World | Pakistan
Cautious India hopes neighbour's crisis won't rock ties
Some of the most muted international reaction to Pakistan's emergency rule has come from India, reflecting New Delhi's need for stability with a nuclear-armed rival and neighbour amid a fragile peace process.
New Delhi: Some of the most muted international reaction to Pakistan's emergency rule has come from India, reflecting New Delhi's need for stability with a nuclear-armed rival and neighbour amid a fragile peace process.
While the United States said it was "deeply disturbed" by President Pervez Musharraf's imposition of emergency rule - echoing similar condemnations from former colonial power Britain and the Commonwealth - India was far more cautious.
"We regret the difficult times that Pakistan is passing through. We trust that conditions of normalcy will soon return permitting Pakistan's transition to stability and democracy to continue," an Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman said.
Necessary action
Musharraf, who seized power in a bloodless coup in 1999, deployed troops, shut down privately-run television stations and sacked a top judge on Saturday night, saying the action was needed to counter rising militancy and a hostile judiciary.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh consulted with his Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee on the crisis, the Press Trust of India said, but no more details were available.
Washington and many Western allies view Pakistan as a bulwark in the US's "war on terror" after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Pakistan is seen as key to a victory of Western allies against Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.
But for India, the issue is far more about ensuring that any instability in Pakistan does not spill over its own borders and lead to increased militant attacks in Indian-ruled Kashmir or bombings of Indian cities.
Flashpoints
Indian and Pakistan have been involved in talks since 2004 to solve several territorial flashpoints, bringing hope of peace between the two states that have been to war three times and nearly fought each other in 2002.
"India has different priorities than the West," said C. Raja Mohan, a Singapore-based Indian strategic affairs expert.
"India cannot afford the luxury of preaching democracy to a nuclear neighbour. Relations with Pakistan are historically at their best. So why spoil that?"
Infiltration by militants from Pakistan into Indian Kashmir has fallen in the past three years after international pressure on Pakistan to rein in guerrilla groups. Regular exchanges of fire across the line separating India and Pakistan in Kashmir have stopped since late 2003.
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