Diplomatic speeds and cross-border skirmishes protect the fear of a bubble of military escalation.
Tensions between India and Pakistan continue to boil down a week after the fatal attack in India-controlled Kashmir.
Indian authorities have announced the closure of numerous tourist attractions in the region. The region has been claiming by both countries since independence on Tuesday, 1947, saying Pakistan is preparing legal action against the punitive suspension of New Delhi’s important water treaty.
Meanwhile, the fire was exchanged along the Control (LOC), the de facto boundary of 740km (460 miles) separating the Indians of Kashmir from the controlled Pakistan area. Pakistan said it defeated the drone, fearing escalation while nuclear forces bubbled up.
The India-controlled Kashmir government has announced that it has closed 48 of 87 government-approved tourist destinations in the scenic Himalaya region.
The measure was not given a time frame as panic-hit tourists sought an early exit.

Tit-for-tat
India accused Pakistan of encouraging “cross-border terrorism” in Kashmir, the majority of Muslims, following last week’s shootout.
Islamabad has denied any role and calls for neutral investigations.
A series of non-TAT diplomatic measures followed, including visa cancellations and diplomat recalls.
India closed its border with Pakistan and expelled Pakistani citizens. Pakistan announced its border and airspace closures and threatened to abandon the 1972 Shimura Agreement, which normalized some relations between the two countries.
Last week, New Delhi announced it had suspended the Indus Waters Treaty, a 1960 agreement that feeds 80% of Pakistan’s irrigated agriculture.
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In Islamabad, Minister of Law and Judicial State Aqeel Malik said on Tuesday that Pakistan plans to take legal action “at all available legal forums including the World Bank and permanent courts of arbitration.”
He told Reuters that Pakistan could undertake the case to the International Court of Justice for what was called a violation of India’s treaty treaty on the 1960 Vienna Convention.
“Immediate” military invasion
Meanwhile, five consecutive shots were fired along the LOC.
The Indian army said it responded to a fire of small arms that had been “unprovoked” from multiple Pakistani posts around midnight. It gave no further details and did not report any victims.
Pakistan has not confirmed the fire replacement, but the provincial broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported that the military has fired down an unmanned Indian “quadcopter” and called it an airspace violation.
The time of the incident has not been reported. India has not commented yet.
Pakistan’s Defense Minister Kawaja Muhammad Asif told Reuters on Monday that his country is ready for an “immediate” military invasion by India.