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Why Pakistan is delaying its response? A strategic discussion.

India’s Misinformation Mayhem vs. Pakistan’s Calculated Calm: Decoding the 2025 War Theatre

The subcontinent has once again become the stage for high-stakes brinkmanship. The current India-Pakistan war crisis was ignited on May 7, 2025, when India launched Operation Sindoor—a preemptive but reckless campaign of missile strikes that deliberately targeted civilian infrastructure, including mosques and the Neelum-Jhelum Hydropower Project. The cost: 31 civilian lives and massive outrage across the Muslim world (CNN, May 9). What followed was not a military victory but a credibility crisis for India, as leaked RAW memos confirmed the operation to be a false flag—a manufactured narrative aimed at justifying aggression (Urdu Newsdesk, May 1).

Pakistan's military response—code-named Operation Allah o Akbar—was swift, precise, and devastating. Within 24 hours, five Indian jets (including Rafales and Su-30s) were downed, critical Indian airbases were neutralized, and an embarrassing surrender occurred at the Chora Complex in Kashmir (security sources, May 7). However, what followed was even more telling than the battlefield: a disinformation barrage by India, aimed at rewriting the facts, inflaming nationalism, and masking operational failures.

Amid this, Pakistan has chosen restraint. A two-day delay in launching further retaliation has drawn mixed reactions, ranging from praise for strategic patience to criticism over perceived hesitation. But is this delay a diplomatic stroke of genius in a nuclear shadow war—or a sign of internal disarray?

Let’s break it down.


I. India’s Misinformation Barrage: A Drowning Narrative in Desperation

India’s Operation Sindoor failed to achieve tactical or strategic objectives. Rather than crippling Pakistan’s defense grid, it handed Islamabad a diplomatic and military win. So, Delhi switched to psychological operations, attempting to “win the war” through narrative domination.

Four Key Objectives Behind India’s Media Blitzkrieg

1. Domestic Distraction and Nationalist Mobilization

With public outrage mounting over India’s failures, Modi’s BJP government found itself cornered. The shooting down of Rafales—India’s prized air superiority jets—exposed the vulnerability of its $8.7 billion French fleet (CNN, May 7). Drone warfare, another major investment, crumbled with the loss of over 30 Heron and Harop UAVs in Pakistan’s electronic warfare kill zone (security sources).

Faced with embarrassment, the Indian state media launched a fantastical narrative: Pakistan’s Army Chief had been arrested, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif locked himself in a room, and—absurdly—ports in landlocked Lahore and Multan were destroyed. Formerly respected journalist Barkha Dutt amplified these falsehoods, damaging her journalistic credibility in the process (Dawn, May 9). The purpose? Create an illusion of victory, mobilize public rage, and distract from humiliating military setbacks.

2. International Narrative Manipulation

India has long invested in global perception-building. From Bollywood soft power to IT diplomacy, narrative management is strategic. In this war theatre, it attempts to portray itself as the victim of “Pakistani aggression,” recycling old imagery (like the 2016 Turkish F-16 crash) and fabricating tales of Pakistani disintegration. However, this approach is unraveling. International outlets including The Guardian, CNN, and Reuters have questioned India's credibility, especially after the Chora Complex surrender and visual confirmation of Rafale wreckage shared by open-source intelligence groups.

Moreover, Oxfam and Amnesty International condemned the targeting of civilian sites, noting it may constitute a war crime under international law. India’s attempted cover-up has only amplified global skepticism, further isolating Delhi diplomatically (X posts, May 8).

3. Psychological Pressure on Pakistan

India’s information warfare isn’t merely for its own people—it aims to rattle Pakistani decision-makers, goad them into overreaction, and then play the “defensive democracy” card before the global community. Drone incursions into border areas, despite repeated shoot-downs, seem less about strategic gain and more about testing Pakistan’s thresholds and response timelines.

But Pakistan hasn’t taken the bait.

4. Internal Military and Political Cracks

With a shortage of over 100,000 troops and an operational shortfall of nearly 13 fighter squadrons (India has 29.5 vs. a required 42, IISS 2024), India’s military doctrine appears overstretched. Reports of top-level sackings in the Northern Command and Dassault’s stock plunge post-Rafale losses (Indian Express, May 8) further undermine morale. The fake news spree is a thin veil attempting to conceal internal decay.


II. Pakistan’s Response: Strategic Delay or Systemic Constraints?

Pakistan’s military struck with stunning precision in Operation Allah o Akbar, using JF-17 Thunders, J-10Cs equipped with PL-15 beyond-visual-range missiles, AM350 AESA radars, and Turkish Koral electronic warfare systems. All five downed Indian jets were intercepted within Pakistani airspace, allowing Islamabad to maintain the moral high ground.

However, since then, Pakistan has withheld further strikes. While some see it as a missed opportunity, a closer analysis reveals a deliberate doctrine of controlled escalation—classic asymmetric warfare in the age of 5th-gen conflict.

Four Strategic Layers Behind Pakistan’s Delay

1. Asymmetric Psychological Warfare

Pakistan’s delay is not passive; it is psychological warfare in action. By not responding instantly, Islamabad controls the tempo of conflict, unnerving Indian war planners. The uncertainty of when and where Pakistan might strike next forces India into continuous high alert—draining resources and morale.

This echoes the 2019 Balakot episode, where Pakistan downed a MiG-21 a day after India’s strike, captured a pilot, and strategically de-escalated while still claiming the upper hand.

2. Target Selection and Tactical Posturing

Military sources confirm that Pakistan is finalizing precision target lists, including high-value installations like the Ambala Airbase and Northern Command HQ. Saidu Sharif, Sargodha, and Skardu airbases remain on high operational readiness, equipped with long-range H-4 glide bombs, Ra’ad II cruise missiles, and Chinese HQ-9 SAM systems.

The message: Pakistan will strike—on its terms, at its time, with decisive consequences.

3. Diplomatic Leverage and Narrative Mastery

While India screams “war,” Pakistan has quietly moved through diplomatic channels. From pushing for a neutral Pahalgam massacre probe to preparing an IWT lawsuit at the ICJ, Pakistan is building a legal case for Indian aggression. This has garnered attention from Turkey, China, and OIC members, who are publicly questioning India’s version of events.

China’s delivery of PL-15 missiles and Turkey’s movement of C-130 support planes into Skardu airspace (security sources) have signaled a shift in regional alignments. India’s isolation is becoming visible.

4. Information Warfare Discipline

While Indian media loses credibility with outrageous claims, Pakistan’s ISPR and Foreign Office have maintained a tight, data-backed communication line. Information Minister Attaullah Tarar’s icy remark—“Revenge is a dish best served cold”—is not just rhetoric. It’s a strategy. In a nuclear-charged environment, managing public emotion, sustaining international support, and maintaining the upper hand in narrative warfare are as critical as kinetic actions.


Conclusion: A War of Nerves, Narrative, and Nuance

The 2025 India-Pakistan conflict is no longer just a military standoff—it is a multidimensional battle spanning psychological, informational, diplomatic, and military domains.

  • India, through Operation Sindoor and its ongoing media circus, has exposed the rot in its crisis management machinery—relying on deception over discipline, optics over outcomes.
  • Pakistan, though criticized domestically for its delayed retaliation, appears to be executing a deeper strategy—leveraging calm to build a stronger international case, plan decisive strikes, and allow India’s misinformation campaign to collapse under its own absurdity.

The days ahead may define South Asia’s strategic future. Will Pakistan’s calm translate into a calibrated and crushing blow? Or will global actors intervene before a broader escalation? Either way, one thing is clear: in the fog of war, facts are weapons—and Pakistan, for now, is wielding them more wisely. 

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