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Hi-Tech War Sets A New Landmark In India-Pakistan Conflict
Missiles, drones, and standoff weapons will replace ground troops, tanks, and even aircraft as the primary weapons.
Pakistan, China, AWACS, Integrated Information System, India-Pakistan war,
Unlike traditional air combat, where a single jet handles detection and missile guidance, Pakistan’s approach shared real-time data.
India seeks deeper defence ties with Japan amid push for strategic self-reliance
Biman Mukherji/South China Morning Post New Delhi, May 13 – India is seeking to deepen defence cooperation with Japan as both nations pursue military modernisation and aim to reduce dependence on traditional arms suppliers – a strategic alignment analysts say reflects shared regional concerns and...
Bangladesh First: No corridor without national consensus
By Rakib Al Hasan/Daily Sun Dhaka, May 13 – In diplomacy, silence can be louder than declarations. When Bangladesh quietly agreed in principle to a United Nations-backed proposal for a humanitarian corridor into Myanmar’s restive Rakhine state, there were no televised speeches, no parliamentary sessions...
BNP not willing to challenge Yunus for at least a year
“This has been our policy before and remains so now,” a senior BNP leader confirmed.
How United States has helped India and Pakistan end their wars
Right from the first India-Pakistan war in 1948-49 to the just-ended war over Pahalgam, the United States has played a positive role in helping the two perpetually-estranged neighbours end armed conflicts.
Renowned Pakistani pilot Air Marshal Nur Khan’s links with India
By P.K.Balachandran Colombo, May 12 -The Nur Khan airbase near Rawalpindi in Pakistan shot into fame in the recent India-Pakistan war after it was hit by Indian missiles on May 9. This raid forced the Americans to bring an end to the India-Pakistan war as...
Nuclear threat made US intervene to stop Indo-Pak war
An indifferent US President Trump and Vice President J.D.Vance swung into action to end the India-Pakistan war after getting intelligence about a threat to Pakistan’s nuclear command facility
Ex-UK Special Forces break silence on ‘war crimes’ by colleagues
One SAS veteran said that killing could be an "addictive thing to do"
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