
70 Terrorists In Pak Killed
One message—India won’t be a punching bag.

India’s military launched a powerful strike across the Line of Control (LoC) on Wednesday, targeting terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and stressing on just terrorist infrastructure. Some of the terrorists killed were senior field commanders from Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad, according to defence sources.
This action comes just two weeks after 26 Indian civilians were slaughtered in Kashmir. India blames Pakistan-based terror groups, and rightly so, as history will say. Pakistan, as always, denies involvement.
But this wasn’t just another border skirmish. It was the most intense exchange of fire between India and Pakistan in over two decades.
Justice is Served.
Jai Hind! pic.twitter.com/Aruatj6OfA
— ADG PI – INDIAN ARMY (@adgpi) May 6, 2025
A Timeline of Broken Promises and Blown Cover
To understand the gravity of this strike, let’s rewind through some of Pakistan’s greatest hits—starring denial, deflection, and diplomatic drama:
- Kargil, 1999: Pakistani forces and militants sneak across the LoC. India fights them back. The U.S. steps in and tells Pakistan to cut it out.
- Parliament Attack, 2001: Terrorists storm India’s legislature. Delhi goes into lockdown. War looms. Pakistan blinks.
- Mumbai, 2008: 166 civilians are killed in cold blood. The world watches. Pakistan claims the attackers were “non-state actors.”
- Uri, 2016: Eighteen Indian soldiers are killed. India retaliates with surgical strikes. Pakistan says “nothing happened.”
- Pulwama, 2019: 40 Indian paramilitary men die. India strikes Balakot. Pakistan scrambles jets in response—and loses one.
- April 2025: Hindu pilgrims are targeted in Kashmir. 26 dead. India responds with a military strike and tears up the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty. Pakistan, predictably, plays the victim card—again.
It’s a pattern of terrorism, yet Pakistan claims that it is the frontline for world peace. The idea itself is laughable.
Pakistan’s Denial Machine Rolls On
Every time a bomb goes off or bullets fly in India, Islamabad issues the same script: We condemn violence. We had nothing to do with it. Let’s have dialogue.
But how long can you lie with snakes and pretend you didn’t know they’d bite?
Instead of dismantling terror networks, Pakistan offers them prime-time coverage and political backing. Instead of justice, it offers “neutral probes” while harboring fugitives. This isn’t diplomacy—it’s a con game.
India Isn’t Playing Along Anymore
This time, India didn’t wait for CNN to show interest or for the UN to tweet concern. It struck swiftly—and shut the border.
- Trade suspended.
- Airspace closed.
- Visas cancelled.
- Water-sharing halted.
It’s a clear message: Crossing red lines comes with a cost. And no amount of international waffling will make India fold.
The Global Irony: When Terror Wears a Suit
The West, so quick to condemn violence in Ukraine or Gaza, often tiptoes around Pakistan’s state-sponsored extremism. Why? Because Islamabad is “strategic.” Translation: It’s too messy to confront.
But for India, this isn’t a chessboard—it’s our citizens’ lives.
We’ve buried too many. Heard “we stand with India” too many times. Now, we’re standing for ourselves.
China is quick to support a terrorist state Pakistan so far as going and spreading false news of Pakistan shooting down Indian jets.
Final Word: A New India, Not a Nicer One
The Indian strike on Pakistan is more than military action—it’s a reset. For too long, India was expected to “show restraint” while Pakistan played pyromaniac behind a peace banner.
Not anymore.
This is a new India. Confident. Unapologetic. Assertive.
“प्रहाराय सन्निहिताः, जयाय प्रशिक्षिताः”
Ready to Strike, Trained to Win.#IndianArmy pic.twitter.com/M9CA9dv1Xx— ADG PI – INDIAN ARMY (@adgpi) May 6, 2025
And if you still think both sides are equally to blame, ask yourself this:
Which country exports engineers, and which exports jihadis?