Former Indian diplomat K P Fabian supported the government's firm yet measured response to the Pahalgam terror attack, including visa restrictions, expulsion of defence attaches, and suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty, calling it a mature and strategic approach.
In the wake of Tuesday's terror attack which claimed 26 innocent lives in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam, protests have erupted in various parts of the country as people express their anger amid the nationwide mourning over the loss of innocent lives during the attack.
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, condemning the terror attack in Phalgam, expressed his support to central government and said that we should not show terrorists any sympathy.
After the Centre decided to suspend the Indus Water Treaty following the terror attack in Pahalgam, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Kavinder Gupta said that bloodshed and water cannot go together.
The Indian stock market opened with a marginal decline on Thursday as geopolitical tensions weighed on investor sentiment. This comes after India took diplomatic measures against Pakistan in response to the recent attack in Pahalgam.
As the world united in its condemnation against the Phalgam terror attack that killed 26 people, mostly tourists and left many more injured, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney stated that he was "horrified" by the "senseless" and "shocking act of violence".
Following the deadly Pahalgam attack, Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, issued a strong statement and said that "it is now the duty of India to do to Pakistan and to Pakistan's ISI what Israel did to Hamas," calling for decisive
President of Pahalgam Hotels and Owners Association, Javeed Burza, condemned the dastardly attack by terrorists in which 26 people were killed and expressed grief over the incident.
A day after the terror attack, India on Wednesday announced a series of steps to give a strong message to Pakistan for its support to cross-border terrorism, stating that the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960 will be held in abeyance and the integrated checkpost at Attari will be closed with immed
Former Pentagon official Michael Rubin said Pakistan Army chief Asim Munir's speech "green lighted" the Pahalgam terror attack, calling for a firm response and blaming Pakistan's ISI for backing cross-border terrorism.
Taking to social media X, the BJP MP in a post wrote that hookah, water and food would be stopped to them (Pakistan) and the workers of Sanatani BJP would kill them after torturing them.
Following the terrorist attack in Pahalgam, Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, has called for the United States to officially label Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism. He also pointed to Pakistan's Army Chief, Asim Munir