Pakistan clings to its nukes after embarrassing air battle beating and intense mockery from India

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Pakistan clings to its nukes after embarrassing air battle beating and intense mockery from India

india pakistan kashmir.JPG

REUTERS/Adnan Abidi

People hold national flags and placards as they celebrate after Indian authorities said their jets conducted airstrikes on militant camps in Pakistani territory, in New Delhi, India, February 26, 2019.

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  • India launched airstrikes on Pakistan on Tuesday in response to a terror attack that killed 40 Indian troops, and people across India are celebrated what they saw as vengeance.
  • On the Pakistani side, the airstrikes represent a deeply embarrassing military defeat, even though they claim the airstrikes missed and killed no one.
  • India didn't just bomb the disputed border zone between the two countries, it entered Pakistan's actual air space with virtual impunity.
  • Pakistan's defense minister said Pakistan would have responded with jets, but it was dark, prompting intense mockery in India.
  • But the clash is no joke. Pakistan's military has incredible sway in the country and may now feel forced to retaliate against India, its nuclear rival.
  • With China closely backing Pakistan and the US supporting India, Pakistan and India's rivalry has long been seen as a potential flash point for a global nuclear conflict.

Pakistan on Tuesday hinted at a possible nuclear retaliation to Indian airstrikes in its territory, which came as a great embarrassment to Islamabad, where the politically powerful military apparently failed to do anything about an outright attack from its chief rival.

India bombed Balakot, Pakistan, in response to a terror attack that killed 40 Indian troops in the disputed region of Kashmir, which India and Pakistan both claim but jointly administer.

"What happened is embarrassing," Asfandyar Mir, a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University, told Business Insider.

"The fact that India was able to intrude into Pakistani airspace, not into the disputed region, but into the country, very close to the place where the US raid to kill Osama Bin Laden happened... this is embarrassing for domestic audience," said Mir.

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Pakistan vowed retaliation at a time and place of its choosing, which it said would come as a surprise to India. Pakistan even called a meeting of their National Command Authority, or the group that makes the calls on when to use nuclear weapons, and hinted it was mulling a nuclear strike.

But in other ways, Pakistan's response furthered the shame of the attack.

Pakistan being trolled online

Pakistan air force fighter jet

REUTERS/Stringer

Pakistani air force personnel check a JF-17 Thunder fighter jet ahead of the China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition, or Zhuhai Airshow, in Zhuhai in China's Guangdong province, October 31, 2018.

"Our air force was ready but since it was night they could not assess the damage so they waited and now there is clear direction that if there is any other similar attack, we will respond adequately," Pakistan's defense minister said at a press conference.

Indians on social media latched on to the first part of the quote, which appeared to make an excuse for Pakistan's inaction in face of the attack and viciously mocked Pakistan.

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Maj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor, the spokesperson for Pakistan's military, said that Pakistan's air force did indeed respond and chased away the Indian jets, but the Indian side totally refutes this.

Ghafoor tweeted pictures of cratered patches of dirt and twisted metal which he said was evidence of India's failed attack, but this didn't blunt the gleeful and taunting response from Indians online.

Read more: Pakistan hints at nuking India after cross-border airstrikes roil the white hot feud

Both sides agree that India struck Balakot, but the results of the strike remain unclear and hotly disputed, with India claiming that as many as 300 militants were killed, and Pakistan saying only trees and some houses were hurt.

Around the country, Indians celebrated what they saw as vengeance for the terror attack earlier in February.

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But there's reason to believe that the online mockery could lead to real life bloodshed.

Online mobs and blood lust

pakistan

REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

A Pakistani flag flies on a mast as paramilitary Frontier Corps soldiers talk while guarding at Karachi's District Malir prison, August 23, 2013.

Mir said that there will be intense pressure on Pakistan, both Prime Minister Imran Khan and the military, to strongly respond. In the immediate aftermath of the Indian airstrikes, reports of gunfire across the line of control in Kashmir and fighter jets flying above Islamabad, Pakistan's capital, flooded Twitter.

On Facebook and other social media platforms, both Pakistan and India have fielded intensely bloodthirsty online commenters that constantly mock and antagonize the other side.

"The online militias, they are certainly representative of the sentiment on the ground. In many ways, they are also stoking nationalism," said Mir.

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In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist party faces a looming reelection, and in Pakistan, the military faces pressure from young nationalists to look powerful after being caught off guard.

Mir said that Balakot is close to Abbottabad, the location of the US Navy SEALs raid that killed Osama Bin Laden, which also shamed Pakistan.

'This is the second time Pakistani air defenses were caught sleeping, at least as known to the Pakistani public," said Mir.

Kashmir region 2004

CIA via Wikimedia Commons

Political map of the Kashmir region districts, showing the Pir Panjal range and the Kashmir valley or Vale of Kashmir.

"India is not the US. Pakistan might be discouraged by what the US might do next should it bring down a US aircraft," but "the Pakistani military is likely to see that as more of an insult than an American incursion."

And it matters what Pakistan's military thinks.

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Pakistan's military wields significant political power in ways likely unimaginable to those in the West, where militaries labor to do the bidding of civilian leadership.

Read more: The US military is getting ready to fight underground - here are 10 things it'll need for subterranean combat

"Pakistan has seen four bouts of military rule after the British gave India and Pakistan independence," said Mir.

"In the Pakistani context, the military is the most important political entity. Even at times when there is a civilian government in charge, the military tends to have enormous power," he continued, adding that Pakistan's prime minister cannot act independently and would need the consent of the military before making any bold moves.

Nuclear conflict unleashed

pakistan nuclear weapon

Public Domain

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Not only does Pakistan's military likely feel the need to strike back to save face, India completely unleashed its military to freely conduct war in retaliation for the terror attack.

Normally the US would step in and intervene to urge calm and an end to fighting, but this time around the US has done no such thing.

Mir said that with the US's State Department's Southeast Asia division busy negotiating a peace deal with the Taliban and guiding a summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, there's little focus on this conflict between two nuclear-armed states.

The one notable comment the US did make defended India's right to self-defense while placing the blame on Pakistan for harboring terror groups.

With China closely backing Pakistan and the US supporting India, Pakistan and India's rivalry has long been seen as a potential flash point for a global nuclear conflict.

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