Pakistan Lands Jets On Highway, Calls It ‘Routine’ Amid Tensions Over Uri

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Traffic was diverted from the highway to let Pakistan's air force land jets on the road.
Traffic was diverted from the highway to let Pakistan’s air force land jets on the road.

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) — Pakistan’s air force closed a major highway on Thursday to let it practice landing jets on the road, in what it said was routine training not related to heightened tension with India after the attack in Uri.

On Thursday, traffic on Pakistan’s busy main highway between Islamabad, the capital, and the eastern city of Lahore was diverted to an older mountain road during the two-day air force exercise, dubbed High Mark.

“They landed on the road in this, yes. That is something they have been doing for years,” Pakistan Air Force spokesman Commodore Javed Mohammad Ali said. The drill was needed “in case your runways get damaged or they are not available for you,” he added.

The exercise was not ordered in response to recent tensions with India and the timing was a coincidence, he said.

“This exercise, High Mark, is not done overnight just like that,” he said, describing it as “a routine training matter”.

Another security official, however, said the Pakistani military was on high alert in case India decided to retaliate for the Uri attack with cross-border military force.

© Thomson Reuters 2016
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