Indian Prime minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee termed the massacre "a most inhuman and brutal carnage". Hundreds of army personnel and their family members held candlelight prayers on Friday night in memory of those killed in one of the worst ever terrorist strikes in Jammu and Kashmir, in May 2002.
Jaswant Singh, then-Minister for External Affairs, writes in his book
A Call To Honour – In Service of Emergent India that the Kaluchak incident was the last straw that almost led to war between India and Pakistan (see
2001-2002 India-Pakistan standoff), and was the closest that Pakistan and India came to war. Indian Union Minister of State for External Affairs
Omar Abdullah blamed Pakistan for this massacre and argued for escalating the response against Pakistan, citing the "sheer barbarity" of the attack. Chief Minister of
Jammu and Kashmir Farooq Abdullah also blamed Pakistani intruders, calling them "animals." Members of
Parliament of India unanimously blamed Pakistan for this attack. On 18 May 2002, India expelled Pakistan's Ambassador Ashraf Jehangir Qazi. Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) decided to place the paramilitary forces and Coast Guard under the command of the Army and Navy. Reportedly American officials told NYT that India is taking the steps needed to go to war. ==International reactions==