Some moments in a nation’s life arrive not as events but as verdicts. May 10, 2025 was Pakistan’s verdict. Delivered across land, air, sea, and cyber simultaneously, against an adversary five times larger by defence budget, absorbing aggression with patience before answering with precision. Today, exactly one year on, Pakistan marks Youm-e-Marka-e-Haq. The missiles have long since landed. The jets have long since been confirmed. What remains now is the meaning, and on May 7, 2026, DG ISPR Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry gave that meaning its fullest articulation yet, presenting ten strategic consequences of Marka-e-Haq that together form the most complete account of what Pakistan actually won.
What This Year Buried
The first consequence DG ISPR named was the permanent burial of India’s decades-long narrative painting Pakistan as a source of terrorism. “The international community now fully understands that Pakistan is not a perpetrator but a victim of Indian-sponsored terrorism,” he said. The second consequence was Pakistan’s consolidation as the net security stabiliser in the region, the biggest ambassador of stability, a country that handled escalation with maturity while India escalated on the basis of a lie. The third consequence was the politicisation of India’s military leadership and the militarisation of its political leadership. DG ISPR pointed to India’s Air Chief Marshal claiming months after the conflict that India had also downed some planes. “Why are you trying to make jokers out of your admirals, generals and marshals,” he asked. No Pakistani officer made a single political statement over the past year. “We have placed the facts as they are.”
What This Year Exposed
The fourth consequence was the world’s growing acknowledgement of India’s pattern of externalising its internal problems while using terrorism as a state tool, with Kashmir reaffirmed as an internationally disputed matter carrying decades of UNSC resolutions. The fifth consequence was the exposure of Indian media’s discredited information operations. “The only thing that can survive in today’s information domain is truth. Tell people the truth. Somehow the Indians think they can work their way around lies. It does not work anymore,” DG ISPR said. Both consequences point to the same reality. An adversary that controls neither its military narrative nor its media credibility has already lost the most consequential battlefield of the modern era.
What This Year Proved
The sixth consequence was the transformed character of warfare itself, with Pakistan standing prepared across land, sea, air, cyber, and the cognitive domain. Air Vice Marshal Tariq Ghazi described the aerial engagements as a classical case study in full-spectrum multi-domain operations that would be studied internationally. The seventh consequence was Pakistan’s proven potential and resilience against multifaceted challenges, fighting counter-terrorism operations on the western front simultaneously with multi-domain war on the eastern front without pause. The eighth consequence was the loud and clear reestablishment of deterrence. “Anyone who thinks there is space for war between two nuclear neighbours is crazy. That is madness,” DG ISPR said. The ninth consequence was Pakistan’s recognition as a geopolitically significant and responsible middle power at the global stage.
The Verdict, One Year On
The tenth and most important consequence, in DG ISPR’s own words, was the unshakeable synergy between the people, the government, and the armed forces, what he called the Bunyan-un-Marsoos effect. That unity was the foundation beneath every military achievement, every verified claim, and every diplomatic gain of the past year. Truth is a strange weapon. Slow to load, impossible to suppress, and lethal at long range. Pakistan chose truth on May 10, 2025, in its targets, in its restraint, in its transparency, and in the account it gave the world afterward. Marka-e-Haq means the Battle of Truth. Today, one year on, the name has proven itself worthy of the day it commemorates.
Read More: Before May 9 and After May 10