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India, Pakistan DGMO agrees not to cross-country shooting, LOC’s troops are reduced

India and Pakistan agreed on Monday to strictly avoid a shooting at the border. This is the central result of the DGMO-level talks held at 5:00 pm on May 12. The Indian army confirmed that both sides discussed mutual commitment to avoid “any positive and only action against each other”.“It also agreed that both sides consider taking immediate measures to ensure reduced forces from the border and forward areas,” the Army said.
The speech was originally planned for noon, but was rescheduled at night. This was an early understanding after calling directly between the two sides on the weekend.

How a ceasefire becomes

The turning point is Saturday. Pakistan’s military operations director-general said his Indian counterpart, Lieutenant Rajiv Guy, proposed to cease hostilities.

“My communication with PAK DGMO was conducted at 15:35 hours yesterday (Saturday), resulting in the cessation of cross-border shooting and air invasion, both sides were under the influence of May 10 (May 10), and after he proposed that we stop the enemy, we also decided to speak further at 12:00 hrs on May 12 on Sunday.


However, within a few hours after the ceasefire came into effect, the violation was reported.

Ceasefire violation, India responds firmly

Gen Gen Gen Gen Gen said the Pakistani army had not reached a deal for a long time. “However, disappointingly, it was expected that it only took a few hours for the Pakistani army to break the cross-border and the entire Line of Control (LOC) firing, followed by a drone invasion, followed by last night and early morning today (Sunday).

India immediately notified Pakistan through the military hotline. According to Lieutenant Ghagi, India said: “If it is repeated, it will respond enormously to the same act”, adding that the Chief of Staff has been granted the Army Commander action as needed.

The developments come after the deadly terrorist attacks in Jamu and Pahalgam in Kashmir, where 26 civilians were killed. India responded to the May 7 operation Sindoor targeting nine terrorist sites in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi calls the action a “new normal” indicating that India’s security posture has become more severe.

Retaliation has prompted tensions across the LOC to intensify, leading to a ceasefire between the two sides and urgent diplomatic and military participation to manage the consequences.

When India and Pakistan returned to the negotiating table, U.S. President Donald Trump said his administration played a crucial role in preventing escalation.

“I think on Saturday, my government helped a full and immediate ceasefire, a permanent ceasefire between India and Pakistan, ending a dangerous conflict with a lot of nuclear weapons between the two countries,” he said.

Trump added: “I am proud to know that the leadership of India and Pakistan is unwavering, powerful but unwavering, and in both cases it is really the power of having the power, intelligence and perseverance that can fully understand and understand the situation.”

Monday’s talks concluded that there was no announcement of a formal agreement, except for reaffirming restrictions and relegating troops.

But the communication between DGMOs was “completed today” and as both parties evaluated further links on how to move forward.

Whether this fragile calm will remain the same depends not only on military discipline along the LOC, but also on how the political and security agencies of both countries choose to browse in the days ahead.

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