Sunday, December 7, 2008

I think a 'REAL HOT LINE' is over due !

Hoax call put
Pakistan on high alert

South Asian regional tensions mounted last week after nuclear-armed Pakistan entered a state of “high alert” after receiving a phone call, now believed to be a hoax, from India’s foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee to Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari the day that terrorist attacks on Mumbai concluded.

The caller allegedly threatened to attack Pakistan if measures were not taken to track down militants associated with the Mumbai terrorist strikes.

On Saturday, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported on the incident: ”Whether it was mere mischief or a sinister move by someone in the Indian external affairs ministry, or the call came from within Pakistan, remains unclear, and is still a matter of investigation. But several political, diplomatic and security sources have confirmed to Dawn that for nearly 24 hours over the weekend the incident continued to send jitters across the world. To some world leaders the probability of an accidental war appeared very high.”

Senior Pakistani government officials confirmed the report and said the matter was under investigation, which involves efforts to trace the origin of the phone call and how it was directed to Mr Zardari.

One senior Pakistani official said Indian officials have denied that the call ever originated from Mr Mukherjee, raising the possibility that the call was a hoax. However, the Pakistani official insisted that the calling number was traced back to Mr Mukherjee’s office in New Delhi.

”We are looking at two possibilities right now. Either it was somebody from the Indian foreign ministry who used the foreign minister’s number to pull a prank or some very sophisticated technology was used to fabricate the calling number” said the official who spoke to the Financial Times on condition of anonymity.

Reporting on the reaction to the phone call, DAWN wrote; ”Intense diplomatic efforts that started late on Friday went on throughout the following day. During this period phone calls were made from Islamabad to some of the top officials and diplomats in Washington, including Condoleezza Rice, and the US Secretary of State called Mr Mukherjee and others in India in a night-long effort to understand what might have gone wrong, and to persuade the two sides to bring down the temperature.”

A senior western diplomat commenting on the report said, the incident prompted Mr Zardari to call Condoleezza Rice, US Secretary of State, to convey Pakistan’s anxiety over worsening security conditions.

Ms Rice then called Mr Mukherjee to inquire about the incident during which Mr Mukherjee categorically denied making the phone call in the first place. The western diplomat also revealed that before Ms Rice’s phone call to Mr Mukherjee, the unknown caller allegedly using the Indian foreign minister’s phone from his office, also called the US secretary of state, but was not put through to speak to her.

”Could this incident have caused a war between India and Pakistan? That is the big fear of an accidental situation coming together” said the western diplomat. ”It seems that standard procedures should have been followed in Pakistan such as someone taking down the Indian telephone number and then returning the call. That obviously did not happen, in what seemed at the time like a building up crisis situation”.

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