From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- Sep 14
- 3 min read
From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Rajnath Singh’s Stern Naval Warning to Pakistan! India’s Defence Minister Rajnath Singh has issued a thunderous warning that reverberates far beyond South Asia: “What has happened so far was only a warm-up. The Navy was not even involved. If Pakistan dares again, the Navy will have full freedom.” The timing is crucial. With Donald Trump under pressure and Sergio Gor arriving in India, this message doubles as both deterrence and diplomacy. Singh’s statement makes it crystal clear—any act of terror or destabilization on Indian soil will no longer be seen as an isolated incident but as an “Act of War.” The tri-services—Army, Air Force, and Navy—will respond in unison, striking deep inside enemy territory. This is not rhetoric. It is a strategic declaration that India will no longer tolerate provocation. For Pakistan, the warning is simple: misadventure will invite annihilation from land, air, and sea.
From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Israel Strikes at Hamas Leadership in Doha! The Middle East once again trembles as Israel expands its campaign against Hamas leadership beyond Gaza. After eliminating Yahya Sinwar and Ismail Haniyeh, Israel has now struck Doha, killing senior Hamas figure Khalil al-Hayya and five others. Al-Hayya was no ordinary militant—he was a key negotiator in ceasefire talks, yet also long tied to operations under Hamas. The strike exposes the paradox of Qatar: a nation that shelters Hamas leaders in luxury while ordinary Palestinians die in Gaza. Doha hosts negotiations, but also harbors the very leadership Israel seeks to dismantle. America distances itself, but reports reveal Washington informed Qatar only minutes before the strike. As Israel asserts its right to eliminate threats anywhere, international law debates intensify. For India, the situation is clear—Prime Minister Modi has reaffirmed solidarity with Israel. In this volatile theatre, Israel shows it listens to no one, only to its own survival instinct.
From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
EU Refuses Trump’s Tariff Gambit on India! Reuters reports that the European Union has flatly rejected U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to impose 100% tariffs on India and China. This decision goes far beyond trade; it is a message that India cannot be contained. Trump’s intent was clear—apply pressure on emerging giants. Yet, the EU recognized reality: India is no longer just a market but a trusted global partner in technology, pharmaceuticals, textiles, steel, agriculture, and IT services. Hitting India with tariffs would backfire, hurting European economies dependent on Indian exports. By resisting U.S. pressure, the EU has indirectly endorsed India’s growing strength under Modi’s leadership. The world sees India not as a subordinate but as a partner. The lesson is simple—India today does not bend to external will. Instead, the global economy bends to India’s rise.
From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Pakistan Link Allegations Shake Assam Politics! When Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma declared that Congress MP Gaurav Gogoi’s case has a “direct Pakistan link,” it was no mere political barb—it was a national security alarm. Gaurav Gogoi is not just any politician; he is the son of former Assam CM Tarun Gogoi, heir to a Congress dynasty. That such a figure is named in a SIT report with alleged foreign links makes the situation deeply unsettling. For years, Congress has paraded itself as the custodian of national interest. Yet, if its leaders’ families are suspected of links with questionable international networks, the party’s credibility collapses. While Prime Minister Modi strengthens India’s position globally, Congress faces allegations of compromising sovereignty. This is more than an Assam issue—it is a warning to all of India. Under Congress, national interest has never been secure.
From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
When Zeroes Vanish, Credibility Suffers! It is often said that journalism is the first draft of history. But when this “first draft” comes with glaring mistakes, it is not just history that suffers, but credibility too. Maharashtra Times recently reported that India had announced a “$680 package” for Mauritius. The reality, however, was a $680 million package. That missing word “million” transformed a historic diplomatic and economic gesture into a laughable figure—barely enough to fund a mid-sized housing project in Mumbai! The irony is sharp: two prime ministers met, seven agreements were signed, and the paper reduced it all to a three-digit joke. Printing errors in reputed papers are not trivial; they dilute the seriousness of policy, insult readers’ intelligence, and misrepresent India’s stature. Readers deserve accuracy, not arithmetic blunders. A newspaper that cannot keep its zeroes intact risks reducing its credibility to zero.












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