Pakistan's Terror Calculus Exposed: Global Silence on Kashmir Attack Condemned

A report by Sri Lanka News asserts the 2025 Pahalgam terror attack was a calculated strike by a Pakistan-based group to shatter Kashmir's returning normalcy and booming tourism. It details how Pakistan blocked UN recognition of the responsible group, The Resistance Front, an LeT offshoot. The analysis cites Pakistan's Defence Minister Khawaja Asif and former President Pervez Musharraf admitting state support for militant groups over decades. The report concludes the international community must abandon diplomatic politeness towards Pakistan, which openly shelters terrorists.

Key Points: Report: Global Community Must End Diplomatic Politeness with Pakistan

  • Pahalgam attack aimed to kill Kashmir's tourism boom
  • Pakistan blocked UN mention of its terror proxy
  • Defence Minister admitted to decades of support
  • Attack was a choreographed display of religious supremacy
  • Extradited terrorist highlights Pakistan's global terror footprint
3 min read

Global community can't afford 'diplomatic politeness' when dealing with Pakistan: Report

A report details Pakistan's role in the Pahalgam terror attack, its admission of supporting militant groups, and calls for an end to global diplomatic politeness.

"The global community cannot afford 'selective memory or diplomatic politeness' - Sri Lanka News report"

Colombo, April 22

Pakistan's blocking of any mention of The Resistance Front, an offshoot of the UN-proscribed Pakistani terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, in a UN Security Council release following the Pahalgam attack reflected not fight against terrorism but an effort to manage it, a report said on Wednesday.

According to a report in 'Sri Lanka News', the April 22, 2025 Pahlagam terror attack carried out by the Pakistan-based terrorist group TRF was not an act of sudden rage but a calculated strike aimed at the idea that Jammu and Kashmir was returning to normalcy.

In 2024 alone, it said, nearly three million tourists visited the valley, with newly-wed couples, families, and holidaymakers filling the hotels across Pahalgam, Gulmarg, and Sonmarg.

"The tourism industry had been booming since the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019, and analysts say the ISI's calculated intent was to unleash Lashkar-e-Taiba to hurt that very sector. The massacre was designed not only to kill people but also to kill confidence - and for a brief, brutal moment, it worked. Bookings were cancelled overnight at hotels across Pahalgam, Gulmarg, and Sonmarg, leaving owners, guides, and shopkeepers to absorb losses running into crores of rupees," the report detailed.

"The horror of the attack itself is almost impossible to narrate without flinching. Armed with M4 carbines and AK-47s, the militants entered Baisaran Valley through surrounding forests. They singled out the men, asked them about their religion before firing, and in some cases instructed tourists to recite the Islamic declaration of faith to identify non-Muslims. Newlywed men were shot point-blank in front of their wives," it added.

The report stressed that the attack was not insurgency but a choreographed display of religious supremacy orchestrated by handlers operating safely across the border.

Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Asif, in an interview with an international media outlet, appeared to acknowledge that Pakistan had supported terrorist groups for over three decades - describing it as carrying out the West's "dirty work".

"That admission, offered almost casually in an interview, is among the most significant confessions in the modern history of South Asian terrorism. Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf had made a similar concession years earlier, acknowledging that his government trained militant groups for deployment in Kashmir and turned a blind eye because it wanted to pressure India into negotiations. What had once been whispered is now, apparently, spoken aloud," the report mentioned.

Highlighting the growing global footprint of Pakistan-linked terror networks, it cited India's extradition of Tahawwur Rana in the weeks preceding the Pahalgam massacre - a former Pakistan Army officer convicted in the United States for aiding the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.

The report stated that the global community cannot afford "selective memory or diplomatic politeness" when dealing with Pakistan, which "openly shelters the architects of mass murder".

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The details of the attack are horrifying. Asking people to recite religious declarations to identify targets is pure evil. The international community's silence is complicity. How many more innocent families have to suffer before concrete action is taken?
R
Rohit P
It breaks my heart to read about the tourism industry being targeted. Kashmir was finally healing and thriving post-2019. My cousin got married there last year and said it was paradise. These attacks are designed to break our spirit, but we must not let them win. #StandWithKashmir
A
Aman W
The report is right about "diplomatic politeness". The West uses Pakistan when it suits them and then looks the other way at terrorism. It's a double game that costs Indian lives. Time for real sanctions and isolation of terror-sponsoring states, no more excuses.
P
Priya S
While the anger is justified, we must also ensure our response strengthens our own society. Sometimes the rhetoric in India can become too generalized against ordinary Pakistanis, many of whom also suffer. Our fight is with the establishment and terror groups, not the common people across the border.
K
Karthik V
The extradition of Tahawwur Rana is a big deal. It shows the global network is real. We need more such actions. The financial and ideological pipelines of these groups must be choked internationally. India's diplomatic efforts are commendable, but the pace needs to increase. 🇮🇳

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