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NewsMay 23, 2002

KUPWARA, India -- India warned rival Pakistan on Wednesday that it's not bluffing about a "decisive battle" against terrorism and told its soldiers on the tense Kashmir border to be ready for sacrifice. Army officers responded by declaring the troops were primed for war and prepared to die, and India's navy moved five warships nearer to Pakistani waters as fears of war between the nuclear-armed rivals grew...

By Neelesh Misra, The Associated Press

KUPWARA, India -- India warned rival Pakistan on Wednesday that it's not bluffing about a "decisive battle" against terrorism and told its soldiers on the tense Kashmir border to be ready for sacrifice.

Army officers responded by declaring the troops were primed for war and prepared to die, and India's navy moved five warships nearer to Pakistani waters as fears of war between the nuclear-armed rivals grew.

Cross-border shelling has killed dozens in the past week in divided Kashmir, which both nations claim in its entirety. India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the Himalayan region.

In Islamabad, Pakistan's top military leaders and Cabinet issued a statement endorsing efforts to resolve the dispute through negotiations, but warned that Pakistan was ready "to meet any contingency resolutely and with full force."

"The meeting also called on the international community to impress upon India the dangers inherent in the explosive situation created as a result of Indian belligerence and obduracy," the statement said.

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India says it is being forced to fight a proxy war with Pakistan, which it accuses of training and arming Islamic militants who have been fighting for Kashmir's independence or merger with Muslim Pakistan for 12 years. The militants have staged deadly attacks inside mostly Hindu India.

Militants blamed

Islamabad says it has no control over the militants and provides them only moral, not material, support. In September, Pakistan joined the U.S.-led war on terrorism.

In India, hundreds of soldiers with mine detectors and sniffer dogs patrolled the roads around the army base where Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee addressed more than 600 troops on the cease-fire line dividing Kashmir.

Vajpayee asked the soldiers "to be ready for sacrifice. Your goal should be victory. It's time to fight a decisive battle."

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