
'Will not give in to nuclear blackmail': India responds to Pak Army Chief Munir's anti-India statements in US
New Delhi: The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Monday issued a strong statement in response to remarks reportedly made by the Pakistani Chief of Army Staff during his visit to the United States.
'Our attention has been drawn to remarks reportedly made by the Pakistani Chief of Army Staff while on a visit to the United States. Nuclear sabre-rattling is Pakistan's stock-in-trade,' the MEA official spokesperson said.
The spokesperson added, 'The international community can draw its own conclusions on the irresponsibility inherent in such remarks, which also reinforce the well-held doubts about the integrity of nuclear command and control in a state where the military is hand-in-glove with terrorist groups.'
The MEA spokesperson further expressed regret that these remarks were made from the soil of a friendly third country. 'It is also regrettable that these remarks should have been made from the soil of a friendly third country,' the official said.
'India has already made it clear that it will not give in to nuclear blackmail and will continue to take all necessary steps to safeguard its national security, the MEA spokesperson affirmed.' the MEA statement further said.
Despite this firm stance, Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir has once again threatened India, warning that Islamabad would plunge the region into nuclear war and could take 'almost half of the world' down if faced with an existential threat in a future conflict with New Delhi. During his ongoing visit to the United States, General Munir also stated that Islamabad will defend its water rights 'at all costs' if India proceeds with dam construction on the Indus River.
Munir also repeated his anti-India rhetoric by describing Kashmir as Pakistan's 'jugular vein,' asserting that it is not India's internal matter but an unresolved international issue, Pakistan-based media outlet ARY News reported on Monday. 'We will wait for India to build a dam, and when they do so, we will destroy it,' Munir told members of the Pakistani-American community in Tampa, Florida, according to a report published today in The Dawn.
At a black-tie dinner in Washington, DC, hosted by Adnan Asad, Pakistan's honorary consul in Tampa, Munir said the Indus River 'is not the Indians' family property,' adding that Islamabad has 'no shortage of resources to undo the Indian designs to stop the river,' the Dawn reported.
ARY News cited Munir as condemning 'Indian aggression under Operation Sindoor,' calling it a grave violation of Pakistan's sovereignty. He also stated, 'A bilateral conflict due to any mistake by India would be a huge blunder.' Munir credited Pakistan's response with successfully preventing a wider conflict and thanked US President Donald Trump for his role in defusing tensions between the two countries.
Ahead of the Pahalgam attack, India had strongly rebutted Pakistan Army Chief General Munir's remarks describing Kashmir as Pakistan's 'jugular vein,' calling the claim baseless and asserting that the only relationship Pakistan has with Kashmir is to vacate the territory it occupies illegally.
Meanwhile, Munir recently visited two US cities over the weekend and flew to Brussels on Sunday after completing his second high-profile trip to the United States in less than two months. Like his previous visit, he engaged with political and military leadership in the host country, Dawn reported.
In Tampa, the Pakistan army chief attended the US Central Command (CENTCOM) change of command ceremony. According to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), his engagements included the retirement ceremony of General Michael E. Kurilla, Commander of CENTCOM, and the change of command where Admiral Brad Cooper assumed charge.
Dawn quoted ISPR as saying that Field Marshal Munir praised General Kurilla's 'exemplary leadership and invaluable contributions in strengthening Pakistan-US military relations' and expressed confidence that Admiral Cooper 'would take this partnership forward to address shared security challenges.'
On the sidelines of the ceremony, Asim Munir met US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine and chiefs of defence from other friendly countries. He invited General Caine to visit Pakistan and reaffirmed Islamabad's role as a key regional security stakeholder, Dawn reported
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
27 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Will the rules-based international order survive the Trump presidency?
Recent observations on the rules-based international order have suggested that this system of interlocking governance institutions that emerged since the end of World War II, known to some as Pax Americana, might survive or thrive despite the onslaught of political and economic confrontations foisted on the world by U.S. President Donald Trump. The real question is not about its survivability per se, but rather the extent to which it might mutate under pressure from Washington's coercive policy prescriptions inflicted upon developing and emerging economies, particularly across the Asian region. A few definitional remarks are in order at this point. Firstly, the rules-based international order, a liberal paradigm seen as a remedy to the devastation wreaked by the two World Wars, was brought into existence by the U.S. This was made possible by the U.S. pushing ahead with the Marshall Plan to rebuild war-torn Europe, returning it to a minimum threshold of economic advancement and political stability that would enable the continent to support the global narrative of a unipolar world as envisioned by Washington. Thereafter, a broad set of 'norms and institutions that govern international relations as well as broad patterns of power distribution and economic flows across the world, most of it backstopped by American power and leadership' came into force, including the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (as well as the 'Washington consensus' that they implied), and a variety of related organisations. All these institutions existed to put guardrails in place for international politics — in other words these organisations were used as leverage to limit the regional and global ambitions of any potential rival to the aforementioned unipolar balance of power. The triumphs of Pax Americana The argument made by some who see the continuation of the rules-based international order even through the turbulence of the Trump years is that throughout the history of Asia's development, the U.S. has displayed the very same bullying tactics around the region that curbed and shaped the growth trajectory of Asian powerhouse economies. For example, Sandeep Bhardwaj argues that during the post-War years, when Japanese cloth imports of the U.S. outsold American domestic product, the U.S. in 1955 compelled Japan to agree to a voluntary export restriction that capped the latter's share of the U.S. market. However, the U.S. has equally nurtured the quality of openness within the rules-based order, allowing room for Asian and Latin American economies to periodically assert themselves and play a larger role within limited spaces, thus introducing the necessary element of system flexibility that has helped it endure despite a series of economic and political shocks over the past half century. Examples cited of such openness within Pax Americana include the U.S. and developed nations encouraging developing countries to join the United Nations umbrella of institutions; getting China to join the WTO in 2001 after going slow on global concerns about Beijing's human rights violations; supporting Japan's entry to the G-7 in 1973; strongly backing the entry of China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and Saudi Arabia into the G20; establishing the UN Millennium Development Goals to backstop the financing of industrialisation in emerging economies; and structural adjustment loans from the IMF. These loans, however, were a double edged sword, offering a financial lifeline for Asian countries while benefitting U.S. trade policy by forcing the opening up of these markets. The extent of U.S.' power There is no denying that the rules-based international order is far from an authoritarian hierarchy of forced policy prescriptions and expected political genuflection of so-called subordinate Asian nations. Yet, it is fair to ask whether such a warped balance of power in favour of the U.S. could ever emerge, given the Asian trajectory of rapid economic growth built on global trading and capital systems, the collective social emancipation of people, the propagation of individual and institutional liberty, and the growing state capacity for meaningful regional action and collaboration. If the sense of agency and autonomous power of Asian nation-states is overlooked, then it leads to a false sense of U.S. munificence in 'bestowing' openness and flexibility upon the rules-based order. In reality, the U.S., for all its economic heft and technological prowess had no choice but to find its own place within this complex matrix of competing nations worldwide, each strong in specific economic sectors, but perhaps less so in other areas. Within this more reasoned paradigm of the global political economy, which neither denies the unipolarity of the present moment nor overstates the U.S.'s ability to impose its hegemonic ambitions on other nations in today's multi-alliance, interconnected and interdependent framework of international engagement, it becomes clear that damage done to the rules-based liberal international order under the second Trump administration will transform the order to the point of it resembling a new order entirely. Ironically, at the heart of this act of reshaping the rules-based liberal international order, are not so much the consequences of what the U.S. is inflicting upon Asian nations but rather its abrupt pulling of the rug from under the heels of Europe by undermining the ideological cause and financial prospects of NATO and leaving the continent exposed to the risk of ever-increasing depredations of Russia. Similarly, the resoluteness with which Mr. Trump has tied his administration to the whims and fancies of the genocidal and warmongering causes of Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu will rewrite the playbook for everyone. This will impact the rulers of Saudi Arabia and Türkiye, rethinking regional political dynamics, as much as it will aspiring college students from India seeking admissions in countries other than the U.S. in the wake of compulsory social media scrutiny as a condition of visa issuance. A new order Yes, the silhouettes of the old rules-based liberal international order will continue to fall upon the new arrangements that the world will find itself forced to confront by the end of the second Trump term. However, there can be no denying that it will indeed be a new order built on the rise of bilateral agreements in place of broader regional ones. The newer order will feature the widespread use of economic sanctions to penalise political opponents across the globe in contravention of WTO norms; ever-growing skirmishes and limited wars; a reliance on drones and AI to settle territorial and other disputes; as well as a steady, catastrophic dismembering of global institutions fostering cooperation, reducing transactions costs and speaking up for human rights and standards of international engagement more broadly. Pax Americana may well give rise to the next phase of its own evolution, Flux Americana.

The Hindu
27 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Trump meets with Intel CEO after demanding he resign
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said he had a "very interesting" meeting with the chief of US chip maker Intel, just days after calling for his resignation. Mr. Trump said on his Truth Social platform that he met with Lip-Bu Tan along with Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick and Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent. "The meeting was a very interesting one," Mr. Trump said in the post. "His success and rise is an amazing story." Mr. Trump added that members of his cabinet are going to spend time with Mr. Tan and bring the president "suggestions" next week. "Mr. Tan had the honor of meeting with President Trump for a candid and constructive discussion on Intel's commitment to strengthening US technology and manufacturing leadership," the company said in a posted statement. Intel added that it looks "forward to working closely with him and his Administration as we restore this great American company." Mr. Trump demanded last week that the recently-hired boss of Intel resign "immediately," after a Republican senator raised national security concerns over his links to firms in China. "The CEO of INTEL is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately. There is no other solution to this problem," Mr. Trump posted on Truth Social last Thursday. Mr. Tan released a statement at the time saying that the company was engaged with the Trump administration to address the concerns raised and ensure officials "have the facts." Intel is one of Silicon Valley's most iconic companies but its fortunes have been dwarfed by Asian powerhouses TSMC and Samsung, which dominate the made-to-order semiconductor business. In a statement, Mr. Tan said there has been "a lot of misinformation circulating" about his past roles at Walden International and Cadence Design Systems. "I have always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards," Mr. Tan said. The Malaysia-born tech industry veteran took the helm at struggling Intel in March, announcing layoffs as White House tariffs and export restrictions muddied the market. Intel's niche has been chips used in traditional computing processes, which are steadily being eclipsed by the AI revolution.


Time of India
27 minutes ago
- Time of India
We'll show them what's next: After Indus dams, Pak Army Chief Asim Munir now fixes target on RIL Jamnagar refinery
Pakistan's Army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, threatened to target India's economic infrastructure, specifically Reliance's Jamnagar refinery, in a future conflict. He also warned of missile strikes on Indian dams if the Indus Waters Treaty is suspended. Munir urged overseas Pakistanis to increase their support for the nation, highlighting Pakistan's strategic diplomatic position. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Threats to dams & broader strategic messaging Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Nationalistic rhetoric & diplomatic posture In an alarming address at a private dinner in Tampa, Florida, Pakistan Army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir explicitly threatened to target India's economic infrastructure in any future conflicts. According to a TOI singled out Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries Ltd refinery at Jamnagar, Gujarat — the world's largest single-site refining marks the first time such a key economic asset has been named as a potential military target by Pakistan's top military considered the most powerful man in Pakistan, Munir referenced a social media post combining a Quranic verse and a photo of Reliance chairman Mukesh Ambani. The 11th Pak Army Chief declared that he had authorized the message during recent hostilities 'to show them what we will do the next time,' TOI reported citing media reports based on accounts from attendees of the closed-door speech also included a chilling warning regarding the Indus Waters Treaty . Munir vowed that Pakistan would launch missile strikes on Indian dams if the treaty remains to members of the Pakistani diaspora, he said, 'We will wait for India to build a dam, and when it does so, phir 10 missile sey faarigh kar dengey [we will destroy it with 10 missiles].'This statement was delivered at a black-tie event hosted by Pakistan's honorary consul in Tampa, with about 120 diaspora members present. Phones and digital devices were banned, and no official transcript was issued, but multiple eyewitnesses have shared details with media visit to Florida was primarily to attend the retirement ceremony of General Michael Kurilla, outgoing commander of the US Central Command (CENTCOM), who lauded Pakistan as a 'phenomenal partner' in counterterrorism efforts and received Pakistan's highest civilian honour at the the audience, Munir also exhorted overseas Pakistanis to increase their support for the evocative Hindi film-style language, he remarked, 'Kisi ki maa kaali ho sakti hai, aur kisi ki dharti-maa kaali ho sakti hai, par maa maa hoti hai [someone's mother might be dark-skinned, and the earth of someone's motherland might be dark, but a mother is a mother].' He also asserted that Pakistan's foundation on the Kalimah would ensure divine blessings of rich natural resources like rare earth metals and the diplomatic front, Munir commented on recent strains between India and the US, suggesting Pakistan's unique ability to 'balance rival powers' and take 'masterclasses' in claimed Pakistan's success comes from openly appreciating those who do good, citing the nomination of former US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Prize as an example.