barCreated with sketchtool.
US Gov: Asim Munir's Anti-India Rant 'Regrettable...Made From A Friendly Country'
Aug 11, 2025 04:00 pm
By
infodivyadelhi

Divya Delhi: Indian officials called Pakistani Army chief Asim Munir's Monday US nuclear warning "nuclear saber-rattling." In his Florida speech, Munir threatened to"take down half the world" and "nuclear war" if Pakistan faced an existential crisis with India. Our nation is nuclear. "We'll take half the world down if we think we're going down," Munir said at a private dinner. MEA claimed statements were made "from the soil of a friendly third country," calling the venue "regrettable." "Nuclear saber-rattling is Pakistan's specialty," MEA said. The "irresponsibility inherent in such remarks, which reinforce the well-held doubts about the integrity of nuclear command and control in a state where the military is hand-in-glove with terrorist groups," is judged globally. I "will continue to take all steps necessary to safeguard the national security." Pak nuclear blackmail will fail. Israel condemns Munir's bomb threat Israeli ambassador to India Azar found the bomb threat less "conducive." Munir's reply is pointless. Strongly supporting friends." Senior authorities called the remarks "highly irresponsible," emphasizing Pakistan's regional and global security vulnerabilities. The US-backed Pakistani military "shows its true colors." Another risky nuclear weapons declaration by the Pakistani Army Chief. This displays Pakistan's regional and global security risks. Pakistan's nukes frighten "officials. This implies Pakistani military superiority. Pakistani non-state actors threaten nuclear "sources. Munir reveals the first US nuclear threat to a third nation. On his second US tour in two months, the Pakistani army chief criticized India over Indus River management after a brief four-day conflict. Munir is on an official tour of American political and defense officials and the Pakistani diaspora, according to the Pakistani military. He dubbed his second Washington visit in six weeks "a new dimension" in Pakistan–US ties.