily militarized Line of Control (LoC) in?Kashmir?of "barbaric and inhuman" behavior.
The body of one of the soldiers was found mutilated in a forested area on the side controlled by?India,?Rajesh K. Kalia, spokesman for the?Indian Army's?Northern Command, said. However, he denied Indian media reports that one body had been decapitated and another had its throat slit.
"Regular?Pakistan?troops crossed the Line of Control ... and engaged the Indian troops who were patrolling the sector,"?India's Ministry of External Affairs?said in a statement after?Pakistan's high commissioner to?Indiahad been called in.
"Two Indian soldiers were killed in the attack and their bodies subjected to barbaric and inhuman mutilation."
India's foreign minister sought to cool tensions, however, saying that exhaustive efforts to improve relations could be squandered if the situation was not contained.
"I think it is important in the long term that what has happened should not be escalated,"?Salman Khurshid?told a news conference. "We cannot and must not allow the escalation of any unwholesome event like this."
"We have to be careful that forces ... attempting to derail all the good work that's been done towards normalization (of relations) should not be successful," he added, without elaborating on who such forces might be.
Most serious incident in past 10 years
India?and?Pakistan?have fought three wars since their independence in 1947, two of them over the Himalayan region of?Kashmir, and both are now nuclear-armed powers.
Away from the border, ties had appeared to be improving of late.?Pakistan's cricket team completed a two-week tour of?India?on Sunday, its first visit in five years.
Firing and small skirmishes are common along the 740-km (460-mile) LoC despite a cease-fire that was agreed in 2003.
However, incursions by troops from either side are rare.?Retired Indian army?Brigadier?Gurmeet Kanwal, who previously commanded a brigade on the LoC, said Tuesday's incident - about 600 metres from the de facto border - marked the most serious infiltration since the cease-fire was put in place.
Indian army?officials said cross-border firing broke out hours after the clash but, on Wednesday, the LoC was quiet.
Naveed Chand, a shopkeeper in Chatar village just 2 km from the LoC on the Pakistani side told Reuters by telephone that there had been a pick-up in cross-border firing recently, unusual movements of army trucks and reinforcement of bunkers.
"We think something is up. People in the area are very alarmed," he said.
It was not possible to independently verify events in the remote area, which is closed to journalists on both sides.
Pakistan's foreign ministry denied?India's allegations of an incursion as "baseless and unfounded" and said in a statement that it was prepared for an investigation by a U.N. military observer group into recent cease-fire violations.
Like?New Delhi, it stressed the need to pursue better relations, adding: "Pakistan?is committed to a constructive, sustained, and result-oriented process of engagement with?India."
Propaganda?
Nevertheless, a?Pakistani Army?spokesman described?India's charges as "propaganda" aimed at diverting attention away from an Indian incursion two days earlier in which one Pakistani soldier was killed.?India?denies that its troops crossed over the line during last weekend's incident.
Mushahid Hussain, a Pakistani senator and member of the?Parliamentary Committee on National Security, said the Indian government ? dogged by corruption scandals and facing a tough election as early as this year ? was returning to "the war-like language of the past" for domestic political reasons.
"Pakistan?has its hands full with a full-blown insurgency inside its borders. It doesn't suit Pakistani interests at all to raise the temperature along the LoC," Hussain said.
There was little coverage of the skirmish in Pakistani media, but a succession of commentators voiced fury on Indian news channels and the main opposition party urged the government to expose?Pakistan's actions to the international community.
"Pakistan?can be named and shamed for this brutal attack,"?Bharatiya Janata Party?leader?Arun Jaitley?told reporters.
India?considers the entire?Kashmir?region of snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys an integral part of its territory. Muslim?Pakistan?contests that and demands implementation of a 1948 UN Security Council resolution for a plebiscite to determine the wishes of the mostly Muslim people of?Kashmir.
Some commentators drew parallels between Tuesday's clash and a conflict in 1999 when?Pakistan-backed Islamist infiltrators occupied the heights in Kargil, in the north of Indian?Kashmir.?India?lost hundreds of troops before re-occupying the mountains after fighting that almost triggered a fourth war.
"India's response will be measured but, as a former soldier, I do not rule out a measured military response to teach them a lesson," said retired Brigadier Kanwal. "You cannot tinker with bodies."
(Additional reporting by Mehreen Zahra-Malik and Katharine Houreld in ISLAMABAD and by Sanjeev Miglani, Arup Roychoudhury and Satarupa Bhattacharjya in?NEW DELHI; Writing by John Chalmers; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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