
Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999
VANCOUVER — A British Columbia researcher in South Asian affairs said Thursday that concerns about the current India and Pakistan tensions are justified, given that the region has not seen conflicts this intense in more than 25 years.
M.V. Ramana, professor at University of B.C.’s school of public policy and global affairs, said the last time there was a realistic risk of nuclear weapons being used was the conflict between the two sides in the Kargil region of Kashmir in 1999.
Ramana said the difference between then and now is that in 1999 the United States brokered an end to hostilities, but the current White House administration has not shown similar diplomatic priorities.
“The last time there was such a serious war over Kargil, the conflict was ultimately resolved when the then-prime minister of Pakistan Nawaz Sharif came to Washington and met with president Bill Clinton,” Ramana said. “Clinton evidently showed him the proof that the U.S. intelligence had gathered about Pakistani activities, and Nawaz Sharif had to go back and stop the military from doing whatever it was doing.”