For years, Pakistan tolerated provocations at its border. But the events of October 2025 proved that patience has a limit. While Pakistani soldiers were fighting off a brutal cross-border assault, Afghanistan’s top diplomat was thousands of miles away, smiling and shaking hands with India. One night was enough to expose shifting loyalties and ignite a new regional storm.

For fifty years, Pakistan and Afghanistan shared what many saw as an unshakable bond. Pakistan opened its doors to millions of Afghans, gave them shelter, work, and a chance to rebuild their lives. But in October 2025, that goodwill was tested like never before — and the trust that took decades to build cracked overnight.

Bleeding gums might seem like a minor annoyance—just a bit of blood when you brush or floss. But did you know that this small symptom could be a major red flag for your health?

From intelligent automation to creative tech, discover why PureDesigners leads the pack among top AI firms in Pakistan.

In a time when facts are optional and AI is programmable, India has found the perfect scapegoat for failure: fiction. But not just any fiction — government-issued, AI-written, hashtag-hyped make-believe passed off as military history. Welcome to the curious case of Operation Sindoor's so-called book.

It starts in a saffron-draped hall in New Delhi, where incense swirls and holy chants echo under fluorescent lights. In the center, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, flanked by saints and sages, holds aloft a brass vessel. Inside: a mix of cow dung and cow urine. The audience cheers. Cameras flash. A new era has begun.

It’s not often that a global crisis ends not with sanctions or summits, but a phone call. May 2025 was a turning point. As the skies over South Asia buzzed with hypersonic threats and radar-blinding chaos, Pakistan made a move that stunned the diplomatic world—it nominated Donald J. Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. Not as a gesture of loyalty. But as a statement of strategy.

They said it was untouchable. It wasn’t just touched—it was annihilated.

In the unforgiving terrain between the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, 30 heavily armed militants recently attempted to infiltrate Pakistani territory. They never made it past our front line.

India has a way of burying its most dangerous truths.