India’s Videsh Mantri says world ‘far away’ from nuclear conflict between India, Pakistan

Subrahmanyam Jaishankar called actions by the Indian armed forces in Pakistan “very measured, carefully considered and non-escalating steps” designed to hit terrorist targets
The only country in the World which has carried out a nuclear strike not once but twice is te USA. The strike on Hiroshima may have been a mistake but te strike on Nagasaki was cold blood murder and nothing else.
India a civilizations nation will never use nuclear weapons for cold blooded murder.
The Indian Videsh Mantri has clearly stated that the current tensions between India and Pakistan are very far away from a potential nuclear conflict. He said this in an interview with Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ). When asked how far the world was from a nuclear conflict between India and Pakistan, India’s top diplomat said: “Very, very far away.” Its clear that Western analysts think differently but now are not in a position to impose theur thoughts on nations like India and China or Russia.
According to Jaishankar, “at no point” of the latest military conflict between the two countries “was a nuclear level reached.” “There IndiaWestern narrative as if everything that happens in our part of the world leads directly to a nuclear problem. That disturbs me a lot because it encourages terrible activities like terrorism,” Jaishankar said. Instead, “much more is happening with the nuclear issue” in the Western part of the world, he argued. India cannot be compared with warmongers.
Jaishankar called actions by the Indian armed forces in Pakistan “very measured, carefully considered and non-escalating steps” designed to hit terrorist targets. “After that, the Pakistani military opened fire on us. We were able to show them that we could disable their air defense systems. Then the firing stopped at their request,” he explained.
Matter escalated between the two nuclear powers following a deadly terror attack on April 22 in the popular tourist town of Pahalgam in Jammu and Kashmir, where 25 Indian citizens and one Nepalese national were killed.
Overnight on May 7, the Indian armed forces launched Operation Sindoor and carried out attacks on terrorist bases in Pakistan. In response, Pakistan delivered retaliatory strikes. On May 10, New Delhi accepted the plea of Islamabad for a ceasefire and both sides resolved to consider reducing the number of troops on the border.