Pakistan rejects Indian ‘Vishva Guru’ claim, with COAS Asim Munir saying India’s image does not match reality.
Speaking to the Pakistani diaspora in Tampa during his second United States visit in six weeks.
He said India wants to present itself as a global teacher, but in practice it is nothing like that.
Pakistan rejects Indian ‘Vishva Guru’ claim amid regional concerns
Field Marshal Munir linked the gap between image and reality to regional security issues.
He said the involvement of India’s intelligence agency RAW in transnational terrorist activities is a serious concern at the global level.
CAOS cited examples that have strained India’s standing abroad, including the killing of a Sikh leader in Canada and the Kulbhushan Jadhav episode.
Army Chief said Pakistan has fought a successful diplomatic war against discriminatory and duplicitous policies.
On Kashmir, he reminded the audience that it is an unfinished international agenda with United Nations Security Council resolutions that Pakistan fully supports.
while continuing on Kashmir, he said, remains the jugular vein of Pakistan, echoing Quaid-e-Azam’s words.
The army chief warned that recent Indian aggression has pushed the region close to a dangerous conflict, where even a small mistake could trigger a bilateral war.
Furthermore, he added that Pakistan is grateful for recent diplomatic efforts that helped cool tempers.
He also underlined that social media is being used by anti-state elements to create engineered chaos, and that Pakistan will not show sympathy to terrorists.
Placing the remarks in a wider context, he said Pakistan seeks a constructive and sustainable path with the United States.
Several memorandums of understanding under implementation with the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and China.
He called overseas Pakistanis a source of pride and a vital part of the country’s progress.
The message was clear. Narrative alone cannot make a country a teacher to the world.
For Pakistan, stability, lawful conduct, and respect for international norms remain the test that matters in South Asia.
