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India Says It ‘Accidentally’ Fired a Missile Into Pakistan

A “technical malfunction” led to India accidentally firing off a missile into Pakistan earlier this week.

A “technical malfunction” led to India accidentally firing off a missile that landed in Pakistan earlier this week, the Defense Ministry said in a statement. 

“A technical malfunction led to the accidental firing of a missile,” the statement from India’s Ministry of Defence said, adding the incident occurred Wednesday during “routine maintenance.” An inquiry had been ordered into the accident.

Pakistan’s military had said an “unarmed supersonic missile” from India violated its airspace in the eastern province of Punjab but caused no casualties. Islamabad had protested the violation in the area of Mian Channu in Khanewal district in eastern Punjab province on Wednesday. 

India Says It ‘Accidentally’ Fired a Missile Into Pakistan

The Pakistani air force tracked the flight path of the missile from its “point of origin near Sirsa in India,” military spokesman Major General Babar Iftikhar told reporters in the northern city of Rawalpindi. “The flight path of this object endangered many domestic and international passenger flights both in Indian and Pakistani air space as well as human life and property on ground.”

Sirsa, in India’s Haryana state, is a garrison town. 

“This is unheard of between nuclear-armed states,” said Happymon Jacob, professor at the School of International Studies at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University and author of several books on India and Pakistan. “The good thing is the two nuclear-armed states have handled the situation with maturity.”

Islamabad on Friday summoned India’s Charge d’Affaires to convey “strong condemnation of this blatant violation of Pakistani airspace in contravention of the established international norms and Aviation safety protocols,” according to a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The incident is unusual because New Delhi test fires missiles in the Bay of Bengal and not on its western borders. 

Relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbors have been hostile since both gained independence from British rule in 1947, and Muslim-majority Pakistan was created. Their tensions center on the border region of Kashmir, an area in the Himalayas claimed in full — and ruled in part — by both. They’ve fought two of their three wars over control of the region.

Violence flares often, as it did in 2019 when a terrorist attack in India led to the most serious military escalation in more than a decade. 

A suicide bomber killed 40 Indian paramilitary police in Indian-controlled Kashmir. New Delhi responded with its first air strikes on Pakistani soil since 1971, which led to an aerial dogfight. Tensions eased when Pakistan returned a captured Indian pilot.

All formal dialog between the two sides has ceased since the attack.

“This could be a good opportunity and a starting point for both countries to resume dialog,” Jacob said.

New Delhi and Islamabad have an agreement in place to notify each other ahead of flight tests of ballistic missiles and military exercises.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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