pakistan has nothing to lose ?
7th biggest landmass full of resources with 20 crore people is a lot to lose .
india will never attack pakistan first ,if pakistan starts war then only india can retaliate even if there is threat of nuke being used .
well if india captures punjab, than Pakistan will have nothing to loose its better to die than be under a foreign occupation and kill a billion Indians along with it..india has much more to loose than Pakistan in comparison Pakistan has nothing to loose
india has already attacked Pakistan in the past that led Pakistan to develop nukes..what are you talking about, you dont know history ??? i mean i understand it happened before you were born but its not a remote history
we have 20 crore muslims .
it is very easy to talk than implement in action.
92000 of your type muslims put down their arms in 1971 setting aside all honor which you are boasting about .not a single soul protested or stood up for fighting against general who ordered to surrender.
india never threats pakistan, whatever we do that is in self defence .
in 1971 ,
bangali genocide was averted by indian interference , it was a global refugee crisis crores of bangalis crossed in to india disturbing normal life .
excatly, india will manufactur a punjabi, balochi, sindhi, pushtoon, martian, alien refugee crisis
it was 41000 troops, i dont know where you guys manufactured the 91000 number and reasoning was that war was lost ...we learned the lesson from that..
its surprising how a simple aggrestion is justified by india..by this definition you can attack any country..so attacking Afghanistan, iran, iraq, maldives, ukrain, venz, syria are all justified..infact every war is justifed..we should attack india/kashmir again by this definition of "global crisis"
anyway two further annexation were done by india,
upon the advice of Dewan Bhutto, on 15 August 1947, the Nawab announced that Junagadh had acceded to Pakistan. On 13 September, the Government of Pakistan accepted the accession
this is still shown as part of pakistan on maps