Pakistan Warns of Strong Response to Any Attack on Anniversary of Clash with India
US and international analysts say the 2025 clash exposed new escalation paths, with water disputes and miscalculation raising the risk of a faster crisis.
- On Thursday, Pakistan's military marked the anniversary of the 2025 conflict with India, warning that any attack will be met with "greater strength, precision and resolve" than previously demonstrated.
- President Donald Trump's claims of brokering the 2025 ceasefire fueled Indian unease, which the International Institute for Strategic Studies noted complicates Washington's ability to mediate future crises effectively.
- US scholar Elizabeth Threlkeld warns that future conflicts will involve "deeper strikes, shorter timelines, and new domains," as India and Pakistan use lessons from the last exchange to exploit advantages.
- India placed the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty "in abeyance" following the 2025 attack, while Islamabad warned that disrupting water flows "will be considered as an Act of War."
- A report by the Centre for Strategic and Contemporary Research warns limited nuclear exchange could trigger "nuclear cooling," potentially causing a "nuclear famine" that would "cool, dry, and darken the earth for decades.
24 Articles
24 Articles
Pakistan's armed forces today warned that they will respond firmly to any possible attack, on the occasion of the anniversary of the four-day conflict with neighbouring India last year. Any hostile intention against Pakistan will be fought with more force, precision and determination than what India witnessed during the May 2025 conflict, to which Islamabad gave the name of "Marka-e-Haq" or "Battle of Truth." Pakistan and India exchanged retalia…
Pakistan warns of strong response to any attack on anniversary of clash with India
Pakistan’s military warns it will respond strongly to any attack as it marks the anniversary of last year’s conflict with India.
US Think Tanks flag rising risk in India–Pakistan tensions
WASHINGTON: A growing number of international analysts and policy experts are warning that any future conflict between nuclear-armed neighbours Pakistan and India could be more dangerous, faster moving, and significantly harder for global powers to contain. The assessment comes nearly one year after the brief but intense May 2025 confrontation between the two countries, which involved missile strikes, drones, and air operations without a ground …
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