- Reaction score
- 8,017
- Points
- 1,160
I wonder if the Khalistanis will see this as a good time to start asserting their claims.Wont be long before Brampton flares up....
I wonder if the Khalistanis will see this as a good time to start asserting their claims.Wont be long before Brampton flares up....
That is what exactly what Modi would want, so if they are smart, they wont do itI wonder if the Khalistanis will see this as a good time to start asserting their claims.
Might be a pleasant change instead of listening to the coopted Palestinian marchers braying their slogans.Impossible with the ethnic diversity we are so blessed with in this country. It won’t be long before we see marches for either sides demanding Canada “do more” to protect their side.
Rafael air strike on Brampton??? Elbows up or down for that?Wont be long before Brampton flares up....
Rafael air strike on Brampton??? Elbows up or down for that?
Hydrologically speaking, is this within reality?Let's hope so, but Modi has said that India will stop its water from flowing over international borders.
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India to stop water flowing across international borders, Modi says
In Delhi's latest move against Pakistan, the PM says his country's water will now be "conserved for India's benefit".www.bbc.com
From the article:
Doesn't sound very promising.
In theory almost anything is possible with enough decent engineering, money, and national will. In reality, it will not be that easy, it will take large sums of money, and unless Modi wants to be dictator for life (I'm not ruling that out either), it will not be completed under his watch. It could take years alone to do the proper analysis of where to place new dams, reservoirs, and essentially new riverbeds. There may well be unpredicted and severe negative impacts on the ecology in India as well.Hydrologically speaking, is this within reality?
All for the show and appeasement of the crowds.Does it seem like the 'targeted air strikes' were based on very old intel, and a bit random?
Potentially - but they seem to do this every few years and then settle back down.This whole situation seems potentially terrible, and a bit more significant that previous border skirmishes.
For sure, just don't remember it involving missile attacks into Punjab and artillery fire back previous times, but maybe just not widely reported. The BBC does a much better job covering that region.All for the show and appeasement of the crowds.
Potentially - but they seem to do this every few years and then settle back down.
The Liberal Party of Canada and the modern Republican Party believe in essentially the same thing: that soft power and hard power are mutually exclusive.
What is our response? What hard power do we possess?
It would appear that India's loss of one Rafale and one MiG-29 are confirmed - along with Pakistani use of Chinese-made PL-15 Air-to-Air missiles.
Photos from the scene show a Russian-made Zvezda K-36DM ejection seat, a system used in India’s MiG-29 and Su-30MKI aircraft. Additionally, remnants of an RD-33 engine—standard on the MiG-29—were identified, confirming the aircraft type involved.
The crash site lies more than 90 kilometers from the Line of Control (LoC), suggesting the aircraft was struck at an unusually long range, prompting speculation about advanced beyond-visual-range (BVR) missile use in the current confrontation as PL-15.
Artillery back and forth has been a thing. But you are right the air and missile attacks are a new thing as far as I know.For sure, just don't remember it involving missile attacks into Punjab and artillery fire back previous times, but maybe just not widely reported. The BBC does a much better job covering that region.
FWIW I’d trust any Indian or Pakistani reports equally at this point - meaning zero trust.Dassault down Chengdu up. In the end its all about the money
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JF-17 makers stocks surge, Rafale's Dassault Aviation slump
Pakistan’s downing of Indian Rafale jets boosts shares of Chengdu Aircraft Corporation (CAC), while Dassault Aviation’s stock plunges.www.techjuice.pk