Pakistan’s army warned Saturday that any future conflict with India could lead to a “cataclysmic devastation” and that the country “will respond resolutely, without repairs or restrictions.”
The Public Relations Declaration between Services (ISPR) is produced following the provocative comments of the main Indian civil-military leadership and emphasized that Pakistan “would not stop” in that case.
“Given the highly provocative statements of the Minister of Defense of India and his army and air leaders, we warn that a future conflict could lead to a cataclysmic devastation. In case a new round of hostilities is triggered, Pakistan will not stop. We will respond decisively, without repairs or restrictions.”
Indian media NDTV A day ago, it was reported that the Chief General of the Indian Army, Usendra Dwivedi, warned Pakistan that he must stop terrorism sponsored by the State if he wanted to retain his place on the map. According to the report, Gen Dwneddi said that the Indian forces “would not show any restriction this time,” potentially hinting at another military incursion.
The same day, the head of the Air Force of India, Amar Preet Singh, also said, without evidence, that his country “demolished five Pakistani combat aircraft of class F-16 and JF-17” during the intense fight between neighbors with nuclear weapons in May.
Meanwhile, India Defense Minister Rajnath Singh, pronounced a speech earlier this week, with clips published in his X account, in which he said: “Our soldiers have weapons and high moral. No challenge can be before us. Either terrorism or any other type of problem, we have the ability to treat and defeat them all.”
The May conflict, the worst among the old enemies in decades, was caused by an attack against Hindu tourists in busy Kashmir, which New Delhi, without evidence, said he was backed by Pakistan. Pakistan has denied participation, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs questioned the credibility of the account of India’s events, saying that it was “full of manufactures.”
Both parties used combat airplanes, missiles, artillery and drones during the four -day conflict, killing dozens of people, before accepting a high fire. Immediately after the conflict, Pakistan said he demolished six Indian combat planes during the conflict, including the French manufacturing rafale. Nueva Delhi acknowledged “some losses” during the conflict, but denied having lost six planes.
In his statement today, the ISPR said that this time, “we will break the myth of geographical immunity, reaching the furthest scope of the Indian territory.
“As for the talk to erase Pakistan of the map, India must know that if the situation comes, the erased will be mutual.”
He added that “those who seek to establish a new normality must know that Pakistan has established a new normality of response, which will be rapid, decisive and destructive.”
He warned that the nation and the army had the “ability and resolution to bring the struggle to every corner and corner of the enemy’s territory” against unjustified threats and reckless aggression.
He said that the military had noticed “serious concern” the “delusional, provocative and jingoistic statements from the highest levels of the Indian security establishment.”
The ISPR said that such “irresponsible statements” indicated a “renewed attempt to manufacture arbitrary pretexts for aggression”, warning that any perspective could lead to “serious consequences for peace and stability” in southern Asia.
“For decades, India has benefited from playing the victim’s letter and painting Pakistan with negative light, while fueling violence and terrorism perpetrated in southern Asia and beyond.”
The wing of the military media added that the narrative of India has been discredited enough and “now the world recognizes India as the true face of cross -border terrorism and the epicenter of regional instability.”
“Earlier this year, the Indian aggression against Pakistan brought two nuclear powers to the edge of an important war. However, India seems to have forgotten the remains of its combat planes and the anger of the long -range vectors of Pakistan. Suffering from collective amnesia, India now seems sore by the next round of confrontation.”
Pakistan added a new arm to his army, the Army’s rock force command, in August, which had the task of building a long -range conventional attack capacity to give the army a more acute advantage over the Indian archrival.
The new command is responsible for operating conventional missiles, including Ballist, Cruise and possibly even Hypersonic, designed to achieve objectives far beyond the front lines. The idea is to hit deeply, hard and without reaching the nuclear trigger.
The time of the announcement was significant, since there was almost three months after the four -day conflict. It was the first successes of the Pakistan Air Force that tilted the balance in favor of Pakistan, but the deficiency of not having much was observed with what to shoot at a longer range.