Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director General Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said on Thursday that Pakistan was âpreparedâ as he touted the armed forcesâ indigenous military capabilities.
He made the remarks while addressing a press conference in Islamabad as the nation commemorated the one-year anniversary of Marka-i-Haq. The deputy chief of naval staff (operations), Rear Admiral Shifaat Ali, and the deputy chief of air staff (projects), Air Vice Marshal Tariq Ghazi, were also present alongside him.
Last yearâs military conflict with India, starting from the April 22 Pahalgam attack to the end of Pakistanâs Operation Bunyanum Marsoos, with a ceasefire ending a military escalation between the two countries on May 10, has been called âMarka-i-Haqâ (Battle of Truth) by the state.
âWe welcome you to ISPR on this happy day,â he said at the outset of his presser, congratulating the nation on the one-year anniversary of Marka-i-Haq.
He said that the countryâs armed forces had risen to the nationâs expectations and defeated a much larger enemy with multi-domain operations.
âToday, we are not going to dwell a lot on what happened ⊠We are going to spend more time from May 2025 to May 2026,â he said, adding that they would expand on the âstrategic consequencesâ of the conflict.
Strategic consequences of Marka-i-Haq
He said that there were 10 strategic consequences of Marka-i-Haq, the first of which was that the Indian narrative of painting Pakistan as a source of terrorism stood buried.
He said that an attempt had been made to portray, without evidence, that Pakistan had perpetrated terrorism in India. He said that it had been one year since the Pahalgam incident, yet the questions that Pakistan had asked remain unanswered.
âWhere is the evidence?â he asked. âNobody buys this ⊠you are the biggest terrorist. Nobody listens to them, nobody believes them,â he said.
He said that the second consequence was the consolidation of Pakistan as the net security stabiliser in the region. He said that Marka-i-Haq showed who was controlling and dominating the escalation, adding that India escalated the conflict based on a lie.
The DG ISPR said the âbiggest ambassador of security in the regionâ was Pakistan and its leadership.
Coming to the third strategic consequence of Marka-i-Haq, he said it was related to âour eastern neighbour, unfortunatelyâ, saying it was the âpoliticisation of Indian military leadership and militarisation of Indian political leadership.â
âThis is whatâs happening over thereâ, he said, adding that Indiaâs military, which used to be professional, had âunfortunately been politicisedâ.
âYou will come across several examples of this,â he added. âYou heard their air chief marshal a few months after Marka-i-Haq ⊠[saying] âI got to know today that even we downed some planesâ ⊠That is politicisation of the military leadership ⊠Why are you trying to make jokers out of your admirals, and generals and marshal? Donât do that.â
On the other hand, the DG ISPR continued, âWe have placed the facts as they are.â
Moreover, he said, Indian politicians appeared more like âwarmongersâ, going by their statements. The DG ISPR asserted that the politicisation of the military and militarisation of politics was âdangerousâ.
Moving on to the fourth strategic consequence, he said it was the global acknowledgement of Indiaâs efforts to externalise its internal problems and internalise its external problems while using terrorism as a state tool.
He said Indiaâs internal problems included the repression of minorities and Kashmiris. This, he said, âcomes from a false sense of entitlement and this hubristic attitudeâ.
The DG ISPR said India did not want to solve its internal issues, and hence, was externalising them by levelling allegations that Pakistan was behind terrorism in the neighbouring country. He said these issues needed to be addressed âpolitically and internallyâ.
âKashmir is an internationally recognised dispute,â he said. âItâs not your internal problem for you to make demographic changes there ⊠you cannot do that.â
He reiterated the allegations India was backing terrorism in Pakistan, further stating that âthey were even behind terrorism in their own country and would then accuse othersâ.
But, he added, what changed after Marka-i-Haq was that the world recognised how they operated.
He said the fifth consequence was the âexposure of the true face of the Indian media and its discredited information operationsâ. The DG ISPR also noted that Indian authorities had started âshutting down Pakistani mediaâ during Marka-i-Haq and this practice was still ongoing.
But that did not solve the problem, he said, adding that his advice to India was to speak the truth.
âThatâs what Pakistan did ⊠The only thing that can survive in todayâs information domain is the truth. Tell people the truth. But somehow the Indians think they can work their [way] around lies. It doesnât work anymore.â
He said the sixth consequence was the âtransformed character of warfareâ. Elaborating on this, he said this covered multi-domain operations, non-contact warfare, synergy, proxies and information.
The DG ISPR explained that warfare was not limited to borders anymore. âItâs [fought] on land, in the sea, in the air, in cyberspace ⊠and in the minds. Itâs cognitive as well.â
He said Pakistanâs armed forces were prepared to fight against India during Marka-i-Haq in all those domains. âWe were prepared back then, and we are prepared today as well.â
The seventh consequence, he said, was Pakistanâs proven potential and the resilience to combat multifaceted challenges. The eighth was the loud and clear establishment of deterrence, he said.
âAnyone who thinks there is space for war between two nuclear neighbours is crazy. That is madness. Only a madman can think about. You want to do it, then there should be no doubt about our resolve,â he said.
He said that the ninth consequence was that Pakistan was recognised as a geopolitically significant and responsible middle power. He said that the last, but most important consequence, was the unshakeable synergy between the people, the government and the armed forces, âwhich we call the Bunyanum Marsoos effectâ.
Surge in terrorism post-Marka-i-Haq
During the press conference, he also presented figures on counterterrorist efforts post-Marka-i-Haq. He said that India was given a âlesson of their lifeâ and they fell back on their default option, which was terrorist proxies.
âWe saw a surge in terrorist incidents post-Marka-i-Haq,â he said, showing the figures on the screen. He said that in October, Pakistan struck terrorist support infrastructures in neighbouring Afghanistan. He said that the number of incidents subsequently went down.
He reiterated that terrorism in Pakistan was being carried out by India and Afghanistan was being used as a base of operations.
âYou saw who India called after they were taught a lesson in Marka-i-Haq. The Afghan Taliban regimeâs so-called foreign minister,â he said.
During his press conference, the DG ISPR also played clips of Indian media, saying, âThe field marshal and Pakistan; I think they feature in their dreams day and night. They need to grow up.â
âHomegrownâ military capabilities
After multiple videos were played, the DG ISPR said they had presented an overview of âwhat our dear neighbour has been doingâ over the past year. He added that he would also go on to detail what Pakistan had been doing during this period.
He recalled that during a press conference on May 11, 2025, he had stated that Pakistanâs military capability seen during Marka-i-Haq was just 10 per cent of the armed forcesâ power potential.
âWe are prepared; if anyone wishes to test us, they are more than welcome,â he said after a video showing the armed forcesâ prowess played on the screen.
He added that the clips displayed Pakistanâs indigenous military capabilities. âThis is homegrown.â
These included surface-to-air missiles; cruise missiles; the establishment of Army Rocket Force Command; main battle tanks; long-range artillery; ship-launched anti-ship missiles; UAVs, quadcopters and drones; short, medium and long-range anti-drone systems; loitering munitions; electro-optical satellites; and an integrated artillery fire control system.
The military spokesperson highlighted the significance of security in the world today, adding that âwhen we say that the armed forces, with the support of the people of Pakistan, will defend Pakistanâs territorial integrity and sovereignty at all costs, we mean it. And we will do it, come what may.â
However, he added, this operational preparedness, military capability and technical prowess would not be meaningful if it was not backed by the resolve and the strategic clarity of the leadership.
After several videos had played, he highlighted Pakistanâs emergence as a regional player and net security provider.
âWe are not seeking conflict, we are not seeking war. But we know how to defend ourselves with honour and dignity,â he said. At the conclusion of the presentation, the national anthem played.
âHistoric and memorable conflictâ
Rear Admiral Ali then addressed the press conference, saying that Marka-i-Haq was a âhistoric and memorableâ conflict. He said that prior to the conflict, the âenemy prided itself on its naval capabilityâ.
âTheir navy used to consume a big share of their defence budget, there were claims of âMade in Indiaâ; they were self-proclaimed net security providers and there was the status of blue water navy,â he said.
He said, however, that the question remained as to why their naval force was unable to âmuster the courage against Pakistanâ.
He added that the Indian navy tried to deploy its vessels in the northern Arabian Sea during Marka-i-Haq.
âAnd the only purpose behind this move was to target our naval assets and inflict economic harm on us by disrupting our naval trade and waterways.
âBut due to the effective strategy of the Pakistan Navy, [traffic] in all our waterways remained uninterrupted, our instalments remained protected and ports remained operational,â he added.
Rear Admiral Ali said the Pakistan Navy continued to surveil the enemyâs activity through its modern system during Marka-i-Haq.
âThe Pakistan Navy and Pakistan Air Force (PAF) were prepared to destroy Indian aircraft carrier Vikrant,â he recalled, adding that, however, the Indian navy did not move beyond its sanctuaries.
âWe want peace, but that is not our weakness. We are not negligent towards our preparation ⊠for any eventuality that may befall us,â he said.
âTally is at 8-0â
Air Vice Marshal Ghazi also addressed the presser. He said the national leadership decided on a direction, and subsequently, the tri-service plans were coordinated under the guidance of the field marshal.
He said that the PAF had to do two things immediately: a strong defensive air posture and implement the highest alert level. He said that PAF integrated its multi-domain assets in preparation. He said that the Indian Air Force initially carried out aggressive deployments and tried to conceal key and critical systems.
He said that the enemy, however, was forced to recompose its force composition, revealing âwhat we had been looking forâ. Talking about the armed forcesâ preparation, he said, âThe enemy remained oblivious of our preparationsâ.
He said that the PAFâs defensive posture meant that âour aerial sovereignty was impregnableâ.
Air Vice Marshal Ghazi also said that after India attacked, PAFâs defensive posture transformed into an offensive posture. âThe killers embedded into PAFâs packages started targeting their topline fighters,â he said, adding that âwe are now at eight zeroâ.
He said that âconfirmed killsâ, including four Rafales, one Su-30, one MiG-29, one Mirage 2000 and an âexpensive multi-role unmanned aerial systemâ. He said that a number of aircraft were also damaged and some of them remained unrecoverable.
More to follow



