Indian and Pakistani Military Leaders Hero speaks on Monday with the intention of extending a first fire that has stopped the most expansive fighting in decades between the two states with nuclear weapons.
A sensation of normality was based on the return of both sides of its border, two days after a truce mediated by the United States ended its military conflict that increases rapidly.
Securities markets in both countries jumped on the first day of negotiation since the agreement was reached. India announced the resumption of civil flights in about 30 airports in the north of the country, while in Pakistan, the authorities said all airports were open.
However, the situation along the extensive limits of the two countries remained uncertain, with tens of thousands of people still displaced. There were no reports of an important violation on Sunday night, the second night of the high fire. But on Monday, drones and explosions were reported in backgrounds controlled by the Indians.
During most of the last week, the two countries dedicated themselves to an intense struggle that brought cross -border bombings, war of drones and statements on both sides that they had inflicted damage to the military bases of the other.
As asked in the agreement that arrested the armed conflict, the military leaders of both parties discussed on Monday “issues related to continuing with the commitment that both parties should not shoot or initiate the action of Sapy Sadid,” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “” “”.
“It was also agreed that both parties consider immediate measures to guarantee the reduction of borders and areas forward,” the statement said.
On Saturday, President Trump announced that the two parties had agreed to stop the fire with the help of US diplomacy, continuing external mediation patterns when tensions increase between India and Pakistan.
The president again approached the diplomatic efforts of his administration on Monday, saying that he had threatened both nations by pressing them to cease their hostilities.
“I said:” Come on, we will make a lot of exchange with you. Let’s stop it, let’s stop it. If you stop, we are doing trade. If you don’t stop, we are not making any exchange, “Trump said.” Suddenly, they said: “I think we will stop” and have done it. “
The detainee in the fight, said the president, avoided what could have been a nuclear war that would have killed millions of people.
Although the Pakistani side has publicly recognized the American role in the negotiation of the truce, the Indian government has insisted on its statements that only bilaterally reached with Pakistan. In private, Indian officials recognize the role of American diplomacy, but have rejected the suggestions that trade or anything else was used as pressure.
The sensitivity of the Indian government about US participation reflects its efforts for several years to portray its dispute with Pakistan, especially on the territory played by Kashmir, as a small problem that can manage directly.
If the strong man’s prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, was perceived as praise in American pressure for a high fire against a weekly nation, could cost him a political at home. The image of Mr. Modi is based partly on elevating India to an important power that would easily handle the smallest nations in any conflict, and raised the expectations that India would be a decisive blow to Pakistan as tensions increased.
Mr. Modi, in his first speech to the nation from the terrorist attack last month that turned on the confrontation, said on Monday that India had “suspended” his military attacks and made his next steps known later “what kind of attitude of Pakistan.”
The prime minister accused Pakistan of participating in the “nuclear blackmail” and said that India “would attack with precision and decision in the terrorist hiding places that develop under the cover” of that threat.
He described the initial attacks that his army took in Pakistan early on Wednesday, which became a fierce air confrontation, as an “unwavering commitment to justice.”
Mr. Modi said that the assistance of high -level Pakistani military officers at the funerals of the people that India had identified as terrorists and attacked in strikes was evidence of “terrorism sponsored by the State.” The photographs of the funerals showed the Pakistani officers who attended.
The recent conflict was expelled by a terrorist attack that killed 26 people at the end of last month on the Indian side of Kashmir, a territory claimed by both countries. Nueva Delhi blamed the carnage to the groups that said they received the support of Pakistan, an accusation that Islamabad has denied, and promised reprisals.
Two weeks after the massacre, which occurred near the city of Pahalgam, India bombed what he described as terrorist facilities in Pakistan.
The two countries have fought several wars together and have participated in periodic clashes closer to the line that divides Kashmir between them. But the air attacks last week achieved the deepest objectives that India had achieved in continental Pakistan in at least half a century.
Pakistan retaliates shortly after. Although the bombardment of traditional artillery along the border caused the number of civilian casualties of Larst, the confrontation quickly expanded in the heavens, including the intensive use of drones and the so -called shit ammunition to attack each Think military.
There was optimism in financial markets even before Monday’s announcement about continuous military conversations. Pakistani actions shot, with the Karachi 100 index winning almost 9 percent, a record. But trade stopped because the market increased very fast and so much. The markets in India, which has an economy approximately 12 times the size of Pakistan, also jumped and erased the losses of last week.
The return to the normality of those who live along the line that divides Kashmir will be much more difficult.
People were still mourning for the loss of loved ones, with about 20 civilians killed on the Indian side after cross -border bombing days, and about 30 reported dead on the Pakistan side. Tens of thousands remain displaced from the border villages.
“No bombing has tasks placed here after the high fire,” said Narinder Singh, a resident of Poonch, in a backman controlled by India. “But the feeling of fear is still there. Some people are slowly returning to their homes. But still, many people live outside in safe places.”
Suraya Begum, whose family had left his people throughout the so -called control line to seek refuge in a university building in the city of Baramulla, said they would make the frequency with which their lives had turned to cross -border tensions.
“If they are because to fight forever, leave them. But compensate with the earth elsewhere, so that we can live a peaceful life,” he said. “Why should our children become sacrifice lambs for their policy?”
Alex Travelli Reports contributed by New Delhi, Nanda showkat of Jammu and Kashmira controlled by the Indians, and Salman Masood From Islamabad, Pakistan.