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NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Pakistan will have to get rid of its "terrorist infrastructure" if it wants to be "saved", Indian Prime ...
By Aftab Ahmed, Shivam Patel and YP Rajesh NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned Pakistan ...
Hafiz Abdur Rauf, who is designated a global terrorist by the United States, contested elections in Pakistan last year, ...
India had already taken non-military action. After decades of confrontation it wants to expand its toolkit in response to ...
India's military launched missile strikes against what it called "terrorist targets" in Pakistan overnight on Tuesday ...
Then, as now, Pakistan offered cooperation and even returned an Indian pilot within days—a gesture aimed at de-escalation.
Pakistan had no plans on deploying nuclear warheads to strike India over the last week of fighting, the country’s foreign ...
Civilian airports were reopened and stocks jumped in both nations, signs of confidence that the agreement to halt the most ...
Covert operations are “far more effective in weakening the terrorist infrastructure and enterprise in Pakistan, but only if they cover the full spectrum of covert instrumentalities available.” ...
In his Address to the Nation, PM Modi said, 'The terrorists had never imagined that India could take such a big ...
PM Modi reveals evidence of Pakistan's state-sponsored terrorism, citing army officers attending terrorists' funerals.- Watch ...
India has accused Pakistan of continuing to support Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad. Pakistan has rejected those claims.