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Shehbaz Sharif to Vladimir Putin: “We respect your relation with India, but we too want a strong relationship with you”

Atleast he didnt make himself look like an idiot like Imran did when Russia used his visit to launch the attack and he was desperate to escape
 
Why talk about India? Just keep it on Pakistan and Russia.

Pakistan’s “gift” is a lineup of spineless, corrupt politicians who couldn’t stand straight if their lives depended on it.

Stop crawling already, try standing up once in a while.
 
Everybody wants good relations with Pakistan these days and are walking on eggshells around us after the phainta we gave to a top 5 economy.

#TreadLightly #ShehbazBerg
 
A lot of Pakistanis are harsh on their PM because he lacks Modi Ji's masculinity and aura. An extremely unfair comparison because part of Modi Ji's charisma also comes from leading a global power that can even stop the Ukraine war in a day if it wanted (Trump couldn't, Modi Ji can).

Pakistan on the other hand lacks that global relevance, hence a very meek and subservient PM.
 
It’s been a rough week of geopolitical reality checks for Pakistan.

At the SCO Summit, it was Russia, India, and China that stole the spotlight, shaping conversations, commanding attention, and making headlines. Pakistan, though present, was relegated to the background, barely registering on the global radar.

Days later, at China’s grand V-Day parade, it was Russia, China, and even North Korea that took center stage. Pakistan once again tried to project itself as a nation of global stature, but the world’s cameras weren’t interested.

For a country that constantly overestimates its relevance, these back-to-back snubs cut deep: ignored by international media, overshadowed by bigger powers, and reminded once again of its limited weight in global affairs.

The message is unmistakable, in the emerging multipolar order, Pakistan is more spectator than player.



 
A lot of Pakistanis are harsh on their PM because he lacks Modi Ji's masculinity and aura. An extremely unfair comparison because part of Modi Ji's charisma also comes from leading a global power that can even stop the Ukraine war in a day if it wanted (Trump couldn't, Modi Ji can).

Pakistan on the other hand lacks that global relevance, hence a very meek and subservient PM.

Modi, an unmarried man, seems to enjoy holding hands with leaders from whom he buys India’s military equipment.
 
I see the global irrelevance as a blessing for Pakistan. Being that quiet, unassuming kid no one cares about brings with it a lot less pressure on global stage and they can easily fly under the radar unlike star nations like Bharat where our every step leads to 500 global articles and debates.

Modi Ji and Bharat are victims of their own stardom, and I do not wish this fate on our Pakistani friends.
 
Shehbaz Shareef is a good man. A neqdil insan. I understand he has to talk negatively of India as a politician but in his heart he wants nothing but good for his country. I respect him for that and I respect his humble nature.

It takes guts to be truthful the way he specifically mentioned Brahmos attacks ans him being very straight forward with Putin here mentioning India, understanding the dynamics of it all.

He’s a realistic man.

That being said, I fully support urgent and immediate release of Imran Khan, whom I was not a fan of as a politician but there is no doubt that he’s a national hero of Pakistan and deserves respect in old age.

Asim Munir, is a typical military tyrant of whom no good thing can ever be said. These army generals have only damaged Pakistan.
 
It’s unfair, even insulting to compare any Pakistani politician with Narendra Modi. In fact even within India, very few politicians can ever stand alongside him in terms of grit, journey, and sheer resilience.

Modi’s story is the Great Indian Dream in motion. He didn’t inherit a legacy or a political fortune. He rose from the very bottom, from humble beginnings, carving his path through hard work, unshakable will, and years of quiet service.

Before he could lead, he learnt to serve. As an RSS cadre, he spent decades working in the shadows, carrying out duties, listening, learning, and proving his loyalty. Nothing was ever handed to him, he earned every inch of ground he walked on.

This is why he is unbreakable. Nothing can intimidate a man who has already stared at nothingness and built everything with his own two hands. He has often said that if tomorrow it all ends, he will walk away gladly as a faqir. He has no dynasty to guard, no heirs to appease, no empire of wealth to preserve. He came from nothing, and when the time comes, he will leave with nothing and with peace.

In contrast, the politics of the Sharifs, Bhuttos, Zardaris, Gandhis, Munirs is not about service but preservation. They cling to power not to serve the people, but to ensure that their children, grandchildren, and the generations after them stay rich, relevant, and powerful. From this arises their greatest weakness: fear. Fear of losing control, fear of slipping into irrelevance, fear of being forgotten. And fear makes them corrupt, manipulative, desperate.

This is where Modi towers above them all. He doesn’t need to protect a dynasty. He doesn’t need to secure wealth for unborn generations. He is free of that burden. He came, he conquered, he is writing a legacy that will last long after he has walked away. And when that moment of farewell comes, he will leave on his own terms not as a man clutching at power, but as a leader who proved that a self-made life of service is greater than any dynasty.
 
Here we go, another thread where we will hear the closet dwellers of India lust after modi and his “masculine” ways.

Modi moochers pucker up…
 
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