India-Pakistan Conflict Intensifies Into Most Expansive in Decades
Gunfire and shelling battered the disputed borderlands of India and Pakistan on Friday, as the two nuclear-armed countries launched volleys in their most expansive military conflict in decades, with widespread accounts of attacks in both countries.
The exchanges of fire stopped early Friday, and both the Indian and Pakistani authorities said that civilians were among those injured and killed. But there was also a swirl of disinformation and the governments made contradictory statements, making it difficult to verify the nature, location and toll of the attacks.
The conflict has escalated rapidly since Indian airstrikes hit targets in Pakistan and the Pakistani-controlled side of Kashmir on Wednesday, despite diplomatic efforts to ease tensions. There were reports of nonstop barrages along the border overnight into Friday, as well as reports of attacks by Pakistan into the Indian city of Jammu, a part of the disputed Kashmir territory.
On Friday, the Indian Army said that Pakistani armed forces had launched attacks using drones and other weapons along India’s entire western border. The army said on social media that the drone attacks had been intercepted. Pakistan has rejected those claims.
Anupreeta Das May 9, 2025
Read the full story here NY TIMES
Author Profile
Latest entries
Housing Conditions07/13/2026The Housing Act Trades Affordability for Builder Profits
Racial Justice07/10/2026“America, U.S.A.”: Eddie Glaude on the 250th Anniv., Race & “The Madness at the Heart of the Country”
White Supremacy07/06/2026“What to the Slave Is the 4th of July?”: James Earl Jones Reads Frederick Douglass’s Historic Speech
Constitutional History07/03/2026The Founders Never Meant the US to Be a Democracy
