
India's advice to Pakistan on nuclear threat: 'There will be painful consequences as demonstrated recently'
Taking a strong note of Pakistan's recent threatening on use of nuclear power, India on Thursday warned the Pakistani leadership that any 'misadventure' will have 'painful consequences'. Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal referenced reports regarding 'war-mongering' by Pakistan against India.
He further added, 'Pakistan would be well-advised to temper its rhetoric as any misadventure will have painful consequences, as was demonstrated recently.' Jaiswal was referring to Operation Sindoor
What Munir had threatened?
His comments came at the backdrop of many reports where Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir was quoted issuing a nuclear threat to India. During his visit to the US, Munir apparently threatened that it would 'take half the world down' if faced with an 'existential threat' from India. The remarks were the first nuclear threats known to have ever been delivered from US soil against a third country. Munir had also threatened to destroy India's infrastructure on the Indus water channels, which could impede water flow to Pakistan, and said that the water source is not 'Indians' family property'.
'We will wait for India to build a dam, and when it does so, phir das missile sey faarigh kar dengey [we will destroy it with 10 missiles]…The Indus River is not the Indians' family property. Humein missilon ki kami nahin hai, al-hamdulillah [we have no shortage of missiles, Praise be to God],' Munir reportedly said.
On the upcoming meeting between Putin and Trump
MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal says, 'We welcome the understanding reached between the United States and the Russian Federation for a meeting in Alaska on 15th August…PM Modi has said before on several occasions that this is not an era of war. India endorses the upcoming summit…'
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Indian Express
21 minutes ago
- Indian Express
PM Modi's address to the nation on Independence Day: Atmanirbharta for a Viksit Bharat
This grand festival of Independence is a celebration of the 140 crore resolutions of our people. This festival of Independence is a moment of collective achievements, a moment of pride, and our hearts are filled with joy. 'Har Ghar Tiranga' is visible, whether from the deserts, the Himalayan peaks, the seashores, or densely populated regions and everywhere there is one echo, one cheer: The praise of our motherland, dearer to us than life itself. Friends, I feel great pride that I have the opportunity to salute the brave warriors of Operation Sindoor from the ramparts of the Red Fort. Our courageous soldiers punished the enemies beyond anything they could have imagined. On April 22, terrorists crossed the border and committed a massacre in Pahalgam. The entire nation was filled with outrage, and the whole world was shocked. Operation Sindoor was the expression of that outrage. After the events on the 22nd, we gave our army complete freedom — let them decide the strategy, choose the targets, and select the timing. Our army accomplished something that had not happened in decades. Penetrating hundreds of kilometres into enemy territory, they reduced terrorist headquarters to dust. Imagine if we were not self-reliant, could we have executed Operation Sindoor with such swiftness? We would have been plagued by worries over who might supply us, whether or not we would get the required equipment, and so on. The results we see today are the outcome of our consistent mission over the past 10 years towards self-reliance in the field of defence. None can deny that the 21st century is a technology-driven century. When we speak of various dimensions of technology, I wish to draw your attention to semiconductors. I do not stand here to criticise any person or government. But it is equally important for the youth of our country to know. In our country, files related to semiconductors started moving 50-60 years ago. The idea of a semiconductor factory began then. My young friends will be shocked to know that today, semiconductors have become a global force — but 50-60 years ago, the idea was stalled, delayed and shelved. The conception of semiconductors was aborted. We lost 50-60 years. Today, we have freed ourselves from that burden and advanced the work on semiconductors in mission mode. Six different semiconductor units are taking shape on the ground, and we have already given the green signal to four new units. We all know that we are dependent on many countries for petrol, diesel, and gas. We are spending lakhs of crores of rupees to procure them. It is essential to make the country self-reliant in energy. We took up this resolve, and in the last 11 years, solar energy has seen a thirty-fold increase. We are building new dams to expand hydropower so that we may obtain clean energy. With Mission Green Hydrogen, Bharat is today investing thousands of crores of rupees. In the field of nuclear energy, 10 new reactors are progressing rapidly. By 2047, when the nation will complete 100 years of independence — the year we have set as the target for achieving the goal of a Viksit Bharat — we are moving forward with the resolve to increase our nuclear energy capacity more than tenfold. Today, the National Manufacturing Mission is progressing at great speed. There is always some tool or component that comes from our country's MSMEs in the making of some of the biggest products globally. But we want to move towards a path of comprehensive and integrated development. That is why we must strengthen their capabilities. I had once said from the Red Fort — Zero Defect, Zero Effect. Today, I want to reiterate that if we want the world to recognise our strength in the global market, we must constantly scale new heights in quality. The world accepts quality. Our quality must be the best. Those who lived by the mantra of an independent Bharat gave us freedom. That generation dedicated itself to a free Bharat; this generation must take bold new steps for a prosperous Bharat. That is why I keep urging again and again, and I want to tell all the influencers of the country — help me in spreading this mantra. I appeal to all political parties, politicians, everyone: Come, this is not the agenda of any one political party. Bharat belongs to all of us. Together, let us make 'Vocal for Local' the mantra of every citizen's life. I want to appeal to every small trader and shopkeeper, you too have a responsibility. In our childhood, we used to see shops simply labelled as 'Ghee Shop,' but over time, people began writing 'Pure Ghee Shop'. In the same way, I want traders and shopkeepers across the country to put up boards saying: 'Swadeshi goods sold here'. Let us take pride in Swadeshi. We should use it not out of compulsion, but with strength, for our own strength and if needed, even to compel others to use it. That should be our power. This should be our guiding mantra. This nation is built by the toil of crores of people — by sages, saints, scientists, teachers, farmers, soldiers, workers, labourers. Contributions come from individuals and from institutions alike. Today, with great pride, I wish to mention one such institution. One hundred years ago, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh was founded. These 100 years of service to the nation constitute a proud and golden chapter. With the resolve of nation-building through character-building, with the aim of serving Maa Bharati, the swayamsevaks have, for a century, dedicated their lives to the welfare of the motherland. In a sense, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is the world's largest NGO. Today, from the ramparts of the Red Fort, I salute all the swayamsevaks who have contributed to this century-long journey of national service. The nation takes pride in this grand and dedicated journey of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which will continue to inspire us. I wish to warn the nation of a grave concern and challenge. As part of a deliberate conspiracy, the demography of the country is being altered. These infiltrators are snatching away the livelihoods of our youth. These infiltrators are targeting our sisters and daughters. These infiltrators are misleading innocent tribals and seizing their lands. When demographic change occurs, particularly in border areas, it creates a crisis for national security. It threatens the unity, integrity, and progress of the country. Our forefathers attained freedom through sacrifice. It is our duty towards those great souls that we do not accept such acts. Therefore, today I announce that we have decided to launch a High-Power Demography Mission. Through this mission, the severe crisis will be addressed in a deliberate and time-bound manner. We have to remember — the one who has toiled hard, the one who has toiled hard, is the one who has created history. The one who has worked hard, is the one who has created history. The one who has broken the steel rocks, is the one who has bent the time. This is the time to bend the time, this is the right time. Once again, I extend my best wishes to all of you on this great festival of Independence. The writer is Prime Minister of India. Edited excerpts of the English translation of his address to the nation on August 15


Indian Express
21 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Express View on PM Modi's Independence Day speech: Hope, not fear
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Independence Day speech, his 12th in a row, was delivered against the backdrop of a global economy roiled by unpredictability, turmoil and upheaval. PM Modi did not name him but Donald Trump and the tariff regime the US President has unleashed, lurked, between the lines, as both presence and shadow. For the most part, the PM spoke of how India needs to enliven the 'Make in India' and 'Vocal for Local' mantras, and install self-reliance at the heart of the country's development strategy and growth model. The message was: In times when the Trump tariff regime is impacting exports, and when disruptions in global supply chains are threatening to squeeze imports, India must focus on strengthening the domestic economy by pursuing the path of self-sufficiency or 'aatmanirbharta'. PM Modi reminded the nation of India's proven 'samarthya' or capability — when it took the lead in manufacturing the coronavirus vaccine, not only for itself, but also for the world; and more recently, when, powered by indigenous weapon systems, it conducted Operation Sindoor. This is not the first time that PM Modi has spoken of the need to Make in India, or extolled the virtues of aatmanirbharta. But this I-day speech was remarkable for the urgency with which it sought to connect the dots from Atmanirbhar Bharat to Viksit Bharat and national security, framing it as a matter not merely of import-export but as a test of a nation's very 'aatma samman' or self-respect: 'Hum nahin banayenge? Hum nirbhar rahenge? (Why will we remain dependent on others)?' He exhorted the young and the entrepreneurs, the scientists and the private sector, to come forward and fill the gaps with ideas and innovations — to make India's own fertiliser and semiconductor, and to be self-reliant in clean energy and critical minerals. The government, he said, would encourage and enable them through the next generation of reforms, for which he announced a special task force. But as much as the PM sought to exhort and energise, and even as he tapped into his countrymen and women's ambitions and optimism — he announced a special Diwali bonanza of GST reform, a Rs 1 lakh crore Rozgar Yojana for the young, invoked the symbolism of naari shakti, space start-ups and Shubhanshu Shukla's odyssey — he also painted a gathering spectre. Illegal immigrants or 'ghuspaithiye', he said, are snatching Indians' jobs, taking away land from tribal populations, endangering India's 'behan-beti' or women. His government would, therefore, set up a high powered Demography Mission. While illegal immigration is a resonant issue that is becoming bigger across the world, riding on the back of nationalist politics and populist movements, the PM's highlighting of it has a disquieting domestic backdrop — of growing incidents of violence against Bengali-speaking migrants in states, and the ongoing controversy over voters' lists. The BJP's defeat in the Jharkhand assembly election may have pointed to the limits of 'illegal immigration' as an electoral plank, but in a diverse country, it is still an issue that is fraught, one that can propel a politics of distrust and fear. The PM's playing up of the dark motif of the 'ghuspaithiya', coupled with his tribute to the RSS from the ramparts of Red Fort, showed an unmistakable ideological layering of his message. For the nation, they frame the challenge that lies ahead: Of finding a way forward that sidesteps the fear and embraces the hope.


India.com
an hour ago
- India.com
South Korean Foreign Minister Arrives In India On Maiden Visit
Foreign Minister of South Korea, Cho Hyun, arrived in New Delhi on Friday evening for his maiden visit to India. Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal extended his greetings, noting that the India-South Korea Special Strategic Partnership remains strong and future-oriented. In a post on X, Jaiswal wrote, "Warm welcome to FM Cho Hyun of the Republic of Korea as he arrives in New Delhi on his maiden visit to India. India-South Korea Special Strategic Partnership remains strong & geared towards the future." Korea's Liberation Day coincides with India's Independence Day. Cho Hyun extended his greetings to India after External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar wished him on the occasion. In a post on X, he said, "Dear External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, thank you sincerely for your warm congratulations on Korea's National Liberation Day. Today is also India's Independence Day, and I extend my heartfelt congratulations. I look forward to further deepening the close friendship and cooperation between our two countries. I hope to see you soon!" Jaishankar shared an old snippet of Prime Minister Narendra Modi meeting South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on the sidelines of the G7 Summit at Kananaskis in Canada in June. In a post on X, he said, "Heartfelt congratulations to FM Cho Hyun, the Government and the people of the Republic of Korea on their National Liberation Day. Look forward to welcoming you to India." Marking the twin celebrations, the Korean Embassy in India released a video in which Korean diplomats conveyed Independence Day wishes in Hindi. "Letter from the Korean Embassy on Independence Day, in Hindi. Watch as our Korean Diplomats at the Embassy wish you a Happy Independence Day," the Embassy said. Meanwhile, the Indian Embassy in Seoul celebrated the 79th Independence Day. In a post on X, the Embassy said, "The Indian diaspora in South Korea joyfully celebrated the 79th Independence Day at the Indian Embassy in Seoul. Ambassador Amit Kumar unfurled the Indian flag, read the Hon'ble President's Address to the Nation. The event featured vibrant cultural performances by the members of the Indian community. The captivating performances highlighted India's rich cultural heritage, with diaspora members delivering captivating performances that instilled pride and joy in the audience."