
Pakistan signals potential retaliation for India air strikes
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said it reserves the right to retaliate after India launched targeted strikes, signaling a potential further escalation in hostilities between the nuclear-armed rivals following last month's deadly Kashmir attacks.
Just hours after India hit nine targets in Pakistan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's office said in a statement that the country "reserves the right to respond, in self-defense, at a time, place, and manner of its choosing.'
"The Armed Forces of Pakistan have duly been authorised to undertake corresponding actions,' the statement, issued after the National Security Committee meeting, added.
Islamabad's response is likely to intensify tensions in a region already unsettled by the April 22 militant attacks in India's Jammu and Kashmir, which left 26 civilians dead.
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday (May 7) called the situation "so terrible' when asked about it during White House event, adding "I want to see them work it out.'
"They've gone tit-for-tat, so hopefully they can stop now,' Trump said. "We get along with both the countries very well, good relationships with both, and I want to see it stop. And if I can do anything to help, I will be there.'
India said in a statement early Wednesday that it conducted "a precise and restrained response' that was "designed to be non-escalatory in nature.' The strikes were the deepest breach of Pakistani territory since the 1971 war.
New Delhi said it only targeted "known terror camps' and hit no Pakistani civilian, economic or military targets. Pakistan's army said 31 civilians were killed in the strikes by India. Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the move an "act of war.'
For now, there is little clarity on how Pakistan will respond. The last time the two sides came close to an all-out war was in 2019, after a suicide bomber killed 40 members of India's security forces.
India blamed Pakistan and responded about two weeks later with its first airstrikes on Pakistani soil since 1971.
Pakistan retaliated by shooting down an Indian jet and arresting the pilot, who was later released. Tensions died down soon afterward.
Pakistan's army said Wednesday it shot down Indian jets - including three Rafales, a MiG-29, and an SU-30 - following the strike. At a New Delhi briefing, Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri detailed the April militant attack and investigation but did not address Pakistan's claim.
During a television address late Wednesday, Sharif said that Pakistani and Indian jets engaged in an hour-long dog fight along the border. "India now must face consequences of the mistake it committed,' he said.
Also on Wednesday, Pakistan International Airlines said in a message that the country's airspace has been reopened.
India struck Pakistan beyond the disputed Kashmir territory, hitting seven locations - Bahawalpur, Muridke, Tehra Kalan, Sialkot, Bhimber, Kotli, Muzaffarabad - according to government officials from both countries.
The action so far mirrors previous incidents, indicating a reluctance by the two sides to escalate the conflict, Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, resident senior fellow at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
"Things can go out of control, spin out of control,' she said. "That's something that the political leadership on both sides are mindful of. But if you look at their repeated conflicts over the last three decades since both countries went nuclear in 1998, both sides have shown restraint.'
Indian stocks closed slightly higher after swinging between gains and losses during the day. The rupee weakened 0.5% against the dollar and yields on the benchmark bond fell. Stocks pared decline in Pakistan.
The Indian National Congress, the country's main opposition party, backed the military action, but refrained from calling for more strikes.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he is closely monitoring the rising tensions, while the President Donald Trump, speaking in the Oval Office, called the situation "a shame.'
"They've been fighting for a long time,' Trump said. "I just hope it ends very quickly.'
The Indian Army on Wednesday said it engaged in cross-border firing with Pakistan's forces, using heavy caliber weapons. At least three Indian civilians have been killed so far in the firing, it added.
Ties between the nuclear-armed South Asian rivals have rapidly deteriorated in the wake of the Kashmir attack, which India has called an act of terrorism.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government had accused Pakistan of involvement and vowed to punish those responsible. Pakistan has denied any links to the attacks.
India called its military strike "Operation Sindoor,' a reference to the sacred vermilion powder married Hindu women wear along their hairline. Survivors of the April 22 attack said that men were shot while their wives and children watched.
Tensions had also escalated following the Kashmir attack after India suspended a long-standing Indus Waters Treaty, with Pakistan saying earlier in the day that India has almost entirely stopped the flow of water across the border through the Chenab river, which is crucial for farm irrigation.
India and Pakistan are two of the world's most acrimonious neighbors, and the long-running tensions between them center on the border region of Kashmir, an area in the Himalayas claimed in full - and ruled in part - by both.
New Delhi, for decades, has been frustrated by what it sees as the Pakistani military's support for terror groups that strike inside its territory.
Skirmishes in the border areas have continued in the past few days and both nations took steps to show their operational readiness.
Pakistan conducted surface-to-surface missile tests this week, highlighting its military might and India ordered mock drills across several states to ensure preparedness amid the standoff.
Since achieving independence from Britain in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought several times over the disputed Himalayan region.
The most recent prolonged fighting occurred in 1999, when Pakistani troops infiltrated Kargil, an Indian-controlled district in Kashmir.
That lasted for several months until Pakistani forces withdrew from locations on the Line of Control, the de facto border. - Bloomberg
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Trump says China will supply rare earths in ‘done' trade deal
President Donald Trump says the US is 'getting a total of 55% tariffs, China is getting 10%' in a social media post. - Photo: Reuters WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said a trade framework with China has been completed, with Beijing supplying rare earths and magnets 'UP FRONT' and the US allowing Chinese students into its colleges and universities. The United States and China will maintain tariffs at their current, lower levels following negotiations between the two nations this week in London, Trump said on Wednesday (June 11). He said the deal is subject to final approval by him and Chinese President Xi Jinping. 'OUR DEAL WITH CHINA IS DONE, SUBJECT TO FINAL APPROVAL WITH PRESIDENT XI AND ME,' Trump posted on social media. 'WE ARE GETTING A TOTAL OF 55% TARIFFS, CHINA IS GETTING 10%. RELATIONSHIP IS EXCELLENT!' A White House official said the agreement allows the US to charge a 55 per cent tariff on imported Chinese goods. This includes a 10 per cent baseline 'reciprocal' tariff, a 20 per cent tariff for fentanyl trafficking and a 25 per cent tariff reflecting pre-existing tariffs. China would charge a 10 per cent tariff on US imports, the official said. In a later post, Trump said Xi and he 'are going to work closely together to open up China to American Trade. This would be a great WIN for both countries!!!' His post suggested China may have to restart rare earth shipments before the US agrees to lower export controls on key technology. And his comments left doubt about whether Beijing could negotiate tariff rates even lower. 'FULL MAGNETS, AND ANY NECESSARY RARE EARTHS, WILL BE SUPPLIED, UP FRONT, BY CHINA. LIKEWISE, WE WILL PROVIDE TO CHINA WHAT WAS AGREED TO, INCLUDING CHINESE STUDENTS USING OUR COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES (WHICH HAS ALWAYS BEEN GOOD WITH ME!),' Trump said. US and Chinese officials said on June 10 they agreed on a framework to get their trade truce back on track and remove China's export restrictions on rare earths while offering little sign of a durable resolution to longstanding trade tensions. At the end of two days of intense negotiations in London, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters the framework deal puts 'meat on the bones' of an agreement reached in May in Geneva to ease bilateral retaliatory tariffs that reached crushing triple-digit levels The Geneva deal faltered over China's curbs on critical minerals exports, prompting the Trump administration to respond with export controls of its own preventing shipments of semiconductor design software, aircraft and other goods to China. Trump's shifting tariff policies have roiled global markets, sparked congestion and confusion in major ports and cost companies tens of billions of dollars in lost sales and higher costs. - Reuters, Bloomberg


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Deal ‘is done', says Trump, as China and US trade truce gets back on track after London talks
BEIJING: China and the United States agreed to revive a fragile trade truce after two days of talks in London, further defusing tensions between the two geopolitical rivals. US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday (June 11) that the deal with China 'is done' and that the relationship was 'excellent'. Hours earlier, Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng, who led the negotiating delegation in London, called on the US to 'stay true to your words', and 'demonstrate good faith in keeping promises'. The agreement, which concluded close to midnight on June 10 in London, followed a roller coaster of rising and easing tensions over non-tariff measures, after both sides agreed in May in Geneva to a 90-day truce that sharply lowered tariffs on each other's goods. The main sticking points since May were Beijing's restrictions on rare earth exports to the US and Washington's curbs on the export of chip design technology to China. In a Truth Social post, Trump said full magnets, along with any necessary rare earth minerals, will be supplied upfront by China. In return, the US will provide to China 'what was agreed to', including allowing Chinese students to attend colleges and universities in the US, which he noted 'has always been good with me!'. Separately, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters that the 'framework' reached in London puts 'meat on the bones' of the Geneva agreement, adding that it will still need approval from both leaders. He said Chinese restrictions on rare earth minerals and magnets and some of the recent US export restrictions would be removed 'in a balanced way' but did not provide details. China's Vice-Commerce Minister Li Chenggang told reporters after the talks that both countries had agreed on a framework to implement the consensus that Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump had reached after a June 5 phone call, as well as May's trade truce. He described the talks as in-depth, professional, rational and frank. 'The progress achieved at the London talks is beneficial to enhancing trust between the two countries, advancing the healthy and stable development of China-US economic ties, as well as provide positive energy to the global economic development,' Li said. Analysts saw the latest talks as positive. Professor Wu Xinbo, director of the Centre for American Studies at Shanghai's Fudan University, said he expects the US to roll back the non-tariff measures threatened or imposed on China after the Geneva talks, such as revoking visas of Chinese students studying in the US. 'As for the Chinese side, it may accelerate the process of rare earth exports to help resolve the urgent needs of the Americans,' he said. The May agreement was derailed on June 1 when the US accused China of 'slow-rolling' licences for exports of rare earths, which are critical in the production of cars, chips and other products. China dominates the world's rare earth supply chain, accounting for nearly 70 per cent of the global mining output and processing about 90 per cent of the total supply – a trump card Beijing has cultivated for decades. However, economist Bert Hofman noted that China's delay in rare earth export licences was partly due to 'bureaucratic inertia'. 'The process was cumbersome and brought issues for industries around the world, not just for the US. So it was not specifically targeted at US companies,' he said. Washington, meanwhile, activated its own levers on China. On May 29, it announced the revocation of visas for Chinese students and issued export control guidelines for AI chips, as well as effectively halting sales of chip design software to China. Chinese tech firms that design chips rely on such foreign software, known as electronic design automation. China's Ministry of Commerce on June 2 criticised these measures as discriminatory and accused the US of violating the consensus of the Geneva talks. Just as all the signs pointed to the breakdown of the truce, the June 5 call between Xi and Trump was widely seen as having reset fraught relations. This was followed on June 7 by China's Ministry of Commerce's announcement that it had approved a number of applications for rare earth exports, and will continue to strengthen the approval process for such applications. Even as the London talks were ongoing, Beijing strategically underscored its resilience. In a front-page interview on the official People's Daily on June 10, Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei discussed China's technology and research capabilities, particularly in chips. The Chinese telecommunications equipment giant has emerged as a national champion for areas such as AI chips called the Ascend processors, which Washington has recently warned other countries against using. Asked how he feels about Huawei being under a blockade, Ren said: 'Don't think about the difficulties – just do it, one step at a time.' - The Straits Times/ANN


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Trump's FAA pick vows to hold Boeing accountable on quality
NEW YORK, June 11 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Wednesday vowed to hold Boeing Co. accountable for the quality of its jets as the U.S. plane maker works to produce its cash cow 737 Max aircraft at higher rates. "If confirmed, airline executive Bryan Bedford will be tasked with making decisions on how to proceed with Boeing, which the FAA is still closely monitoring following a midair mishap last year that exposed quality lapses at the company's factories," reported Bloomberg News about the development. Bedford told U.S. senators during a hearing in Washington that he wants to hold "Boeing accountable to deliver a high-quality product." He said he aims to ensure the plane maker is listening to its workforce and backed the use of data, such as defect rates, to determine if the quality and supply chain issues at Boeing have been addressed. Boeing in recent weeks has begun producing 737 Max jets near the 38-per-month cap imposed by the FAA after last year's incident, which involved a door-size panel detaching from a Max plane shortly after takeoff.