Crush China First—Let Pakistan Crumble from the Fear
Ankit Gupta | May 27, 2025, 10:23 IST
This growing nexus between China and Pakistan (Iron Brother) is not just a strategic concern but a direct threat to India’s national security and regional stability. While Pakistan has long relied on Chinese support for military and economic survival, it now appears more like a client state, executing Beijing’s broader ambitions in South Asia.
China is not just a neighbouring country. It is a brutal expansionist regime masquerading as a superpower, and Pakistan is its most loyal puppet—a feudatory state that dances to Beijing’s war drum in exchange for survival scraps. The recent U.S. intelligence revelations that Pakistan is acquiring weapons of mass destruction with the help of China are not shocking—they are merely confirmations of what every serious Indian strategist has known for years. This isn’t cooperation. It’s collusion. And it demands a response that is not hesitant, not defensive, but ruthless and revolutionary.
For too long, India has allowed itself to be reactive. It has chosen dignity over dominance, dialogue over demonstration, peace over preparedness. But the time for restraint is over. China’s actions—from arming Pakistan with nuclear capabilities to military bullying along the LAC—are declarations of hybrid war. They are not waiting for formal warfare. Neither should India.

Let us stop dignifying Pakistan as an independent actor in regional affairs. It has long ceded its sovereignty to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in return for economic oxygen. Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal is not Pakistani. It is manufactured in Beijing, polished in Rawalpindi, and pointed at New Delhi. With Chinese technology, Pakistani missiles are becoming longer-ranged and more accurate. The ISI has become the errand boy of the PLA. The entire doctrine of Pakistani hostility toward India is now shaped by the Chinese vision of regional domination.
These weapons of mass destruction are not for deterrence. They are for blackmail. They are meant to tie India’s hands in fear while China continues salami-slicing Indian territory and spreading its red tentacles across the Himalayas. Every missile, every drone, every piece of Pakistani military hardware coming via Hong Kong or UAE is a Chinese whisper of war.
India must no longer pretend that diplomacy with Pakistan is about peace. It is about Chinese power projection. And that means the Chinese dragon must be cut off at the neck, not tickled under the chin.

The myth of Chinese military supremacy is just that—a myth. This is a country that has not fought a full-fledged war since 1979, when it got humiliated by a far smaller Vietnamese force. The 1962 war with India is repeated like a victory mantra in Beijing, but it is a 60-year-old memory. In reality, the modern Chinese soldier has never seen real combat. He has trained in propaganda studios and cyberspace simulators, not in trenches or mountains.
And their weapons? Reverse-engineered copies of Russian and American designs, often flawed and untested. The world knows about the third-class quality of Chinese manufacturing. Their tanks are bulk without backbone. Their jets are noise without accuracy. Their ships are numbers without dominance. Even their so-called technological edge is built on stolen IP and espionage.
Compare this to the Indian Armed Forces—men and women who have fought in the most brutal terrains and conditions, from Siachen to Kargil, from counter-insurgency to surgical strikes. Indian soldiers don’t need war games. They live war.

India has made a habit of waiting for provocation. It waited in 1962. It waited in 1999. It waited in Galwan. It is always preparing, never initiating. That must end. China’s strategy is built on the assumption that India will always absorb the first blow. What if India gave the first blow? What if, for once, China was on the back foot?
Every inch of Indian land under Chinese occupation—from Aksai Chin to the ridges of Galwan—must be viewed not as disputed, but as stolen. And the only language China understands is force. It does not respect peace; it exploits it. It does not reciprocate restraint; it weaponises it.
India must escalate where it hurts China most:

India has a moral and strategic duty to Tibet. China’s illegal occupation of Tibet is one of the greatest unpunished crimes of the 20th century. The Dalai Lama, living in exile in India, is not just a refugee. He is a symbol of a civilization that China tried to erase through massacres, cultural destruction, and demographic terrorism.
If India strikes at China, let the goal not just be Aksai Chin. Let it be Lhasa. Tibet was independent. It deserves to be free. And when India weakens the Chinese grip on the region, Pakistan will crumble like a sandcastle in a tsunami. The PoK will fall without a bullet, for Pakistan’s military spine is just a borrowed stick from Beijing.
The liberal dream of peaceful coexistence with a hostile, expansionist state is over. China is not rising. It is rotting from within—economically, demographically, socially. But like every dying empire, it wants to export chaos to delay collapse. India must not be the sponge that soaks up Chinese instability. It must be the sword that cuts it down.
This is not about bloodlust. It is about strategic clarity. When the dragon is breathing fire at your doorstep and arming your enemies with nukes, you don’t recite poetry. You launch missiles. You send tanks. You drop iron.
Let the new doctrine be clear: China must be made to pay. Not just in border skirmishes, but in long-term humiliation. Its economy must be under siege. Its expansion must be reversed. Its allies must be isolated. Its narrative must be shredded.
The goal is not just military victory. It is psychological trauma. Let the next generation of Chinese leaders grow up with the memory of Indian retaliation so brutal, so unrelenting, that they dare not look toward the Himalayas again. Let Tibetans raise their flags in Lhasa. Let Indian tanks roll through the Aksai Chin. Let the Dalai Lama walk back to Potala Palace in dignity. And let Pakistan learn that dancing with the devil leads only to destruction.
India is not just a nation. It is a civilization. And no dragon, no viper, no paper tiger can stand against the fury of a civilization awakened.
For too long, India has allowed itself to be reactive. It has chosen dignity over dominance, dialogue over demonstration, peace over preparedness. But the time for restraint is over. China’s actions—from arming Pakistan with nuclear capabilities to military bullying along the LAC—are declarations of hybrid war. They are not waiting for formal warfare. Neither should India.
China’s Pet Viper with a Nuclear Fang
Pakistan Turns to Panicistan
Let us stop dignifying Pakistan as an independent actor in regional affairs. It has long ceded its sovereignty to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in return for economic oxygen. Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal is not Pakistani. It is manufactured in Beijing, polished in Rawalpindi, and pointed at New Delhi. With Chinese technology, Pakistani missiles are becoming longer-ranged and more accurate. The ISI has become the errand boy of the PLA. The entire doctrine of Pakistani hostility toward India is now shaped by the Chinese vision of regional domination.
These weapons of mass destruction are not for deterrence. They are for blackmail. They are meant to tie India’s hands in fear while China continues salami-slicing Indian territory and spreading its red tentacles across the Himalayas. Every missile, every drone, every piece of Pakistani military hardware coming via Hong Kong or UAE is a Chinese whisper of war.
India must no longer pretend that diplomacy with Pakistan is about peace. It is about Chinese power projection. And that means the Chinese dragon must be cut off at the neck, not tickled under the chin.
The Insecure Giant with Glass Jaws
Father of Corona
The myth of Chinese military supremacy is just that—a myth. This is a country that has not fought a full-fledged war since 1979, when it got humiliated by a far smaller Vietnamese force. The 1962 war with India is repeated like a victory mantra in Beijing, but it is a 60-year-old memory. In reality, the modern Chinese soldier has never seen real combat. He has trained in propaganda studios and cyberspace simulators, not in trenches or mountains.
And their weapons? Reverse-engineered copies of Russian and American designs, often flawed and untested. The world knows about the third-class quality of Chinese manufacturing. Their tanks are bulk without backbone. Their jets are noise without accuracy. Their ships are numbers without dominance. Even their so-called technological edge is built on stolen IP and espionage.
Compare this to the Indian Armed Forces—men and women who have fought in the most brutal terrains and conditions, from Siachen to Kargil, from counter-insurgency to surgical strikes. Indian soldiers don’t need war games. They live war.
Enough of Defensive Posturing : Be the First to Strike
The Ground Reality is Harsh
India has made a habit of waiting for provocation. It waited in 1962. It waited in 1999. It waited in Galwan. It is always preparing, never initiating. That must end. China’s strategy is built on the assumption that India will always absorb the first blow. What if India gave the first blow? What if, for once, China was on the back foot?
Every inch of Indian land under Chinese occupation—from Aksai Chin to the ridges of Galwan—must be viewed not as disputed, but as stolen. And the only language China understands is force. It does not respect peace; it exploits it. It does not reciprocate restraint; it weaponises it.
India must escalate where it hurts China most:
- Reclaim every piece of LAC inch by inch.
- Support the Tibetan freedom movement aggressively.
- Launch coordinated information warfare against CCP atrocities.
- Strengthen Taiwan ties openly.
- Block Belt and Road initiatives within South Asia.
- Counter Chinese influence in Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, and Sri Lanka.
Tibet: The Forgotten Genocide that Must Be Avenged
Dalai Lama
India has a moral and strategic duty to Tibet. China’s illegal occupation of Tibet is one of the greatest unpunished crimes of the 20th century. The Dalai Lama, living in exile in India, is not just a refugee. He is a symbol of a civilization that China tried to erase through massacres, cultural destruction, and demographic terrorism.
If India strikes at China, let the goal not just be Aksai Chin. Let it be Lhasa. Tibet was independent. It deserves to be free. And when India weakens the Chinese grip on the region, Pakistan will crumble like a sandcastle in a tsunami. The PoK will fall without a bullet, for Pakistan’s military spine is just a borrowed stick from Beijing.
War is Not a Fantasy. It is a Necessity
This is not about bloodlust. It is about strategic clarity. When the dragon is breathing fire at your doorstep and arming your enemies with nukes, you don’t recite poetry. You launch missiles. You send tanks. You drop iron.
Let the new doctrine be clear: China must be made to pay. Not just in border skirmishes, but in long-term humiliation. Its economy must be under siege. Its expansion must be reversed. Its allies must be isolated. Its narrative must be shredded.
The goal is not just military victory. It is psychological trauma. Let the next generation of Chinese leaders grow up with the memory of Indian retaliation so brutal, so unrelenting, that they dare not look toward the Himalayas again. Let Tibetans raise their flags in Lhasa. Let Indian tanks roll through the Aksai Chin. Let the Dalai Lama walk back to Potala Palace in dignity. And let Pakistan learn that dancing with the devil leads only to destruction.
India is not just a nation. It is a civilization. And no dragon, no viper, no paper tiger can stand against the fury of a civilization awakened.