'Will use full spectrum of power': Pakistan's nuclear warning to India, says conflict ‘imminent’ (WATCH)

Published : May 04, 2025, 10:55 AM IST
Muhammad Khalid Jamali

Synopsis

Pakistan’s Ambassador to Russia, Muhammad Khalid Jamali, has warned that his country would respond with its “full spectrum of power” if India launched a strike.

Pakistan’s Ambassador to Russia, Muhammad Khalid Jamali, has warned that Islamabad would respond with its “full spectrum of power", including nuclear weapons, if India launched a strike.

Speaking in an interview with Russian broadcaster RT on Saturday, Muhammad Khalid Jamali, Pakistan's top diplomat in Moscow, said Islamabad has credible intelligence suggesting that India is planning military strikes on Pakistani territory. "There are some other leaked documents whereby it has been decided to strike certain areas of Pakistan," Jamali said. "So that makes us feel that this is going to happen and it's imminent."

 

 

The comments represent one of the most explicit threats of nuclear retaliation made by a senior Pakistani official against India in recent years. "We in Pakistan will use the full spectrum of power, both conventional and nuclear," he said.

Jamali's warning follows the April 22 terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam, in which 26 people, mostly tourists, were killed. The incident has heightened tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbours. India has accused Pakistan of harbouring and extending support to terror groups who orchestrated the attack, although Islamabad has denied involvement.

Pahalgam attack aftermath

In retaliatory measures, India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), a 1960 agreement brokered by the World Bank that governs the distribution of the Indus River and its tributaries between the two countries. This treaty had endured through multiple wars between India and Pakistan and was long viewed as a rare stabilising arrangement in a tense bilateral relationship.

Jamali termed India's suspension of the treaty as an act of war.

"Any attempt to usurp the water of the lower riparian, or to stop it, or to divert it would be an act of war against Pakistan and would be responded to with full force of power, including full spectrum of power," he said.

Amid talks of nuclear action, Pakistan's military conducted a test launch of the Abdali surface-to-surface missile on Saturday. The weapon has a range of 450 kilometres and is capable of carrying both conventional and nuclear payloads. According to a statement from the Pakistani army, the launch was intended to ensure "operational readiness".

Meanwhile, India, on Saturday, imposed a ban on imports of goods originating in or transiting through Pakistan, and prohibited Pakistani ships from entering Indian ports.

Other measures announced in recent days include the suspension of postal exchanges, including parcels and letters sent via air or surface transport, and the closure of the Attari-Wagah land border crossing.

 

 

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