India, Pakistan and blasts
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After US President Donald Trump claimed that Pakistan has been secretively conducting nuclear tests, India has flagged Pakistan’s long history of nuclear proliferation and said any illegal nuclear activity will be in line with Pakistan’s history.
On September 24, security forces opened fire on unarmed protestors opposing the Indian central government’s oppressive rule of the region, killing four and wounding more than 150.
India’s Defense Minister Rajnath Singh warned Pakistan last week against launching any aggression in the Sir Creek sector as it would lead to an Indian response “so strong it would change both history and geography” of the area. In his speech at the ...
When asked about the long-standing dispute between Afghanistan and Pakistan over the Durand Line, Singh reiterated that the issue was a bilateral matter in which India would not interfere.
After Trump's N-test remark, India says 'illegal nuclear activities' in line with Pakistan's history
MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said India has always drawn the attention of the global community to Pakistan's illegal nuclear weapons testing
When the Taliban first seized power in 1996, India refused to recognise their rule. Instead, New Delhi backed the Northern Alliance, the regime’s key opposition group, while closing its embassy in Kabul.
Summary It will be an overestimation of Pakistan’s leverage to believe that Afghanistan, the ‘graveyard of empires’, one that defeated superpowers, will plainly succumb to Pakistan’s whims. Pakistan must
The Pakistani leadership is now convincing its people that India is backing terrorist groups operating against it from Afghan soil. Islamabad’s hypocrisy is obvious: It wants from Kabul what it doesn’t do for Delhi.
As Pakistan continues to close crossings, delay transit routes, and issue threats, it risks losing both economic leverage and diplomatic credibility in a region increasingly turning away from its influence.