The terror attack in Pahalgam has once again drenched Indian soil in the blood of innocents. Twenty-five Indian citizens and one Nepali tourist—unarmed, unsuspecting, on vacation—slaughtered in cold blood amid the serenity of Baisaran meadows. Their only crime? Being on Indian land, enjoying its beauty and peace. This is not just a terror attack—it is an assault on the soul of a nation. And the trail of this savagery leads unmistakably, as it always has, to one habitual offender: Pakistan.
It is nothing short of nauseating that while Indian families are still counting their dead, the Pakistani establishment—military and civilian alike—is not only denying its role but spinning outrageous conspiracy theories, calling the massacre a “political drama” staged by India for electoral gain. This level of cruelty, combined with delusion, exposes a deep rot within the Pakistani state. These are not the words of a responsible neighbor—they are the gutter-level tactics of a collapsing regime desperate to shift blame from the blood on its own hands.
Pakistan's so-called Prime Minister, Shahbaz Sharif, a man whose political career has been lubricated with the fuel of extremism, dares to threaten India with retaliation if strong action is taken. Retaliation? Against whom? Against a sovereign nation exercising its right to defend its people from the cowards you’ve trained, funded, and unleashed? This is not diplomacy—it is thuggery in a blazer. Shahbaz is not a statesman; he is a scoundrel in denial, presiding over a failed state with delusions of grandeur and a death wish.
And let’s not forget the man behind the uniforms—the “very stupid” army chief of Pakistan, who seems to believe that sponsoring terrorism gives him geopolitical relevance. The truth is quite the opposite. Every IED you plant, every terrorist you arm, and every lie you peddle only digs your grave deeper. Pakistan’s military elite lives in a fantasy where proxy war equals strategy. In reality, it is the slow, methodical suicide of a nation that never learned from its history.
What lessons has Pakistan actually learned from its own humiliations? Clearly, none. The Kargil War, launched in arrogance and ended in disgrace, should have taught you that India is not a nation that tolerates betrayal. Instead of learning humility, you celebrated martyrs who were nothing but pawns in a failed military misadventure. Then came Pulwama in 2019—another brutal attack, another wave of tears in India. But you weren’t prepared for Balakot, were you? Indian jets crossed the border and struck deep inside your territory, destroying the Jaish-e-Mohammed terror camp without so much as scratching a civilian. That air strike was not just a reply—it was a lesson in precision, planning, and political will. But Pakistan, as always, chose ignorance over introspection.
Now, you peddle the lie that Pahalgam was a false flag operation. How pathetic. How predictably vile. Even as Indian agencies conduct thorough investigations, even as global intelligence aligns with the truth of cross-border terrorism, Pakistan pushes its usual narrative. There is no moral floor too low for your establishment to sink through.
India, however, has moved past the phase of empty warnings. The Cabinet Committee on Security, under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has taken unprecedented measures: holding the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance, suspending visa services for Pakistani nationals, expelling diplomats, and closing diplomatic doors until your rogue state shuts down its terror factories for good. These are not symbolic steps—they are signals of a new doctrine. One that says: there will be no talks, no trade, and no tolerance for terror.
The time has come for the world to choose sides. No country, however strategically convenient, can afford to remain neutral when a state openly nurtures terrorism. Pakistan has now crossed every line. The fiction of it being a victim of terrorism has been blown to bits—this is a terror-exporting enterprise masquerading as a nation. Its leaders are not victims—they are godfathers of bloodshed.
To Pakistan: your empty threats do not shake this nation. Your tantrums, your propaganda, your proxies—they have all failed before, and they will fail again. Learn from the fire of Kargil, the thunder of Balakot, and the tightening diplomatic noose around your rogue regime. Or continue digging your own grave, one terrorist at a time. India will mourn its dead, but it will not forget. And it will never forgive.
Let history record this moment not just as another attack, but as the turning point when India said: enough. No more tears without retribution. No more lies without exposure. No more attacks without decisive, unforgiving consequences.