
No More Tolerance, No More Talks: Pakistan will bleed for every terror act
Pakistan has once again provoked India with cowardly acts of terrorism—this time brutally murdering 26 Hindu pilgrims and taunting our leadership. But India, under Prime Minister Modi's firm command, has struck back with precision, power, and clarity. Calculated and well measured steps have demolished terror camps without harming civilians, while Pakistan descends into chaos—its provinces revolting, its leadership humiliated, and its military exposed as a hollow force. As the Indian Tri-Services respond with unmatched coordination, Pakistan stands globally isolated and internally fractured. This isn't mere retaliation—it's justice in motion. A terror state is crumbling, and India is ensuring it pays a steep, historic price.
Bharat Mata Ki Jai The Bold Talk is back—and bolder than ever.
After a brief pause, we're resuming with renewed resolve to call a spade a spade. And let's begin by confronting the belligerent, broken state that is Pakistan.
As tensions rise once again due to unprovoked escalations from across the border, India has responded with measured restraint and unmatched resolve. Delhi and several border states have activated emergency protocols—not as a knee-jerk reaction, but as a calculated step in the face of Pakistan's ongoing campaign of terror. From the ghastly 26/11 Mumbai carnage to the daily infiltration of jihadis, Pakistan's hands are soaked in innocent blood. Its latest cowardly provocation—the brutal killing of 26 Hindu pilgrims, accompanied by the mocking taunt 'Jaa kar Modi ko batao'—is a grim reminder that Pakistan remains a terror factory masquerading as a nation.
But karma, as they say, hits hard. And this time, India struck back—with clinical precision. After giving Islamabad a 14-day window to dismantle its terror camps, hoping in vain for basic decency, India launched coordinated strikes that razed nine terrorist hubs. Not a single civilian harmed. Not a single inch of Pakistani territory crossed. Yet the message was loud and clear.
India is now on a path of retribution—not revenge, but justice. The architects of terror, from the Kandahar hijacking to the Pahalgam massacre, are being systematically hunted. The very idea of Pakistan is crumbling. Balochistan has captured Quetta and taken over all administrative structures. Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are not far behind. Pakistan is no longer a coherent nation—it's an imploding carcass of failed ideology and fractured identity.
In response to India's targeted strikes, Pakistan, rudderless and desperate, made the cowardly choice of attacking Indian civilians in J&K and launching drone swarms in Punjab, Rajasthan, and Kutch—supplied, of course, by its co-conspirator Turkey. True to form, it escalated recklessly and blindly. But the Indian Tri-Services intercepted 100 drones, neutralized the rest, and hit back with surgical precision. Lahore, Rawalpindi, Karachi—all struck. Their air defense systems—reduced to rubble.
And what does the Pakistani leadership do? It blabbers incoherently. Their Defence Minister gave a laughable excuse: they didn't intercept Indian drones because doing so would expose their military installations. This is the logic of incompetence, the rhetoric of a regime utterly devoid of tactical maturity. It reminds one of the proverb, 'Nach na jaane, aangan teda'—those who don't know how to dance, blame the floor.
Pakistan today is a parody of a state: no foreign policy, no functioning economy, no coherent military command, and zero international credibility. It has no political executive—just a puppet regime controlled by a paranoid military elite that survives by feeding off terror.
And while India uses intelligence, precision weaponry, and diplomatic leverage to isolate Pakistan globally, Islamabad lurches between denial and delusion. India has not only acted with strength but also with strategy—bolstered by new Russian-supplied Igla-S missiles and real-time surveillance via the US HawkEye satellite network. The message is clear: India is prepared, and Pakistan will pay.
Meanwhile, India's decisive actions have also exposed the duplicity of certain opposition parties at home. Instead of uniting with the government in this hour of national security, the Congress and its allies have chosen to parrot Pakistani propaganda. Mallikarjun Kharge's outrageous claim that PM Modi had foreknowledge of the Pahalgam attack is not just false—it's vile. Akhilesh Yadav's juvenile taunt about 'sutli bombs' only displays his intellectual bankruptcy.
In their blind hatred for Modi, they are handing ammunition to Pakistan. Islamabad now falsely accuses the Indian Army of orchestrating the Pahalgam attack. They forget that Indian Muslims, too, are patriots—and many, like Asaduddin Owaisi, have openly called for zero tolerance toward groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.
Opposition parties continue to live in a haze, unwilling to say 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai,' yet quick to label any Indian countermeasure as warmongering. They fail to grasp that an aggressive posture isn't reckless—it's rational. It's about leveraging every tool—military, economic, diplomatic, cyber, and informational—to ensure that every act of terror exacts a steep price from Pakistan.
Even some media houses have behaved irresponsibly, portraying India's restraint as weakness and calling for action while lacking the spine to support it when it happens. They misrepresent strength as hesitation. But India has shown the world what responsible power looks like—hitting hard without hitting civilians, isolating Pakistan globally while defending its sovereignty with honor.
Unlike Pakistan, which hides behind civilian airliners and kills innocents, India has acted with moral clarity and strategic depth. It has destroyed four of Pakistan's key air bases with precision, used diplomacy to block international funding to the terror state, and made sure the world sees Islamabad for what it truly is: the global epicenter of jihadist terrorism.
Let it be said without ambiguity: Pakistan is not just a failed state. It is a malignant entity, a danger to regional peace, and a disgrace to the values of humanity and civilization. Its collapse is not a matter of if, but when—and India will not just watch from the sidelines.
Jai Hind. Bharat Mata ki Jai.
(The author is former Chief Editor of Hans India)

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The Hindu
37 minutes ago
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Sibal questions Dhankar's ‘inaction' on impeachment notice against Justice Shekhar Kumar Yadav
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First Post
40 minutes ago
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India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Should we stay or leave? Indian students at Harvard caught in Trump's crossfire
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The administration's actions include a freeze of USD 2.2 billion in grants, revocation of the university's eligibility to enroll international students and suspension of entry of foreign nationals seeking to study or participate in exchange programmes at Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has said that Harvard's leadership has created an "unsafe campus environment by permitting anti-American, pro-terrorist agitators to harass and physically assault individuals, including many Jewish students and otherwise obstruct its once-venerable learning environment".US President Donald Trump, in a proclamation last week, said Harvard had refused recent requests of the DHS for information about foreign students' "known illegal activity", "known dangerous and violent activity", "known threats to other students or university personnel" and other related Indian student, who graduated from the Harvard Graduate School of Design after completing a two-year course, said students come to American institutions with plans of finishing their studies and then finding jobs to work for a few years in the she described the situation of the past few months as being a "rollercoaster"."With all the uncertainty, I can say that a lot of people who are hiring were generally hesitant of international students and maybe the Harvard tag helped earlier, but that's not the same right now at this particular moment," she student from Harvard Kennedy School pointed out that she was in a "desperate job search" at the moment, noting how difficult it was to get a job in the current environment."Employers have just stopped entertaining any international students, forget international students from Harvard, because our visa statuses are so volatile that who would want to employ us right now," she said she doesn't know whether she will be going back to India, staying back or heading to a different country altogether."That uncertainty is a lot in a country like America where you're paying" huge amounts of money in added that she thinks this is a short-term turbulence and things will settle down in the future. "But while we're caught in the crossfire, I think it's been difficult to plan and so it's stressful for sure."The students also pointed out that funding cuts initiated by the Trump administration were impacting jobs in the policy space, climate change, healthcare and public health Design School student recalled that just days before graduating last month, students found out that the Trump administration had terminated Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Programme (SEVP) certification, which meant the university could no longer enroll foreign students and existing foreign students must transfer or lose their legal status."We had just finished our final presentations, we were celebrating over lunch and we saw this news. It was quite unbelievable. Six months ago, you could never predict that something like this would happen," she however, urged foreign students not to feel discouraged by the current situation."This should not discourage people. Because I think what institutions like Harvard also do is that they make you a global citizen. And if not America, people are finding pathways elsewhere," she students say they had planned to move back to India eventually but had hoped to work in the US for the initial few years, both to get experience in the American job market and also to earn to pay back the significant student loans they young student, who graduated from Harvard Kennedy School, said while the current situation has been full of "unpredictability", at some levels students are building some kind of resistance, immunity to respond to developments in real-time, because the Trump administration's moves against Harvard have been blocked and stalled by the courts."The challenges that we face on a day-to-day basis are probably in terms of job opportunities, how we plan our future and the next steps," he said."I know of some classmates of mine who have been in the final stages of interviews with a few companies, but once they found out that these students were from Harvard, they were like 'that might pose a few issues later on. So, we'll move on with another candidate'," the student said."I've seen a higher number of people who are going back (to India). They have made up their mind that it's not worth staying and then being in a state of uncertainty, away from family and home, sacrificing a lot of things for a future that remains highly uncertain. So, that holds lesser value now for a lot of my peers," he cited media reports that said the State Department had told US consulates globally to resume processing visa applications for students planning to attend Harvard University. "All this is a signalling effect currently, which is hurting all of us a lot. Because you don't really know what, where you can apply, what you can do, employees are hesitant."He added that he had also been talking to a lot of students from India who are set to arrive in the US to commence studies at Harvard around September this year."Generally, yes, the concern has increased a lot in terms of what kind of opportunities exist, because they would be leaving a lot of things back home. The opportunity cost is higher than ever."He said incoming students or those planning to come to the US in the future to study were hesitant and considering whether they should apply to universities in Europe and elsewhere given "the kind of environment which has been created for international students generally in the US", which will have far-reaching said that while no one he has spoken to among the incoming students has been denied a visa, "some are reconsidering. They are unsure since there's fear of losing funding and scholarships they've received this year if they defer or don't join".According to statistics on the website of Harvard International Office, there are 788 students and scholars from India at all schools under Harvard University for the 2024-25 academic Global Support Services said on its website that each year, anywhere from 500-800 Indian students and scholars study at hosts a total of about 10,158 students and scholars from around the world across its schools, according to Harvard International Office Kennedy School student pointed to the "American Dream" that used to bring students from India and elsewhere to the US."I think that has been significantly affected. It's definitely not the same as what it used to be, even, I would say, five years ago, because a lot of this damage is unrepairable."But amid all this, what he found "heartening" was the university administration "stepping up" and putting forward a more resolute and strong show of support for the students."The other thing which has been absolutely amazing to see is students showing more support for their international peers."Tune InMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Donald Trump#United States of America