Pakistan army chief rejects Indian claims of Chinese help in May conflict

Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir, Pakistan’s army chief, addressing the graduating officers at the National Defense University in Islamabad, on July 7, 2025. (ISPR)
Short Url
Updated 07 July 2025
Follow

Pakistan army chief rejects Indian claims of Chinese help in May conflict

  • In early May, the two sides engaged in a four-day war involving drones, missiles and artillery fire
  • Top Indian general has said China gave Pakistan “live inputs” about key Indian military positions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s army chief on Monday rejected recent Indian military claims Islamabad received real-time support from China during the May 2025 conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, calling the insinuations “factually incorrect” and a “shoddy attempt” to deflect from its battlefield failures.

The remarks came during an address by Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir, Pakistan’s army chief, to graduating officers at the National Defense University in Islamabad.

Last week, Indian Army Deputy Chief Lt. Gen. Rahul Singh alleged at a defense forum in New Delhi that during the May fighting, China had provided Pakistan with “live inputs” about key Indian military positions. Singh did not detail the evidence behind the claim.

In an interview with Arab News last month, Defense Minister Khawaja Asif denied any direct Chinese military involvement during the May 7-10 conflict.

“Insinuations regarding external support in Pakistan’s successful Operation Bunyan Al Marsoos are irresponsible and factually incorrect,” Munir said, according to a statement from the military’s media wing, referring to the name of the Pakistani military response to Indian attacks on May 10.

He described the allegations as reflecting “a chronic reluctance to acknowledge indigenous capability and institutional resilience developed over decades of strategic prudence.”

“Naming other states as participants in the purely bilateral military conflagration is also a shoddy attempt at playing camp politics and desperately trying that India remains the beneficiary of larger geopolitical contestation as the so-called net security provider in a region which is getting increasingly weary of its hegemonic and extremist Hindutva ideology.”

Munir said India’s failure to achieve its stated goals during the conflict highlighted shortcomings in planning and capability.

“India’s inability to achieve its stated military objectives during Operation Sindoor, and the subsequent attempt to rationalize this shortfall through convoluted logic, speaks volumes about its lack of operational readiness and strategic foresight,” he said.

The Indian government and military have not yet responded to Munir’s remarks. 

Tensions between the two countries escalated after a deadly April 2025 attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir. New Delhi blamed Pakistan for the assault, which Islamabad denied.

In early May, the two sides engaged in a four-day war involving drones, missiles, and artillery fire — their worst clash in decades — before a ceasefire was brokered by the United States.

Pakistan said its armed forces launched Operation Bunyan Al Marsoos in response to Indian strikes on civilian and military infrastructure. India, for its part, claimed it had targeted militant camps and infrastructure inside Pakistan.

In his speech, Munir warned that any future misadventure would be met with a swift and forceful response.

“Any attempt to target our population centers, military bases, economic hubs and ports will instantly invoke a ‘deeply hurting and more than reciprocal response,’” he said. “The onus of escalation will squarely lie on the strategically blind, arrogant aggressor.”


Pakistan touts investment potential for US businesses in tech, energy and minerals

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan touts investment potential for US businesses in tech, energy and minerals

  • The country’s envoy says both sides was committed to anchoring relations in economic cooperation
  • He describes Pakistan’s tech-savvy youth as a competitive asset for businesses needing skilled labor

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States said on Sunday the country offered profitable opportunities for American businesses in information technology, energy and minerals, according to an official statement.

The comments come months after the US and Pakistan reached a trade deal in July, with officials on both sides signaling interest in expanding cooperation into energy, mining, digital infrastructure and other sectors.

Pakistani Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb at the time said the aim was to move “beyond the immediate trade imperative,” adding that the two countries had “come a long way” in their broader strategic partnership.

“Pakistan presents profitable opportunities for US entrepreneurs, particularly in the fast-growing and lucrative IT, energy and minerals sectors,” Ambassador Rizwan Saeed Sheikh said, according to the statement.

Sheikh made the remarks during a meeting at the embassy in Washington with a delegation from the Yale School of Management, which plans to visit Pakistan.

He said the leadership in both countries was committed to anchoring relations in economic cooperation and providing an investor-friendly environment for American firms looking to enter a market of more than 250 million people.

The ambassador noted Pakistan was strategically located at the crossroads of South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East, adding that it served as a vital trade corridor offering US businesses connectivity to energy-rich Central Asian states and Gulf markets.

Sheikh highlighted opportunities in tourism, agriculture, manufacturing and information technology, pointing to Pakistan’s large, tech-savvy youth population as a competitive asset for businesses needing skilled labor.

“The success of over 80 US companies already operating profitably in Pakistan bears testimony to the country’s vast economic potential,” he said.

The statement added the delegation thanked the ambassador for the briefing and said it looked forward to the embassy’s support during the visit.