Sudha Ramachandran
Terrorists opened fire at Pahalgam in India’s Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) on April 22, killing at least 26 tourists, including two foreign nationals and two locals, and injuring several others. The attack is being described as the deadliest terrorist attack in the Kashmir valley since the February 2019 suicide bombing by Jaish-e-Mohammed militants at Pulwama, which killed 40 paramilitary personnel.
“This attack is much larger than anything we’ve seen directed at civilians in recent years,” J&K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said.
“Those behind this heinous act will be brought to justice…they will not be spared!” India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted on X.
A senior commander of the Indian Army’s Northern Command told The Diplomat that the “terrorists who slaughtered unarmed civilians at Pahalgam were either Pakistani nationals or backed by Pakistan.” India should not “shrink away from air strikes or even sending Special Forces across the border into Pakistan,” he said, stressing that “a forceful response” was necessary to show that “terrorism against the Indian people will not go unanswered.”