South Asia stands once again on the edge of its own illusions. India’s army chief recently spoke of Pakistan’s “erasure from the world map,” a phrase so reckless it betrays a failure to understand the balance of terror that defines this region. Pakistan’s response,however, carried the weight of reason as the army chief reminded all that there exists no space for war in a region where even a limited nuclear exchange could consume millions. Ergo, the language of annihilation belongs to madness. Nothing more. Nothing else.
Giving credit where due, Islamabad’s position has remained consistent despite alarming levels of provocation. Matters of Kashmir and terrorism must be addressed through diplomacy and international law, not through air raids or frontier chest-beating. The Simla understanding between Indira Gandhi and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto once offered a framework for peace, yet its memory is now twisted for domestic gain. The so-called Operation Sindoor, replete with exaggerated tales of Pakistani aircraft losses, serves not as strategy but as election-season spectacle. Our defence minister was right to call such fantasies “crafted for political expediency.”
Compounding this theatre is India’s flirtation with the Taliban, a cynical bid to outflank Pakistan by courting its old adversaries. The signal was unmistakable when Afghanistan’s foreign minister met Indian officials even as fighting erupted along the Durand Line. Delhi wishes to turn the Taliban into pawns in a dangerous regional game. Such duplicity mirrors its record in Kashmir and Balochistan, where slogans of peace accompany acts of aggression. Pakistan’s response has been calm and unmistakable: any intrusion will invite consequences that neither side can control, noting that nuclear brinkmanship carries no winners, only ruin.
Behind India’s martial theatre lies unease. The skirmish in May showed that Pakistan’s Air Force retains both skill and resolve. Meanwhile, allies in Beijing, Ankara and Riyadh continue to recognise Islamabad’s strategic steadiness. The world has grown wary of India’s inflated claims of triumph. Whether Modi likes it or not, Pakistan has gained the diplomatic upper hand, leaving Delhi to posture while wrestling with economic stagnation and political discord.
The responsibility before Pakistan is immense. Its commanders have drawn clear lines of deterrence and readiness. Its diplomats reveal the opportunism behind India’s fiery language.
We owe no apologies for defending our sovereignty but we must not fall into the trap of matching rhetoric shot for shot. The strongest answer to noise is composure grounded in confidence.
Pakistanis are not children to be scared with bedtime stories of maps and missile breakthroughs. Still, true strength lies in calm vigilance and principled diplomacy. The nuclear age leaves no room for recklessness, and no space for war.






