Pakistan fires retaliatory strike at Iran, stoking regional tension
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[January 18, 2024]
By Asif Shahzad and Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Pakistan said it used killer drones and rockets to
strike separatist Baloch militants inside Iran on Thursday, in a
retaliatory strike two days after Tehran said it attacked the bases of
another group within Pakistani territory.
Iranian media said several missiles hit a village in the
Sistan-Baluchestan province that borders Pakistan, killing at least nine
people, including four children.
The neighbors have had rocky ties in the past, but the strikes are the
highest-profile cross-border intrusions in recent years and come amid
growing worries about instability in the Middle East since the war
between Israel and Hamas erupted on Oct. 7.
"A number of terrorists were killed during the intelligence-based
operation," Pakistan's foreign ministry said, describing it as a "series
of highly coordinated and specifically targeted precision military
strikes against terrorist hideouts".
"The sole objective of today's act was in pursuit of Pakistan's own
security and national interest, which is paramount and cannot be
compromised," the ministry added.
A senior Pakistani security official told Reuters the military was on
"extremely" high alert and would meet any "misadventure" from the
Iranian side forcefully.
Tehran strongly condemned the strikes, saying civilians were killed, and
summoned Pakistan's charge d'affaires, its most senior diplomat in Iran,
to give an explanation.
"The information received indicates that four children, three women and
two men, who were foreign nationals, have been killed in the explosion
that occurred in a village," Iran's Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi told
state TV.
In Islamabad, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Pakistan's caretaker
Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-haq Kakar would cut short a visit to the World
Economic Forum in Davos and return home.
"The precision strikes were carried out using killer drones, rockets,
loitering munitions and stand-off weapons," a Pakistani military
statement said. It said the targets were bases used by the Baloch
Liberation Front (BLF) and the associated Baloch Liberation Army.
Iran said on Tuesday it had hit targets inside Pakistan that it alleged
were bases of Jaish al Adl (JAA). All the targeted groups are ethnically
Baloch, but it was not clear if JAA has links with the other two.
Nuclear-armed Pakistan said civilians were hit and two children killed,
warning of consequences for which Tehran would be responsible.
Islamabad recalled its ambassador from Iran on Wednesday in protest
against a "blatant breach" of its sovereignty.
ESCALATION FEARS
Iran had been flexing its muscles in the region, even before its
cross-border incursion into Pakistan.
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The flag of Iran is seen over its consulate building, with
Pakistan's flag in the foreground, after the Pakistani foreign
ministry said the country conducted strikes inside Iran targeting
separatist militants, two days after Tehran said it attacked
Israel-linked militant bases inside Pakistani territory, in Karachi,
Pakistan January 18, 2024. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro
It launched strikes on Syria against what Tehran said were Islamic
State sites and Iraq, where it said it had struck an Israeli
espionage centre. Baghdad recalled its ambassador from Tehran.
The neighbors had appeared to be improving ties, with Iran's Foreign
Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and Pakistan's Kakar meeting at
Davos this week, before the Iranian strikes on Pakistan.
Pakistan's comments after its retaliatory strikes signal a desire to
keep the row contained, but analysts warned it could get out of
hand.
"Iran's motivation for attacking Pakistan remains opaque but in
light of broader Iranian behavior in the region it can escalate,"
Asfandyr Mir, a senior expert on South Asia security at the U.S.
Institute of Peace, told Reuters.
"What will cause anxiety in Tehran is that Pakistan has crossed a
line by hitting inside Iranian territory, a threshold that even the
U.S. and Israel have been careful to not breach."
Khwaja Asif, Pakistan's defense minister until August, said the
action was retaliatory.
"A measured response has been given and it was important," he told
Geo TV. "There should be ongoing efforts on the side that this
doesn't escalate."
Pakistan's international bonds fell after the strikes. Longer-dated
bonds slipped as much as 1.3 cents in early trading though they
later trimmed losses, according to Tradeweb data..
The targeted militant groups operate in an area that includes
Pakistan's southwestern province of Balochistan and Iran's
southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province. Both are restive,
mineral-rich and largely underdeveloped.
The BLF, which Islamabad targeted inside Iran, is waging an armed
insurgency against the Pakistani state, including attacks against
Chinese citizens and investments in Balochistan.
The Jaish al Adl, which Iran targeted, is also an ethnic militant
group, but with Sunni Islamist leanings that primarily Shi'ite Iran
sees as a threat.
The group has carried out attacks in Iran against its powerful
Revolutionary Guard Corps.
(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi, Charlotte Greenfield and
Ariba Shahid; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez and Ros Russell)
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