No More Warnings: PoK Is Next

The Indian armed forces have just delivered a message that thundered not only across the Line of Control but deep into the hollow corridors of Islamabad—and the confused alleys of Lutyens Delhi. Pakistan, which has waged a cowardly proxy war against India since 1947, got a real taste of what a decisive, unforgiving India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi looks like. And predictably, the Congress and its ecosystem of habitual doubters are squirming. With no credible issue to challenge Modi ahead of the assembly polls, the Opposition now hopes Modi falters in this ongoing conflict. Their desperation runs so deep, they were silently rooting for China—another enemy—to come to Pakistan’s aid, just to see Modi cut down to size. But what unfolded instead was a masterclass in modern warfare. Chinese drones, radars, and projectiles—touted as symbols of 5th-gen military supremacy—failed miserably to stop India’s indigenous missiles from decimating nine Pakistani air bases, the headquarters of Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba, and multiple terror camps and launchpads that enjoyed both Pakistani and Chinese backing. India’s Akash and BrahMos systems, along with the strategic edge of the S-400, exposed not just Pakistan’s bluster but also China’s empty hype. Let’s be blunt: Congress is rattled. It’s barely disguised dismay at Pakistan’s humiliation is glaring. For a party that once claimed “terror has no religion”, terrorism now seems to have no enemy—unless that enemy is Modi. Their discomfort is not about national security; it’s about political survival.

When Indian forces launched a precise and devastating counterstrike, global powers like Russia and Israel were stunned, not just by the scale, but by the precision. No civilian casualties. Just targeted destruction of terror infrastructure. That’s not aggression; that’s modern warfare done right. The homegrown Akash missile system, paired with the Russian S-400, formed an iron dome that intercepted Pakistani drones and missiles with surgical accuracy. That’s not just defense—it’s dominance. And yet, the Congress continues its cynical games, questioning the timing, asking if this is the moment to reclaim Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). Let’s be clear: Their tone isn’t patriotic concern. It’s strategic sabotage. Reclaiming PoK isn’t some wild fantasy. It is a constitutional, moral, and political imperative. It’s part of the BJP’s declared agenda, reiterated by Home Minister Amit Shah and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on the floor of Parliament. And when Modi commits, he delivers. Remember Uri? Dismissed as fake—until it wasn’t. Balakot? Called an election stunt—until the satellite images silenced the cynics.

Today, the same crowd is baiting Modi, hoping for a misstep. But this isn’t 2008 Mumbai. This is 2025. India is no longer shackled by the caution of appeasers. Pakistan continues its duplicitous game—pleading for ceasefires while launching drones and harboring global terrorists like Hafiz Saeed and Masood Azhar. In just the last 48 hours, India destroyed multiple Pakistani surveillance towers and downed their drones. Pakistan’s denials are as hollow as its democracy. The time for warnings is over. If Pakistan persists on this suicidal path, PoK will not remain occupied for long. Winds of rebellion are sweeping across Gilgit-Baltistan and Balochistan. The Baloch Liberation Army is gaining ground. People in PoK are openly voicing their desire to join India. Why? Because today, India isn’t just a nation. It is a force of strength, stability, and self-respect. And to those in the Indian Opposition silently praying for Modi’s failure: Be warned. You are on the wrong side of history. This is not about winning a state election. It’s about the soul of the nation. If Pakistan dares another misadventure, and the tricolour flies over Muzaffarabad, so be it. That won’t be aggression. That will be justice, 75 years overdue. So, when Congress and its allies smugly ask, “What’s next?”—the answer is simple and inevitable: PoK is next. And if Pakistan dares to escalate, even Balochistan could be recognised as a Republic. Neither China, nor the US, nor a thousand editorials from Lutyens liberals will stop it.