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Special Correspondent: Last week marked the first anniversary of the
Pakistan-India conflict, a four-day military confrontation that not only pushed
the two nuclear-armed neighbours dangerously close to a wider war, but also
altered regional perceptions about power, deterrence and strategic resilience.
The crisis began after the Pahalgam attack in IIOJK. Within hours, the Indian
media ecosystem and the BJP leadership had effectively declared Pakistan
guilty, even before any credible investigation could take place.Islamabad, as it had done in previous crises,
offered an independent and transparent international investigation into the
incident. Pakistan maintained that allegations without evidence could further
destabilise an already volatile region. But New Delhi rejected the proposal.
Instead, on the night of May 6, India launched "Operation Sindoor,"
carrying out missile strikes inside Pakistani territory while claiming it was
targeting terrorist infrastructure. The strikes marked a dangerous escalation,
and within minutes, the Pakistan Air Force responded with speed and precision.One of the largest aerial engagements in recent
military history unfolded as more than 100 fighter jets from both sides entered
the battlespace in a beyond-visual-range confrontation stretching across
multiple sectors. The downing of several Indian fighter aircraft became global
headlines. In military circles, the destruction of high-end platforms carries
significance far beyond numbers. It affects deterrence credibility and
battlefield psychology. But the real story of May 2025 was about assumptions
collapsing. Before the conflict, a dominant perception existed internationally
that Pakistan, weighed down by political instability, economic stress and
internal security challenges, would struggle to withstand sustained Indian
military pressure.Ironically, India's attempt to isolate Pakistan
diplomatically appeared to produce the opposite outcome. In the months that
followed, Islamabad's geostrategic relevance steadily increased. Pakistan's
engagement with the US deepened under President Donald Trump's administration.
Pakistan's performance during the conflict reinforced the view that Islamabad
remained an indispensable player in regional stability calculations. Today,
Pakistan finds itself playing an active diplomatic role in efforts aimed at
reducing tensions between Iran and the US.
Simultaneously, Islamabad has expanded defence cooperation
with regional and extra-regional partners while exploring new strategic
alignments emerging from shifting geopolitical realities. Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's gamble was intended to redefine deterrence in South Asia.
Instead, many in Pakistan believe it achieved the reverse. It gave Islamabad an
opportunity to test its military preparedness and elevate its international
standing at a time when many had underestimated its resilience.