Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | southasiajournal.net | Saniya Khan

    In the complex geopolitical theatre of South Asia, one truth has become increasingly evident: sustainable peace requires multilateralism. Yet, India continues to reject this foundational principle, positioning itself as a unilateralist actor in a deeply interconnected region. From cross-border tensions to water disputes, trade roadblocks, and ceasefire violations, India’s aversion to collective engagement threatens not just bilateral progress but regional stability.

  • 4 weeks ago | flipboard.com | Saniya Khan

    4 hours agoGeneral Anil Chauhan appears to confirm India lost at least one aircraft during the brief conflict with Pakistan earlier this month. India’s chief of defence staff says the country suffered initial losses in the air during a recent military conflict with neighbouring Pakistan, but declined to give …

  • 4 weeks ago | eurasiareview.com | Saniya Khan

    In the complex geopolitical theatre of South Asia, one truth has become increasingly evident: sustainable peace requires multilateralism. Yet, India continues to reject this foundational principle, positioning itself as a unilateralist actor in a deeply interconnected region. From cross-border tensions to water disputes, trade roadblocks, and ceasefire violations, India’s aversion to collective engagement threatens not just bilateral progress but regional stability.

  • 1 month ago | eurasiareview.com | Saniya Khan

    In the 21st century, warfare has transcended traditional battlefields. It now thrives in coded messages, viral hashtags, and encrypted chat rooms. For Pakistan, this hybrid threat is no longer theoretical. The fusion of digital platforms with terrorist propaganda, radicalization, and kinetic attacks represents a new-age crisis — one that demands a digital counterinsurgency of equal sophistication. Pakistan today is confronting an intensifying multi-front war.

  • 1 month ago | eurasiareview.com | Saniya Khan

    Afghanistan today stands as the epicenter of the most severe women’s rights crisis in the world—a tragic consequence of the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021. Since then, a systematic dismantling of freedoms for women and girls has unfolded, with Human Rights Watch (HRW) and the United Nations raising alarm over the extent and depth of the repression. What we are witnessing is not simply a rollback of rights—it is the institutionalization of gender apartheid.

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