India will have 'whole of Kashmir' someday, but not now, as Pakistan not treating people 'very fairly': Top Indian Air Force officer

A top Indian Air Force officer on Wednesday created a sensation by saying there was no plan "at the moment" to capture Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK)  - the part of Kashmir in Pakistani control - but expressed the hope that someday India will have the "whole of Kashmir"

Oct 27, 2021
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Air Officer Commanding in Chief Western Air Command, Air Marshal Amit Dev

A top Indian Air Force officer on Wednesday created a sensation by saying there was no plan "at the moment" to capture Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK)  - the part of Kashmir in Pakistani control - but expressed the hope that someday India will have the "whole of Kashmir". Speaking to reporters at an event here to mark the 75th anniversary of the Indian troops' Budgam landing, Air Officer Commanding in Chief Western Air Command, Air Marshal Amit Dev, also said the people in PoK are not being treated "very fairly" by the Pakistanis.

“...All the activities which were carried out by the Indian Air Force and the Army (on October 27, 1947) resulted in ensuring the freedom of this part of Kashmir. I am sure that someday, the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir will also join this part of Kashmir and we will have the whole of Kashmir in years to come,” he was quoted as saying by PTI news agency.

However, when asked if the force has any plans to capture the PoK, Air Marshal Dev said there was no plan at the moment.

“(The whole of) Kashmir is one, a nation is one. People on both sides have common attachments. Today or tomorrow, history is witness, that nations come together. We do not have a plan at the moment, but, God willing, it will always be there because people in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir are not being treated very fairly by the Pakistanis,” he said.

Indian troops had landed in Kashmir on October 27, 1947, a day after the then Maharaja Hari Singh signed the instrument of accession with India following the Pakistani tribal raids.

He said the IAF faces many challenges, but the basic one is of technology.

“The rate of change of technology is so fast in the world today that we have to keep pace with that. If any nation which is to grow economically has to have a strong military, we must fulfil our obligation to the nation in the years to come...and we are always ready for the challenge,” he said.

 Asked about the drone attacks, Air Marshal Dev said these can inflict minimal damage only.

“We had equipment against it (drone attacks) ready, and it was deployed here as well. We are now increasing the deployment by further procurement. Drone challenge is a small challenge and we will be able to deal with that challenge as and when it comes,” he said.

He said celebrating the 75 years of Budgam landing was a historic occasion.

“After the instrument of accession was signed, we moved in our troops quickly and Srinagar airfield was saved and thereafter we launched further offensive and pushed the Pakistani military, which came as Kabalis (tribals), further back.

"I am sure if the UN had not intervened, perhaps, the entire Kashmir would have been ours,” he said.

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