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ficker22

Senior Member
Registered Member

I just want America to drown in their own poop.


People are joking, but I think India genuinely sees the current global chaos as the best opportunity to establish Akhand Bharat. Pakistan's government is weak and substantially compromised - the assumption that they'd go to total war vs. India and start throwing nukes over Kashmir is not realistic, IMO. The Muslim world in general has been greatly weakened by recent events and there will be no one riding to Pakistan's rescue; not even China as Pakistan's relationship with China is probably at its worst period since it began.

India's demographics are strong and there is thus both an opportunity and an urgency to make use of it. When you have tons of people and not enough work / resources for them, what do you do? That's right. Fight for more living space.



Muslims are the weakest, most divided bunch there is. Second only to hindutfarts. With the ousting and arrest of Imran Khan, no sane leader can currently unite Pakistan to become a *functional* entity in this decade.



Those "book people" idiotically work for heaven after earth, China works for heaven on earth, they are not the same.

No sahur, no our father in heaven, no shmah israel will change anything. Go to the library and learn real science not "god made the world in seven days", I would rather believe in Ghibli movie Lore that this.
 

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neutralobserver

New Member
Registered Member
@ficker22 Don’t you realize that it was Imran Khan who weakened Pakistan? He strained the country's relationships with the US, China, and traditional allies like the Gulf Arabs. Honestly, I’m relieved the military took action to put him in check. It seems many Chinese members here have been misled by partisan Imran Khan supporters who think Pakistan will fall apart without him. The damage he did to CPEC was nothing short of disastrous. He took over a stable government and turned it into a period of four years of instability. Right now, Imran Khan and his party are actually asking low-ranking US Senators to impose sanctions on Pakistan unless he’s released. Anyway, I know this isn’t the place for Pakistani politics, but I just wanted to point out that some Chinese members here are being misled by these partisan supporters. Pakistan’s governments, regardless of political party, have always been pro-China, no matter what our ties with the US or other countries are. China is an essential partner.
 

BillRamengod

Junior Member
Registered Member
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Sinnavuuty

Senior Member
Registered Member
People are joking, but I think India genuinely sees the current global chaos as the best opportunity to establish Akhand Bharat. Pakistan's government is weak and substantially compromised - the assumption that they'd go to total war vs. India and start throwing nukes over Kashmir is not realistic, IMO. The Muslim world in general has been greatly weakened by recent events and there will be no one riding to Pakistan's rescue; not even China as Pakistan's relationship with China is probably at its worst period since it began.

India's demographics are strong and there is thus both an opportunity and an urgency to make use of it. When you have tons of people and not enough work / resources for them, what do you do? That's right. Fight for more living space.
I believe Pakistan’s strategic value to China rests on three pillars: access to Afghanistan, infrastructure leverage through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), and military deterrence of India. There are problems with all three pillars at this point.

First, the Taliban. China has now built direct relations with the Afghan regime, bypassing the indirect channel with Islamabad. It no longer needs Pakistan to have relations with Kabul.

Second, CPEC. Once considered the crown jewel of the Belt and Road Initiative, it is now seen in Chinese policy circles as a costly liability. Gwadar Port, a planned rival to Dubai, remains underdeveloped, marred by insurgency, local discontent, and unpaid contractors. A project that was meant to showcase China’s global ambitions now reflects its geostrategic limitations.

Third, military leverage against India. Pakistan retains its usefulness in countering India’s strategic air capability, but the cost of associating with a militarized and increasingly unstable regime where jihadist ties permeate state structures is growing.

What Beijing fears most is not Indian retaliation. It is the spillovers of Islamism. Especially in Xinjiang, where it has spent decades suppressing Islamic extremism. The Talibanization of Pakistan’s security apparatus is a warning sign, not a call to action.

During the 1971 Indo-Pakistani war that led to the creation of Bangladesh, Islamabad waited in vain for Chinese military intervention. It never came.

According to Andrew Small’s article, “The China-Pakistan Axis,” a Dawn editorial published in 1972 offered a sobering analysis: “Had we not assumed that we would receive unlimited Chinese support, regardless of our aims and behavior, the country might have been saved from humiliation and defeat.” Since then, this pattern has not changed much. Beijing offers diplomatic cover, economic leverage and strategic coordination, but not military intervention.
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
TFR is below replacement level, but there is a huge bulge in India's youth population. Fertility has a delayed effect. They're at their strongest demographic peak right now, with most of the population being young people 10-40, and importantly a male surplus.

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Not a problem. Unitree can always make more robot lizards.
 
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