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YOUR GLOBAL CONFLICT TRACKER ON THE...

Conflict Between India and Pakistan | By the Center for Preventive Action | Updated May 07, 2025 | Council on Foreign Relations

A deadly militant attack in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, has triggered a sharp escalation between India and Pakistan, with both sides exchanging gunfire across the Line of Control and downgrading diplomatic ties. On May 6, India announced the launch of "Operation Sindoor," targeting nine sites in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir, which it alleged were used to plan the attacks. The situation has heightened fears of a broader military conflict between the two nuclear-armed nations, marking the most significant bilateral confrontation since 2019.

Background
The conflict between India and Pakistan arose out of the 1947 Partition of British India. The Partition established a Muslim-majority Pakistan and a Hindu-majority India and provided the diverse regions of Jammu and Kashmir the opportunity to choose which country to accede to. The maharaja (Kashmir’s monarch) initially sought independence, as Kashmir was neglected and subjugated for centuries by conquering empires. However, he ultimately agreed to join India in exchange for help against invading Pakistani herders, triggering the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947-48. The Karachi Agreement of 1949 temporarily ended violence in the Jammu-Kashmir region by establishing a cease-fire line (CFL) overseen by members of a UN truce subcommittee.

Tensions simmered until a skirmish between border controls escalated to a full-blown war in 1965. In 1971, India and Pakistan fought another brief war over East Pakistan, with Indian forces helping the territory gain independence, resulting in the establishment of present-day Bangladesh. India and Pakistan attempted to usher in a new era of bilateral relations with the 1972 Simla Agreement, which established the Line of Control (LOC). This provisional military control line split Kashmir into two administrative regions. However, in 1974, the conflict took on a new dimension with the introduction of nuclear weapons, raising the stakes of any confrontation. That year, India tested its first nuclear weapon, triggering a nuclear arms race that would see Pakistan reach that same milestone two decades later.

In 1989, Pakistan capitalized upon a burgeoning resistance movement in Indian-administered Kashmir to undermine Indian control, reigniting tensions and beginning decades of communal violence. Despite a recommitment to the LOC in 1999, Pakistani soldiers crossed the LOC, sparking the Kargil War. Although both countries have maintained a fragile cease-fire since 2003, they regularly exchange fire across the contested border. Both sides accuse the other of violating the cease-fire and claim to be shooting in response to attacks.

On November 26, 2008, fears that India and Pakistan would once again head towards direct military confrontation rose after militants laid siege to the Indian capital of Mumbai. Over three days, 166 people were killed, including 6 Americans. Both India and the United States blamed the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a militant group with alleged ties to the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)—Pakistan’s primary intelligence agency—for perpetrating the attack. The Indian government cooperated with the Pakistani government to bring the perpetrators to justice, paving the way for improved relations.

In 2014, many hoped India would pursue meaningful peace negotiations with Pakistan after India’s newly elected Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, invited Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to attend his inauguration. After a brief period of optimism, relations soured in August 2014 when India canceled talks with Pakistan’s foreign minister after the Pakistani high commissioner in India met with Kashmiri separatist leaders.

Momentum toward meaningful talks halted in September 2016, when armed militants attacked a remote Indian Army base in Uri, near the LOC, killing eighteen Indian soldiers in the deadliest attack on the Indian armed forces in decades. Indian officials accused Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), another group with alleged ties to ISI, of conducting the attack. In response, the Indian military announced it had carried out “surgical strikes” on terrorist camps inside Pakistani-administered Kashmir. In contrast, the Pakistani military denied that any such operation had taken place.

This period was marked by an uptick in border skirmishes that began in late 2016 and continued into 2018, killing dozens and displacing thousands of civilians on both sides of the Line of Control. More than three thousand cross-border strikes were reported in 2017, while nearly one thousand were reported in the first half of 2018. Militants launched attacks in October 2017 against an Indian paramilitary camp near Srinagar and, in February 2018, against an Indian army base in the Jammu region, which killed five soldiers and a civilian. During this time, violent demonstrations and anti-India protests calling for an independent Kashmir also continued. Over three hundred people, including civilians, Indian security forces, and militants, were killed in attacks and clashes in 2017. After months of Indian military operations targeting both Kashmiri militants and demonstrations, India announced in May 2018 that it would observe a cease-fire in Kashmir during the month of Ramadan for the first time in nearly two decades; operations resumed in June 2018. Later in May, India and Pakistan formally agreed to a cease-fire along the disputed Kashmir border that would restore the terms of their 2003 agreement.

In February 2019, an attack on a convoy of Indian paramilitary forces in Pulwama, Indian-administered Kashmir, killed at least forty soldiers. The attack, claimed by the Pakistani militant group JeM, was the deadliest in Kashmir in three decades. India retaliated with an air strike targeting terrorist training camps within Pakistani territory, which was followed by Pakistani air strikes on Indian-administered Kashmir. The exchange escalated into an aerial engagement, during which Pakistan shot down two Indian military aircraft and captured an Indian pilot; the pilot was released two days later.

In August 2019, following a deployment of tens of thousands of additional troops and paramilitary forces to the region, the Indian government moved to revoke Article 370 of the Indian constitution. The change removed Jammu and Kashmir’s special status, forcing Kashmiris to abide by Indian property and customary law and effectively diminishing their autonomy. The ruling not only angered Kashmiris but was also viewed as a “grave injustice” by Pakistan. The removal of Article 370 signified the more aggressive approach of the Modi government to integrate Kashmir into India through a doctrine of Hindu nationalism.

Following the revocation of Article 370, India-administered Kashmir remained under lockdown for over a year, with internet and phone services intermittently cut off and thousands of people detained. In 2022 and 2023, the Indian central government cracked down on independent media in the region, redrew the electoral map to privilege Hindu-majority areas in Kashmir, and held a G20 tourism meeting in Srinagar.

Targeted killings against Hindus have become more frequent, motivating some to flee and protest government policies. In response to the uptick in violence, the Modi government has taken an increasingly militarized response. Deadly clashes between Indian and Pakistani forces also persisted in 2023.

Recent Developments
Throughout 2024, violence continued in Kashmir in response to increasing efforts by New Delhi to consolidate territorial control. Attacks specifically targeted Indian travelers and workers in the region. In June 2024, militants opened fire on a bus carrying pilgrims traveling to a Hindu shrine in the town of Reasi. The attack killed nine and injured over thirty. In October, militants killed seven in Kashmir at a construction site for a tunnel project connecting Kashmir to the northern region of Ladakh.

On April 22, 2025, tensions escalated after militants attacked Indian tourists in Kashmir, killing twenty-five Indian nationals and one Nepalese national. The incident marked the deadliest terrorist attack in Indian territory since the 2008 Mumbai attacks. India blamed Pakistan for harboring the group responsible for the attack and arrested two Pakistani nationals as suspects. Pakistan denied any involvement, and its defense ministry even suggested the attack was a “false flag operation.” Although no group has been officially identified as responsible for the attack, the Kashmir Resistance—an offshoot of LeT—claimed responsibility online.

In the wake of the attack, tit-for-tat measures by India and Pakistan have driven bilateral relations to their lowest point in recent years. New Delhi first took measures to downgrade ties with Pakistan, suspending the Indus Waters Treaty, terminating a visa-free travel regime with Pakistan, and closing the Attari border crossing between the two countries. In turn, Pakistan rejected the suspension of the water treaty, warning that any attempts to alter Pakistan’s Indus River flows would be considered “an act of war.” Islamabad also moved to close Pakistani airspace to all Indian commercial airlines, halted a special visa regime for Indian citizens, and suspended bilateral trade.

Indian and Pakistani forces have exchanged fire across the LOC every day since the attack. The United States and China have called for de-escalation, with Beijing advocating for an independent investigation into the attack and its suspects. Islamabad and New Delhi have since traded military threats, with India’s navy testing long-range missiles. On April 28, Pakistan’s defense ministry expressed belief that an Indian military attack on Pakistani territory was “imminent” and that the Pakistan military was preparing reinforcements. Meanwhile, India has launched a crackdown in Kashmir, as Indian security forces have arrested over 1,500 Kashmiris and demolished homes of suspected militants.

https://www.cfr.org/global-conflict-tracker/conflict/conflict-between-india-and-pakistan

OTHER BACKMATTER
Agarwal, Ankit. “The United States and the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971: A Critical Inquiry.” Indian Journal of Asian Affairs 27/28, no. 1/2 (2014): 21–42. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43857990.

Qureshi, Khalida. “BRITAIN AND THE INDO-PAKISTAN CONFLICT OVER EAST PAKISTAN.” Pakistan Horizon 25, no. 1 (1972): 32–44. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41393111.

Rummel, R. J.. Statistics of democide: genocide and mass murder since 1900. Munster: LIT ;, 1998. https://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE5.HTM

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January 07, 2023
A Day Things Changed, InfoWars Fri. Jan. 7, 2011

THE MISSING ALEX JONES SHOW BROADCAST FROM ARCHIVE.ORG

On with Alex intel insider Bob Chapman, The International Forecaster & Charlotte Iserbyt former Asst. Sec. of Education Reagan Administration on the conservative myth of charter schools. "Rainbow" Ronnie and more.

A Day Things Changed, InfoWars Fri. Jan. 7, 2011

"Greatness to Annihilation"
G. Edward Griffin Responds

"What is the function of the State?
"Government is ... The legalized use of Coercion"

Streamed live on Jun 5, 2025 | Jason Bermas

Latest from Grace

Why Earning $100K Now Feels Like Being Poor | May 21, 2025 | Really Graceful

The American Dream is on life support. In May 2025, $100K feels like poverty, homes cost $400K+, and people are financing burritos with “Buy Now, Pay Later” apps like Klarna. In this deep-dive, I break down why homeownership is slipping out of reach, how corporations like BlackRock are buying up entire neighborhoods, and why the system feels rigged against everyday Americans.

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Thanks Gracie! And it could!

This could change everything...
Really Graceful | May 10, 2025

Are the pawns on the world's chess board being rearranged? Or is it one big farce? Are we so back...Or are we just beginning? I am waiting to see what happens...

Monthly Quote: Peter F. Drucker (1909-2005)
source: Peter F. Drucker Conservative Christian Anarchist

A conservative christian Anarchist, yes, that‘s what I am, more or less! The older I get, the more I become sceptical towards the the promises to save mankind through society.

I think, that one of the most important experiences we made within the last fifty years, is, that we aren‘t able to build a paradise on earth. There is no perfect Society, but only a bearable one. We can improve, but not perfecting - and this is a conservative concept. But it is also a christian one, because it puts its focus on the Individual and because of its belief that, there is something beyond Society. Therefore I am christian-conservative and Anarchist in the sense, that I more and more distrust power. For me the basic sin of mankind is the lust for power, not sex, sex is not a sin. In this sense I am an Anarchist. But unlike the Anarchists, I accept the need for a political order (the Justice State). Wilhelm von Humboldt, the political philosopher, I most respect, wrote a wonderful book on the myth of the French Revolution, when he was 23. In it there was an essay titled - Ideas on a trial to define the limits of the effectiveness of the State - This is the center of my interest. This question was the reason for me to concentrate my work on the enterprise and on the other autonomous institutions of our Society, which had taken over social tasks and thus limiting the power of the State. Therefore I call myself a conservative christian Anarchist, however in the special sense, as I described it above.
~  Peter F. Drucker (1909-2005) 

 

Background

Weber, Winfried. "Peter F. Drucker Conservative Christian Anarchist: A dialogue between Peter Paschek and Winfried Weber". Civilization and Management, Tokyo, Vol. 18, 2021. 9 January 2021. https://www.winfriedweber.com/post/peter-f-drucker-conservative-christian-anarchist

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Ike's Failure
20 May 2023 - Armed Forces Day

America celebrates Armed Forces Day this weekend. Unfortunately, those that celebrate have no exposure to the real truth: America's armed forces have failed to protect Americans and a foreign policy commitment to freedom. What? Think about the push for borderless nation-states by the elite and international crime. Think about endless war and political corruption beyond an imaginable scale. American armed forces are involved and millions of children live in conflict zones with no escape. Death is a business and business is good. No one has the answers to end War. We've known who the death merchants are and done nothing. Major General Smedley D. Butler alerted the public writing War is a Racket in 1935. But consider our failures to heed past warnings are not ours but a president's, Dwight D. Eisenhower.  

Eisenhower warned Americans and the whole world about the military-industrial complex. In his farewell speech, Ike additionally warned the public that, "For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers." And continued  "in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite." Wonderful. Thank you Mr. President for your concerns and consideration. 

In less than two years President Kennedy will be dead. 

Obviously, JFK's death is Ike's failure. Isn't it? The great five-star general didn't see it coming. Or did he? Maybe not. Hard to believe in retrospect. Death threats are the norm for many political leaders and Eisenhower must have had his fair share. But did he?

A quick review yields none. Yet, strangely enough, Wikipedia (as a tertiary resource) list attempts for every POTUS in the modern era since Herbert Hover except one. Dwight D. Eisenhower. This doesn't seem possible though Ike did save the world from the Nazi menace. Maybe out of great respect for his efforts during WWII made this odd factoid the case. 

History on the Net paints a powerful picture of Eisenhower. An excerpt mentioned from Mel Ayton’s Hunting the President: Threats, Plots, and Assassination Attempts—From FDR to Obama, published in 2014, aligns Ike as a possible candidate for the greatest American President that ever lived. Historian Stephen Ambrose takes this position by calling Ike "the smartest man I’ve ever met" and Ike's presidential success shaped by “eight toughest years of the Cold War without losing a single soldier, and without giving up an inch of territory . . . he got us through the decade. I don’t know if anybody else could have. I know that he did.” That is a powerful argument.

However, in referencing another historian another observation comes to light. A praiseworthy depiction of Eisenhower in the web article reveals that "behind the bland smile and apparent simplemindedness, historian Evan Thomas argues, he was a brilliant political tactician, a 'master of calculated duplicity,' a patient, subtle leader with quiet moral courage." Interesting. So in between the lines it becomes apparent that Ike was adept at "calculated" plots.

Is this how Eisenhower foresaw the subterfuge now infiltrated throughout the world and America? 

Because within "the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought" from all forms of corruption. Not just the military-industrial complex. Ike took the time to specifically point out technocracy but he did not offer a defense against it. Why? 

A Farewell's Final Words 

So-in this my last good night to you as your President-I thank you for the many opportunities you have given me for public service in war and peace. I trust that in that service you find somethings worthy; as for the rest of it, I know you will find ways to improve performance in the future.

You and I-my fellow citizens-need to be strong in our faith that all nations, under God, will reach the goal of peace with justice. May we be ever unswerving in devotion to principle, confident but humble with power, diligent in pursuit of the Nation's great goals.

To all the peoples of the world, I once more give expression to America's prayerful and continuing inspiration:

We pray that peoples of all faiths, all races, all nations, may have their great human needs satisfied; that those now denied opportunity shall come to enjoy it to the full; that all who yearn for freedom may experience its spiritual blessings; that those who have freedom will understand, also, its heavy responsibilities; that all who are insensitive to the needs of others will learn charity; that the scourges of poverty, disease and ignorance will be made to disappear from the earth, and that, in the goodness of time, all peoples will come to live together in a peace guaranteed by the binding force of mutual respect and love.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower, 17 January 1961.

Read Between lines

Eisenhowser's very last paragraph calls for emotional solidarity to achieve liberty. However, the very first outro paragraph seems to address a select few. A select group capable of arranging the right set of circumstances for opportunities during war and peace. Ike's "last good night" may not be for the American people, but for the elite that kept him and his family alive.  

After WWII many strange geopolitical occurrences shaped the world. We may never know the closed-door political situations that led us to our current geopolitical dilemmas, but Eisenhower must have understood hidden events better than anyone. Something more dynamic and important to the future of humanity made Ike an untouchable. The scientific-technological elite would leave the Eisenhower Presidency alone. And for 8 years a fledging technocracy began to flourish into what we know it to be today. A globalist socioeconomic menace that mimics the dreams of a 20th-century politician. That politician was Adolf Hitler. 

 

Background

"Eisenhower Presidency Summary". History on the Net. 20 May 2023. © 2000-2023, Salem Media. https://www.historyonthenet.com/eisenhower-presidency-summary>

President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Farewell Address. 17 January 1961. Washington D.C. 

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April 10, 2023
HK Update
10 April 2023

The research on Judge John Roll is ongoing and of course, we are eagerly awaiting the next phase of the David DePape story. We at HK all appreciate your patience. The Hell Know website was under attack for years. Now with a SAAS community like Locals, HK can operate on a free speech platform. A platform unencumbered by immoral governmental interference and restriction. A place where alternative information outlets can exchanges ideas and promote discourse.

Spring 2023 has begun with many exciting developments in the struggle against NWO Warlords. We see the J6 Shaman set free under the radar, while the American Deep State deployed ECCM in the form of a Trump indictment. We see COVID-19 Truth become more accepted by the masses. We see East Palestine, Ohio sadly suffer under a boot of fascism and a lack of empathy. We see alternative information outlets such as Locals grow.

Unfortunately, many alternative information outlets get caught up in the sensationalism of Twitter, infighting, and other distractions. No alternative information outlet (AIO) is immune from distractions. Even HK can be victimized by new Operation Mockingbird-type infowar campaigns. That said, seek new information where you can find it, vet it, and appreciate its integrity. We at HK do. We encourage others to do the same.

Great things are happening despite the NWO's war on freedom. Recent triumphs by others in the struggle for liberty that we wish to acknowledge, show great appreciation, and also much admiration for are fitting at this time. Really Graceful's recent contribution The Deep State Encyclopedia is showing remarkable Best Seller acceptance (book review forthcoming, maybe). Programs like Redacted are experiencing rapid growth—this is very encouraging. Children's Health Defence is beyond reproach. The J6 Joke is being exposed daily by Watching the Watchers. Internationally, The Duran continues to be a critical alternative information outlet. And finally, Locals growth is a wonderful thing. There are more, but HK can't keep up with those deserving accolades. If we've missed an organization or someone, in particular, deserving of our praises, please let us know. We Want To Know! 

How do we and you navigate through the disinfo? Through open discourse and community. But there's one eternal truth that shall be understood...

THERE IS NO LEFT vs. RIGHT!
ONLY TYRANNY vs. FREEDOM!

Peace and Be Well, 

HK

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