Who is the United States trying to fool? Does it still live under the delusion that its self-appointed ‘Big Brother’ role grants it the power to hoodwink the world with outdated Cold War theatrics?
In a telling moment of panic, the U.S. President Donald Trump scrambled to deflect attention after India’s precision strike on Pakistan’s Nur Khan Airbase. The target? Not just any military installation, but a suspected nuclear facility long whispered to be under American control, not Pakistani. China’s satellite imagery firm MizazVision has since confirmed what India’s strike exposed: massive craters in the hills surrounding Nur Khan base—hills that allegedly housed Pakistan’s so-called “nuclear arsenal.” The BrahMos strike didn’t just shake Islamabad. It sent tremors through Washington.
Radiation levels reportedly spiked after the strike. Chinese satellite feeds show a steady stream of American aircraft landing at the site, followed by Egypt—America’s regional pawn—airdropping boron, a chemical agent used for radioactive containment. Let that sink in: the United States rushed emergency assets to a foreign nation to protect its nuclear stockpile, disguised for decades as “Pakistan’s deterrent.”
And suddenly, Trump is seen urging “dialogue” and “trade normalization” between India and Pakistan? Was that genuine diplomacy or desperate damage control after India rattled the very foundations of America’s secret nuclear vaults?
Let’s be clear: Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are not its own. They are American warheads, stationed on foreign soil as part of a decades-old covert strategy. What was once dismissed as a conspiracy is now visible in high-resolution satellite imagery. The veil has slipped, and America’s hand stands exposed.
Even China, Pakistan’s all-weather ally, appears blindsided. And Israel—usually portrayed as a hawkish nuclear power intolerant of Islamic bomb ambitions—has conveniently looked the other way while a radical Islamic nation like Pakistan continues to hoard over 100 nuclear warheads. Why? Because these warheads are not Pakistani—they are American. They always were. Just like the U.S. nuclear bases in Turkey, Pakistan was turned into a strategic dump yard for America’s deterrent meant for Russia, China, and India.
The media myth that Israel once planned to destroy Pakistan’s nuclear sites with India’s help? Utter nonsense. If Israel truly wanted to, it had both the range and the will. It didn’t because it knew the truth: the bombs belonged not to Islamabad but to Washington.
Let’s demolish another fantasy—the tale of Dr. A.Q. Khan “stealing” Western nuclear secrets and building a bomb in a back-alley lab in Islamabad. That was a convenient lie peddled to deflect blame from the actual culprit—the United States. To protect its deep-state interests, Washington needed a cover story. So, it invented a rogue scientist and fed the world a tale of a Pakistani “genius.” In reality, the Pakistani military was merely the custodian of America’s tools, nothing more.
Now, after India’s audacious strike under Operation Sindhoor, American panic is palpable. U.S. nuclear support aircraft like the B-350 AMS are reportedly on the ground in Pakistan. A full assessment team is expected soon to evaluate radiation leakage and asset viability. Not to save Pakistan. To save America’s investment. Over five decades of covert infrastructure and millions in military aid are at stake. And yet, the American people are fed hollow platitudes about “South Asian peace” and “strategic partnerships.”
Washington’s narrative—that F-16s were sold to Pakistan to fight Afghan terror—is another grotesque lie. The Balakot air skirmishes and now the Musaf airbase incident reveal that the real target has always been India. F-16s weren’t meant for Waziristan—they were meant for Kashmir.
And so, when Trump dares to equate India and Pakistan—economically, militarily, diplomatically—it’s not ignorance. It’s strategic deceit. It’s an insult to 1.4 billion Indians. It’s a betrayal by a supposed ally.
Let’s call it what it is: America is a new-age imperialist, cloaked in the robes of democracy and diplomacy, but governed by the cold calculations of its deep state. It arms rogue states, fuels proxy wars, and manipulates global narratives to maintain its decaying hegemony. Pakistan, in this game, is just the rented property. The nuclear leash lies firmly in America’s hands—not with the Pakistani Army, not with its intelligence services, and certainly not with the likes of ‘Mullah’ Asif Munir or Shehbaz Sharif.
Even now, unconfirmed reports suggest the U.S. may deploy Patriot Air Defence Systems near its Pakistani bases. If true, this would amount to the formal militarization of American assets inside South Asia—an escalation India must prepare for. Critics may accuse India’s intelligence agencies of oversight, but the BrahMos strike was no fluke. It was the outcome of precise inputs under the strategic supervision of National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, who identified and exposed the enemy’s nuclear belly.
This isn’t just about Pakistan. This is about America’s double-faced diplomacy. Whether it’s Trump or Biden, Washington’s real policy hasn’t changed. India is to be contained, not supported. Pakistan is to be armed, not disciplined. That’s the bitter truth. America will continue to prop up Pakistan, not out of affection, but out of necessity. As long as its nuclear investments remain there, Pakistan will be fed, bailed out, and whitewashed by Western media.
But India under Modi isn’t playing the old game anymore. The strike at Nur Khan wasn’t just military—it was political, strategic, and symbolic. It shattered decades of deception. The ‘Tiranga Yatra’ being celebrated across India is not just a moment of victory—it is a warning to the world: India will not be fooled again.
To every Indian nationalist, to every global observer wondering who still backs terror in South Asia, the mask is off. America’s hypocrisy stands naked. Pakistan is not a nuclear power. It’s a terror state armed and funded by imperial hands.
And the Indian electorate, now more aware than ever, must reject this falsehood. Come election day, strengthen the hands of a leadership that does not kneel—not to Washington, not to Islamabad, and certainly not to lies sold as “strategic partnership.”