No-Fly Zone, Full Meltdown: How Airspace Closure Became the New India-Pakistan 'Friendly Fire'...
The skies are falling—well, just for Pakistan. In a bizarre twist of diplomatic aerobatics, airspace has become the latest battlefield between two nuclear-armed neighbors with a long history of angry glances, cricket sledges, and now, aviation revenge. From the WTF Desk of International Affairs - New Delhi/Islamabad/Somewhere over the Himalayas Act I: The Terror That Triggered Turbulence It all began—not in the skies—but in the scenic valleys of Pahalgam, a town that usually makes headlines for snowstorms and Bollywood shoots, not bullets and bloodshed. On April 22, horror struck when 26 tourists were gunned down in cold blood by attackers allegedly linked to Pakistan-based militant outfits. No group claimed responsibility, probably because even terrorist PR departments were like, “Yeah, this one’s too far.” The attack, gruesome and calculated, came just days after Pakistan’s ever-media-ready Army Chief, General Asim Munir, delivered a fiery sermon to cadets about divine mandates ...