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[🇵🇰] Everything about latest Kashmir attack

G Pakistan Affairs
[🇵🇰] Everything about latest Kashmir attack
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Short Summary: Monitoring Pakistani and Indian responses to latest Kashmir attack
@Guru Dutt ji

shor bhot hai, dono side k bandar full uchal kood macha rahe hain

everything ko fistfull of salt k saath hi liya jaye

unless someone knows andar ki baat, but then that should also not be spoken about

mainstream media and even youtube etc pe to bhot hi gutter level coverage hai, twitter and forums etc pe bhi full bakwas chal ri dono side ki

ekdum sandstorm sa aa gaya hai, gaadi park kar do, sheeshey upar kar ke, full... n95 mask bhi laga lo
 

Pakistan's powerful strikes forced India to seek US mediation, reveals American journalist
Nic Robertson discloses how Pakistan’s decisive response forced India to retreat under pressure, paving way for ceasefire
By Web Desk
May 10, 2025

1746971597650.png

Pakistan's Army men launching a missile during Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos, amid tensions with India, on May 10, 2025. — Screengrab via PTV
  • Pakistan's missile barrage shocked Indian military command.​
  • Ceasefire followed intense global diplomatic mediation.​
  • Water dispute remains unresolved, says CNN journalist.​

Hours after New Delhi and Islamabad agreed to ceasefire after mediation from US President Donald Trump, CNN journalist Nic Robertson revealed that Pakistan’s powerful retaliatory strikes in response to Indian aggression pushed India into an urgent retreat, leading to a ceasefire.

"When India attacked three Pakistani airbases, Pakistan responded with a relentless, massive barrage of missiles and rockets... into Indian military facilities, airbases, and weapons storage sites," Robertson said while speaking to CNN.

"That really put India on the back foot — they didn’t know what had happened," he added.

The latest escalation in the decades-old Pakistan-India rivalry began on May 7 when at least 31 civilians, including children, were killed in an unprovoked Indian cross-border attack. In retaliation, Pakistan downed five IAF fighter jets, including three Rafale, and dozens of drones.

During the escalation, India sent drones into Pakistani territory, with the military shooting down nearly 80, including Israeli-made IAI Heron — medium-altitude, long-endurance — unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

Earlier on Friday night, India launched multiple missile attacks on Pakistani airbases, including the Noor Khan, Murid, and Shorkot airbases, which were fired from aircraft, according to Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR), Lieutenant General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry.

In response, Pakistan launched "Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos" against India early on Saturday, targeting multiple military bases, including a missile storage site in northern India.

Subsequently, President Donald Trump said that India and Pakistan had agreed to a "full and immediate ceasefire" after a fourth day of strikes and counter-strikes against each other's military installations.

"After a long night of talks mediated by the United States, I am pleased to announce that India and Pakistan have agreed to a FULL AND IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE. Congratulations to both Countries on using Common Sense and Great Intelligence," Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

Robertson, while taking to CNN today, cited a source who was present during high-level negotiations, revealing that Pakistan was sort of on a "military pause" to give a window for diplomacy. "What I understand from this source is that that was blown out of the window when India attacked three airbases," he added.

In response, the journalist added, Pakistan unleashed its full military capability, prompting New Delhi to seek immediate mediation through US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Saudi Arabia, and Turkish officials.

Despite multiple flare-ups throughout the day, he said the ceasefire was finally brokered after intense international diplomatic pressure. "The ceasefire was described by sources as a now or never moment," he added.

The CNN journalist also noted that water rights remain a critical issue for Pakistan moving forward.

"The key issue for Pakistan going forward is water," Robertson said, quoting a source. "But for now, this is a ceasefire — everything will work out from there."​
 

India forced to negotiate after Pakistani attacks: US journalist Nic Robertson

'Pakistan retaliated with massive and relentless barrage of missiles'

Samaa TV
May 10, 2025

1746971836272.png


CNN’s international correspondent Nic Robertson reported that it was India who reached out to the United States to help de-escalate tensions after Pakistan launched a missile offensive, catching India off guard.

Speaking on-air, Robertson said: “I was speaking to a source who was literally in the room — it included US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who, I was told, played a significant role in facilitating the ceasefire that was achieved just about an hour ago. This had been in the works for perhaps the last 48 hours. As we've been reporting, Pakistan had entered a sort of military pause, creating a window for diplomacy. However, this fell apart early this morning when India launched attacks on three airbases, one of them near the capital.”

According to Robertson’s source, Pakistan retaliated with a massive and relentless barrage of missiles and rockets, targeting Indian military facilities, airbases, and weapons storage sites.

“It was only in the last few hours before the ceasefire that there was a sufficient pause for both sides to agree it was real. Enough diplomacy and pressure had been applied to bring them to the table,” Robertson explained.

He added that a key unresolved issue for Pakistan is water access, as India has cut off supplies from three vital rivers originating in the Kashmir mountains, which Pakistan considers existential to its survival.

“The source said this is a ceasefire for now — if everything works out. But tensions remain extremely high. From their perspective, they’ve been up all night. There was a sense that if diplomacy had failed, the situation could have spiralled into something far worse. It was now or never.”​
 

India admits it suffered losses during Pakistan clashes​

Story by Samaan Lateef
• 10h•
3 min read

An Indian paramilitary soldier stands guard on the bank of Dal lake in Srinagar - Yawar Nazir/Getty Images

An Indian paramilitary soldier stands guard on the bank of Dal lake in Srinagar - Yawar Nazir/Getty Images

India has admitted for the first time that it suffered losses during recent clashes with Pakistan.

Speaking at a press conference in New Delhi on Sunday, an Indian Air Force marshal said the losses were a normal consequence of military operations but did not clarify whether he was referring to aircraft, equipment, or personnel.

The two countries agreed to a full ceasefire on Saturday, four days after India launched air strikes on nine suspected terror locations in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

Days of cross-border military strikes preceded the ceasefire – which Donald Trump, the US president, claimed he brokered – marking the most significant military confrontation between the two rivals in decades.

“We are in a combat scenario, there will be losses,” Air Marshal AK Bharti said on Sunday. “The question you must ask is whether we achieved our objective of dismantling terrorist infrastructure. The answer is a thumping yes.”

Pakistani officials claimed that its air force shot down multiple Indian fighter jets, including three Rafale aircraft, an Su-30, and a MiG-29.

India has refused to confirm or deny those claims.

A French intelligence source confirmed to CNN that at least one Rafale had been lost.

Two US officials also told Reuters that a top Chinese-made Pakistani fighter plane shot down at least two Indian military aircraft on May 7, marking a major milestone for Beijing’s advanced fighter jet.

If confirmed, the downing of Rafale aircraft would be embarrassing for India, given that the jets were purchased as part of a high-profile defence deal and are viewed as a cornerstone of its strategic air capabilities.

Mr Bharti on Sunday continued to insist that damage by Pakistan was “minimal”, which involved Islamabad launching a series of drone strikes.

“These came in waves over our civilian areas and military installations. All of them were successfully intercepted. While a few did manage to land, the damage they caused was minimal,” he said on Sunday.

Mr Bharti also said that India had sent a clear message that aggression would not be tolerated, adding: “All our pilots are back home.”
 
4 tr in nominal terms and 17 tr in ppp which is rising at 7 % in real terms and 11% in market value. In PPP market value, we add 2 tr USD every year in our economy.
Bhai it is this lopsided economic imbalance which basically is the deciding factor in any India/ Pak match up.

India just has a clear advantage here.
 

Indian military warns Pakistan against ceasefire violations
REUTERS
Published :
May 11, 2025 23:53
Updated :
May 11, 2025 23:53

1747008221924.png

Air Marshal AK Bharti, Lieutenant General Rajiv Ghai, Vice Admiral AN Pramod and Major General SS Sharda attend a press briefing at the National Media Centre in New Delhi, India, May 11, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Priyanshu Singh

The Indian military sent a “hotline message” to Pakistan on Sunday about violations of a ceasefire agreed this week and informed it of New Delhi’s intent to respond if it was repeated, a top Indian army officer said.

India’s Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) was speaking as a fragile 24-hour-old ceasefire appeared to be holding after both sides blamed the other for initial violations on Saturday night.

The truce announced on Saturday followed four days of intense fighting between the nuclear-armed neighbours. In the worst fighting in nearly three decades, they fired missiles and drones at each other’s military installations, killing almost 70 people.

Diplomacy and pressure from the United States helped secure the ceasefire deal when it seemed that the conflict was spiralling alarmingly. But within hours of its coming into force, artillery fire was witnessed in Indian Kashmir, the centre of much of last week’s fighting.

Blasts from air-defence systems boomed in cities near the border under a blackout, similar to those heard during the previous two evenings, according to local authorities, residents and Reuters witnesses.

“Sometimes, these understandings take time to fructify, manifest on the ground,” Lieutenant General Rajiv Ghai, the Indian DGMO, told a media briefing, referring to the truce. “The (Indian) armed forces were on a very very high alert (yesterday) and continue to be in that state.”

The Indian army chief had given a mandate to its commanders to deal with “violations of any kind” from across the borders in the best way they deem fit, Ghai added.

He said his Pakistani counterpart called him on Saturday afternoon and proposed the two countries “cease hostilities” and urgently requested for a ceasefire.

There was no immediate response to the Indian comments from Pakistan. Late on Saturday, the Pakistani foreign ministry had said that it was committed to the truce agreement and blamed India for the violations.

U.S. President Donald Trump announced the ceasefire on Saturday, saying it was reached after talks mediated by Washington.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said India and Pakistan had also agreed to start talks on “a broad set of issues at a neutral site”.

While Islamabad has thanked Washington for facilitating the ceasefire and welcomed Trump’s offer to mediate on the Kashmir dispute with India, New Delhi has not commented on U.S. involvement in the truce or talks at a neutral site.

India maintains that disputes with Pakistan have to be resolved directly by the two countries and rejects any third party involvement.

On Sunday, Trump praised the leaders of both countries for agreeing to halt the aggression and said he would “substantially” increase trade with them.

Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan each rule a part of Kashmir but claim it in full, and have twice gone to war over the Himalayan region.

India blames Pakistan for an insurgency in its part of the territory, but Pakistan says it provides only moral, political and diplomatic support to Kashmiri separatists.

PICKING UP THE PIECES

Among those most affected by the fighting were residents on either side of the border, many of whom fled their homes when the fighting began on Wednesday, two weeks after a deadly attack in Indian Kashmir’s Pahalgam that India said was backed by Islamabad.

Pakistan denied the accusation.

In the Indian border city of Amritsar, home to the Golden Temple revered by Sikhs, people returned to the streets on Sunday morning after a siren sounded to signal a return to normal activities following the tension of recent days.

“Ever since the terrorists attacked people in Pahalgam, we have been shutting our shops very early and there was an uncertainty. I am happy that at least there will be no bloodshed on both sides,” said Satvir Singh Alhuwalia, 48, a shopkeeper in the city.

In some border areas, however, people were asked not to return home just yet. In the Indian Kashmir city of Baramulla, authorities warned residents to stay away due to the threat posed by unexploded munitions.

“People here are hosting us well but just as a bird feels at peace in its own nest, we also feel comfortable only in our own homes, even if they have been damaged,” said Azam Chaudhry, 55, who fled his home in the Pakistani town of Khuiratta and has now been told to wait until Monday before returning.

In Indian Kashmir’s Uri, a key power plant that was damaged in a Pakistani drone attack is still under repair.

“The project has suffered minor damage ... We have stopped generation as the transmission line has been damaged,” said an official from state-run NHPC, India’s biggest hydropower company, who did not want to be identified.​
 
The crux here is dat Indias attacked Pakistan on a made up provocation, fully aware that we are at our weakest currently. Both economically and militarily and also socially.

Now, tbvf......it will be a miracle if we come out of this alive as a nation.

Most Pakistanis don't or fail to acknowledge the severe imbalance in a match up with India.

Its not the 1990's gents.......please wake up!
 
Bhai we can take pride in muslim struggle whatever but dat don't mean we are behind terrorism no?......There is zero link between pehelgam and Pakistan!

Bajwa Singh Ranjith got told to de-link us from India and Kashmir more than 5 years ago now.

sjsadkjasdjnkasdnkj asdjnkajsd
Bhai we are in an existential struggle with India atm. This escalation has hurt us very badly. There is no denying this and there are very few Pakistanis out there who would be as frank as I am.

We have suffered a lot more than India in this skirmish.

The crux here is dat Indias attacked Pakistan on a made up provocation, fully aware that we are at our weakest currently. Both economically and militarily and also socially.

Now, tbvf......it will be a miracle if we come out of this alive as a nation.

Most Pakistanis don't or fail to acknowledge the severe imbalance in a match up with India.

Its not the 1990's gents.......please wake up!

@Krishna with Flute
 

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