New Tweets

[đŸ‡”đŸ‡°] Everything about latest Kashmir attack

G Pakistan Affairs
[đŸ‡”đŸ‡°] Everything about latest Kashmir attack
145
2K
More threads by Saif

If Pakistan fails to respond to blatant Indian aggression like we have witnessed over the last week or so........we will get submitted very quickly in concession.

This is a grave threat to Pakistan gents.

Anybody not understanding the seriousness of the situ is not being serious.

We are supposed to be a nuke power and India has attacked us using sophisticated precision weapons and totally has the upper hand on the escalation ladder.
 
If Pakistan fails to respond to blatant Indian aggression like we have witnessed over the last week or so........we will get submitted very quickly in concession.

This is a grave threat to Pakistan gents.

Anybody not understanding the seriousness of the situ is not being serious.

We are supposed to be a nuke power and India has attacked us using sophisticated precision weapons and totally has the upper hand on the escalation ladder.

Pakistan attacked back harder. International community agrees Pakistan won.

Don't feed the Indian mindset.
 
Pakistan attacked back harder. International community agrees Pakistan won.

Don't feed the Indian mindset.
oh bhai, both AF's pretty much grounded, due to AD threat from either side.

India is using thousands of drones and ballistic/ cruise missiles at the rate of 10 : 1........

Who do you think has more missiles? and far deeper pockets to sustain an escalation?

Do you believe we can sustain a prolonged conflict?
 
Bhai, India also cannot sustain a prolonged war with Pakistan because of China factor. Pakistan is the only country in South Asia which can checkmate India. China will open a second front to annex South Tibet. India can do a jack about it.
Our deterrent is now lost. India can blatantly attack us on the whim.

A lot of myths have been blown to bits over the last 3 years.

Ukraine/ Russia

Iran vs the Zios

And now India/ Pak conflict

Things have been turned on their head in just 3 years. Its like the flood gates have been opened.
 

US wants Pakistan, India to resume direct talks
New Age Desk 15 May, 2025, 00:37

Hours after US president Donald Trump urged India and Pakistan to ‘go out to dinner’ together to resolve their disputes, the State Department said Washington is now focused on encouraging direct communication between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, reports DAWN.com.

Speaking at the Saudi-US investment forum in Riyadh, president Trump highlighted his role in brokering the weekend ceasefire between the two South Asian rivals and urged them to build on this breakthrough.

‘I said, ‘fellas, come on, let’s make a deal. Let’s do some trading. Let’s not trade nuclear missiles, let’s trade the things that you make so beautifully’, Trump said, without clarifying which Indian or Pakistani leaders he had spoken to or when.

‘They’re actually getting along. Maybe we can even get them together, Marco, where they go out and have a nice dinner together,’ he said while addressing his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who accompanied him to Saudi Arabia.

Meanwhile, Pakistan returned a captured border guard to India on Wednesday, in a fresh sign of detente after a ceasefire ended four days of conflict between the nuclear-armed rivals, reports AFP.

The guard was captured a day after an April attack in Indian-administered Kashmir which killed 26 people and sparked tit-for-tat missile, drone and fighter jet attacks.

No group claimed responsibility for the April 22 attack but India blamed Pakistan for backing it. Islamabad rejects the accusations and has called for an independent probe.

‘Purnam Kumar Shaw, who had been in the custody of Pakistan Rangers since 23 April 2025, was handed over to India,’ India’s Border Security Force said in a statement.

The handover was ‘conducted peacefully and in accordance with established protocols,’ it added.

In Washington, the State Department’s principal deputy spokesperson Tommy Piggott told reporters that the United States was now focused on encouraging direct engagement between the two countries.

‘We welcome the ceasefire reached between India and Pakistan this weekend and we commend both prime ministers for choosing the path of peace,’ said Piggott. ‘We also want to encourage direct communication between the parties.’

When asked whether Pakistan had given any commitments on ‘stopping terrorist activities’ that India accuses it of indulging in, Piggott declined to comment, but reiterated Washington’s support for dialogue.

Islamabad categorically rejects such allegations as unfounded and blames India for using them as an excuse to justify its aggression against Pakistan.

‘We have been clear on that. We continue to encourage that direct communication,’ Piggott said. ‘The president has been clear on that and the president has also been in praising both prime ministers for choosing the path for peace and wisdom.’

Responding to a question about the US reaction to India’s refusal to accept a US role in the peace process, Piggott said: ‘I am not going to speculate on that. What I can say is that we encourage direct communication.’

Asked if the US had sent a team to Pakistan following media reports about radiation leaks from some secure nuclear facilities in Pakistan, Piggott replied, ‘I have nothing to preview on that this time.’

When pressed on whether Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s attitude was disappointing for Washington, the spokesperson avoided criticism. ‘What we are happy to see is a ceasefire. That’s what we are happy to see. That’s where our focus remains. We want to see the ceasefire maintained and we want to encourage direct communication,’ he said.

‘Our focus is the ceasefire. Our focus is on encouraging direct communication. That’s where our focus is going to remain. The president has spoken on this.’

Piggott was also asked whether president Trump would deserve the Nobel Peace Prize if he helped resolve the Kashmir dispute.

‘The president is a peacemaker. He values peace. He is also a dealmaker. And he has shown that again, and again, and again,’ Piggott responded. ‘When it comes to solving conflicts, the president wants to solve the conflicts where he can. Stands ready to help.’​
 

Pak FM to visit China on heels of conflict with India
Agence France-Presse . Islamabad 19 May, 2025, 00:03

Pakistan’s foreign minister will make a three-day official visit to China, his office said on Sunday, a little over a week after Islamabad reached a ceasefire with India to end their most serious conflict in decades.

Ishaq Dar, who also holds the portfolio of deputy prime minister, will start his visit on Monday in Beijing where he will hold ‘in-depth discussions’ with Chinese counterpart Wang Yi ‘on the evolving regional situation in South Asia and its implications for peace and stability’, his office said in a statement.

‘The two sides will also review the entire spectrum of Pakistan-China bilateral relations and exchange views on regional and global developments of mutual interest,’ it said.

Dar’s visit to Beijing comes on the heels of a tumultuous couple of weeks, following an April attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in which 26 people were killed.

New Delhi blamed Islamabad for backing the militants it claimed were behind the attack — the deadliest on civilians in Muslim-majority Kashmir in decades. Pakistan denies the charge.

The territory is claimed in full by both India and Pakistan, which have fought several wars over Kashmir since their 1947 independence from British rule.

On May 7, India launched strikes against what it said were ‘terrorist camps’ in Pakistan, kicking off four days of intense tit-for-tat drone, missile and artillery exchanges with Islamabad.

The conflict left more than 70 people, including dozens of civilians, dead on both sides.

Fearing further escalation, global leaders had urged restraint from both sides early on in the conflict, including China which promised to play a ‘constructive role’ — though experts say Beijing had clearly picked a side.

China has been one of Pakistan’s most reliable foreign partners, readily providing financial assistance to bail out its often struggling neighbour.

Dar told parliament on May 7, hours after aerial combat between the two sides, that Islamabad used Chinese jets against India, with Beijing’s ambassador called to his office over the deployment.

‘At 4 am in the morning, the whole Chinese team, led by their ambassador, was present at the foreign office,’ Dar told the parliament.

‘We apprised them about all the developments taken place until that time, and they were very happy,’ he said.

US president Donald Trump announced a surprise truce on May 10, which appears to be holding over a week later.

While Islamabad stated earlier in the week that the ceasefire would last until Sunday, the Indian army said there was no expiry date to the agreement.​
 

Similar threads

Staff online

Members Online

Latest Posts

Back
PKDefense - Recommended Toggle Create