Newsflash:

Pakistan Rejects Indian NSA’s ‘Avenging History’ Remarks, Calls Them Hate-Mongering

Pakistan has rejected remarks by India’s NSA Ajit Doval, calling them hate-mongering and saying such rhetoric harms diplomacy and regional stability.

[read-estimate]

Indian NSA

Pakistan’s Foreign Office rejects Indian NSA Ajit Doval’s remarks and calls them harmful to regional stability [IC: by AFP}

January 14, 2026

Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Wednesday strongly dismissed recent remarks by India’s National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, saying the language reflected hate-mongering driven by “imagined historical vendettas” rather than responsible statecraft.

The Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi said Pakistan had taken note of the comments made by Doval during a public address to young delegates in India earlier this week.

He said such rhetoric undermines responsible diplomacy and threatens regional stability.

“We have seen the reports on remarks made by the National Security Advisor of India. Such rhetoric is hardly surprising coming from camouflaged hate-mongers, for whom imagined historical vendettas are a substitute for responsible statecraft,” Andrabi said.

The reaction followed Doval’s speech at the Viksit Bharat Young Leaders Dialogue on January 10, where he spoke about India’s colonial past and used the word “avenge” while discussing the country’s future direction.

He cited figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, Subhash Chandra Bose and Bhagat Singh and said their struggles should guide India’s path.

However, a RSS follower, the parent organization of the BJP currently ruling India, killed Mahatma Gandhi because of his soft stance on minorities. Therefore, hate speech under BJP rule has increased exponentially, targeting minorities by criticizing their religion, race, ethnicity, and now even their history.

Read more: CTD Kills Three Fitna-al-Khawarij Terrorists in Dera Ismail Khan IBO

Related Articles

Record immigration from India to Canada and the rapidly changing demographics of cities like Toronto have sparked a new debate about the country’s resources and immigration policy.
CM Sohail Afridi is facing severe criticism for ignoring public issues over the Gomal University crisis and the dismissal of PhD teachers in KP.
A viral video from Nepal’s Annapurna Conservation Area shows locals confronting Indian tourists for littering and making them clean up their own waste, reigniting debate over tourist behaviour abroad.
Pakistan’s nuclear weapons architecture spans a complete land, air and sea triad covering every corner of India at three tiers of destructive yield, from the Nasr tactical missile to the Taimoor cruise missile and Hangor-class submarines now entering service.

Post a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *