Senior military officials from India and Pakistan will speak later on Monday to discuss details of the ceasefire between them on Saturday.
After nearly four days of shelling and air invasion on both sides, a ceasefire between the nuclear-weapon neighbors appears to have been held overnight.
President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire between India and Pakistan on Saturday, saying: "It is time to stop the current aggression, which could result in many deaths and destruction of so many aggression".
Both countries have since stopped hostilities, but said they remained vigilant and warned each other of the consequences of a ceasefire violation.
Tensions are the latest competition among neighbors who fought two wars in Kashmir, a comprehensive but partially managed Jewish region.
Recent hostilities could turn into a mature war, as neither country seems willing to retreat and threaten to escalate if another country does not relax.
Both countries say dozens of people died during the four days of last week’s battle, partly due to de facto shelling near the border.
However, after the ceasefire, two competitors declared military victory.
On May 7, India reported that nine targets within Pakistan and Pakistan-managed Kashmir attacked Kashmir in response to the deadly armed attacks in India-managed Kashmir, killing 26 tourists.
India accused a Pakistani attack group, but Islamabad denied any involvement.
In the days since the first strike, India and Pakistan have accused each other of cross-border shelling and claimed to have shot down rival drones and aircraft in their airspace.
As the conflict escalates, both countries say they attacked rival military bases.
Indian officials reported 11 Pakistani air force bases near the capital Islamabad, including Rawalpindi. India also claimed that during the conflict, Pakistan lost 35-40 people on the control line and the neighbor's air force lost several aircraft.
Pakistan has accepted some Indian projectiles landed on its air base.
The Indian Defense Force also said it attacked nine armed group training facilities in Pakistan and Pakistan-run Kashmir, killing more than 100 militants.
In turn, the Pakistani military claims it targets about 26 military facilities in India, with its drones hovering in Delhi.
India also accepted some Pakistani projectiles landed at its air base.
Pakistan also claims to have shot down five Indian aircraft, including three French storms - India has not yet admitted it, although it says "loss is part of the battle".
Pakistan has denied the claim that an Indian pilot was detained after an Indian plane ejected after it crashed. India also said “all our pilots are back home”.
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