Ex-diplomats, pundits react to Pakistan’s ‘swift, proportionate response’ to Iran but call for de-escalation

Ex-diplomats, pundits react to Pakistan’s ‘swift, proportionate response’ to Iran but call for de-escalation

Former diplomat Abdul Basit urges both nations to find a diplomatic solution, former foreign secretary says Pakistan acted “responsibly”.

International politics and diplomacy experts on Thursday weighed in after Pakistan struck terrorist hideouts in Iran’s Siestan-o-Baluchistan province, less than 48 hours after Iran violated its airspace.

According to a statement by the Foreign Office (FO), Pakistan undertook a series of “highly coordinated and specifically targeted precision military strikes” this morning and killed a number of terrorists during the intelligence-based operation codenamed ‘Marg Bar Sarmachar’.

The strikes came after Iran had laun­ched attacks in Pakistan targeting what it described as bases for the militant group Jaish al-Adl in the border town of Panjgur in Balochistan, prompting strong condemnation from Islamabad, which then proceeded to downgrade its diplomatic ties with the neighbours.

stated, “With Pakistan now having retaliated militarily against Iran, now is the time for third-party mediation to ensure that a sudden but increasingly dangerous crisis doesn’t spiral out of control.”

stated a day before Iran’s “sudden, intense border escalation is set to compel the government to delay the February elections” in Pakistan.

“There’s a mounting realisation that, following yesterday’s unwarranted Iranian assault, the tens of thousands of troops necessary for securing the February 8 elections may no longer be available.”

Dawn correspondent Baqir Sajjad Syed, also a fellow at The Wilson Centre, said that “the recent escalation between Iran and Pakistan seems to be a timely diversion for some, providing a temporary reprieve from public scrutiny”.

treaties on it as well.

She said the strike by Iran was “unpredictable” and Pakistan would have thought about the matter “a lot” before retaliating.

Former senator Mustafa Nawaz Khokhar said Tehran’s attack on Pakistani soil was a “drama to hide cowardice in front of Iranian people.”

“It is a pity that the Iranian rulers chose this path. Severing diplomatic relations is the right step,” he said.

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