What's new

19th SAARC Conference in Islamabad 2016-News and Updates

That will not happen it will be like SK & NK , why would we fight with pakistan and lose our economic prosperity ?

The main difference being Pakistan would never be able to blackmail India like NK does to SK.
 
.
You lost 18 soldiers because of your oppression of Kashmir.

Pakistan simply supports the people and asks for a referendum

You dont have restraint, restraint was forced upon you by your lack of military options

Why should any pressure be placed on Pakistan for Uri, when indian's cant even provide any actionable evidence?

Actionable evidence is relevant when the party is genuinely interested in taking action... Pakistan has failed that test multiple times, not just with India but many others...
 
. .
What ppl in PDF consider as cowardness and scores of folks do chest thumping, in fact restraint helps us achieve a much better avenues.. since the day URI happened, track 2 communication with multiple countries will see the price of this restraint. On one side groups like SAARC will be made irrelevant, on other side pressure will build up upon the same Pakistani government to show some response with which the so called powers will again ask Modi to drop by Lahore and start peace process..

In doing so , India for this part will get right from investments to market to accolodaes.. and to force Pakistan the same powers will make the situation tougher with China also slowly but steadily agreeing to this situation for its interests and benefits..

Ultimately it's a written script already.. one just needs to see the larger picture to understand what is going on really.. yes we lost soldiers and we will get the perpetrators one day.. at the time and place we choose.. but the path we have chosen to achieve it will only make life a lot more difficult for GOP, especially bcz the cost of India's restraint is pretty high..

I envy your optimism. I have been biting my tongue on this but I'll let loose for this instance.

Such farcical action of India actually is a massive victory for Pakistan. Indian actions are proving that India has zero planning in tactical response and delivery mechanism. Pakistani military mechanism can literally slap India in the face and all India can do is frown and cry profusely. That's exactly what this is. India does not have the Balls to take out 10 Pakistani posts and get into an escalation regimen, that is what happens to country of bean counters.

India also doesn't posses the capability to stream line it's logistics to support permanent forward deployment for it's artillery bulk of which sits in cantonments, and will be lost to rust there.
The reality remains
IC814> ransom paid
Parliament> Border vacation
Mumbai attacks> Dossiers
Pathankot > joint investigation
Uri> Saarc boycott

Spinelessness has become our character trait, and nothing more can be expected of a country that produces leaders and intellectuals that hail terrorists as martyrs, celebrate killing of your own security forces, and claim most of India is under military occupation.

We deserve this.


Before one lot starts calling me saffron, bhakt, chaddi, and what not and the other lot as congresi, please don't waste your and my time in responding along those lines.
 
Last edited:
.
@GurudevSingh

Hey Saardaar I did this expose on India that you might be interested in. Do read it and did I miss anything?

Link > https://defence.pk/threads/man-as-beast-india.402799/
Link > http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2012/04/09/starving-in-india-the-forgotten-problem/

And what's this I hear that 10 Sikhs took on 1,000,000,000,000,000 Pashtuns and prevailed? You know Battle of Saraghari? All I know is 100 Gurkhas took on 10,000 Sikhs in1919 in Amritsar and Gurkha's made a name for themselves?
Lol Sikhs need an approval from Pakistan?

The same sikhs which stopped your forces from capturing Kashmir? The same sikhs as they entered the battle field your advances in Kashmir theater halted?

Remember what major Major Kuldip Singh Chandpuri did? lol

we have a living monument called Bangladesh for our victories. What do you have?

As i said before India, indeed has problems because of failed economic policies. India is a big country. we accept the problem. whats your excuse? Your country is sh!t because "we will eat grass but will make atum bumb"
 
.
India's ego will keep SAARC dysfunctional.

Core issue is Kashmir which India, beside knowing Pakistan is a party to it and is internationally recognized, will not to resolve.

Strangely India wants to talk terrorism but not Kashmir. Unless Kashmir is resolved this regional grouping will remain hostage to the issue between two countries.
 
.
Such farcical action of India actually is a massive victory for Pakistan. Indian actions are proving that India has zero planning in tactical response and delivery mechanism. Pakistani military mechanism can literally slap India in the face and all India can do is frown and cry profusely. That's exactly what this is. India does not have the Balls to take out 10 Pakistani posts and get into an escalation regimen, that is what happens to country of bean counters.
As Per My sources It was Military establishment Who Stop this from happening Saffronart;s wanted another Parakram Like Op but Military Backed out
 
.
God is not in a temple. God is everywhere. if the terrorists are sitting inside a temple believing god will save them, no one is a bigger fool.

However the operation could have been handled better and could have been done in a much more docile manner. But sh!t happens. one must learn to move on in the same way, 17 of my family members were martyred during partition by Pakistanis.



Yes indeed these dark days, because when people defalcate and pee in open, all these rivers flow down to Pakistan, and Pakistanis have to drink the same water.

Sikhs are India's pride. Most patriotic and courageous. It is a shame that instead of discussing the SAARC developments, some members are pointing at India's filth, open defecation etc.
 
.
Nopes, do we need to. we just have to "push".

We have seen history of Pakistan. When the days are dark, you people eat your own people. We just have to make sure that days are dark, rest you guys will do for us.
Push? How Where When? The day Hasina Govt change you guys find a new BD when northern alliance rats start run to hidden in holes you start run as well from that cursed land now make a batti of Bhutan and take it as you need a force to PUSH:lol: in civilized words to making a building need strong pillars the BD and Afghans are so weak to rely on. Now start Push and no one wake you up from your la la la stupid land.
 
.
Pakistan Humiliated by south Asian countries' boycott of summit



India, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Bhutan cite regional interference as they pull out of what was set to be a historic meeting



Jon Boone in Islamabad and Michael Safi in Delhi

Wednesday 28 September 2016 14.59 BST Last modified on Wednesday 28 September 2016 16.19 BST

Four south Asian countries are to boycott what was set to be a historic regional summit in Islamadad in November, dealing a humiliating blow to Pakistan and isolating it diplomatically.

India, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Bhutan all said they would pull out of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) meeting following a collapse in relations between Pakistan and India, the subcontinent’s nuclear-armed rivals.

Statements by the region’s foreign ministries echoed India’s criticism on Tuesday night, which blamed “increasing cross-border terrorist attacks and growing interference of the internal affairs of member states” for Delhi’s decision to boycott the conference.

Until recently, the prospect of the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Islamabad had been seen as a potentially highly symbolic step towards reconciliation between Pakistan and India.

The two countries, however, have been engaged interse exchanges following an attack on an Indian army base on 18 September that killed 19 soldiers, which Delhi has blamed on jihadis based in Pakistan. The raid took place in town of Uri near the line of control that divides the contested Himalayan territory of Kashmir.

Four days later, India denounced Pakistan at the UN as the host of the “Ivy League of terrorism”.

Islamabad says India has provided no evidence linking the attack either to militants based in Pakistan or to the country’s intelligence agencies, which have long been accused of complicity with anti-India jihadi groups.

Pakistan’s defence minister has even suggested that India itself carried out the attack to deflect attention from its ongoing struggle to quell popular disturbances in the Indian part of Kashmir.



Indian soldiers patrol near the line of control in Kashmir following the 18 September attack. Photograph: Mukhtar Khan/AP
Tensions have been fuelled by television networks and social media on both sides of the border, with some pundits appearing to relish the prospect of all-out nuclear war.

Some Indian hawks have demanded retaliatory attacks against suspected militant camps in Pakistan, but Modi has sought to punish Islamabad with steps that fall short of military means.

His strategy is, however, far tougher than the relative restraint shown by previous Indian governments during earlier crises, such as that prompted by the four-day assault on Mumbai by Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba in 2008.


In recent weeks, Modi has publicly backed separatist rebels in the restive Pakistani province of Balochistan, a move that has infuriated Islamabad. He has also questioned a key cross-border river treaty and vowed to orchestrate Pakistan’s diplomatic isolation.

That promise became reality on Wednesday when it became clear four out of SAARC’s eight members would not attend the summit, which it is Pakistan’s turn to host.

Afghanistan’s foreign ministry, which has long accused Pakistan of supporting the Taliban-led insurgency, was most stinging in its criticism, denouncing “the increased level of violence and fighting as a result of imposed terrorism on Afghanistan”.

Nine months ago, hopes were high for a rapprochement between India and Pakistan following Modi’s surprise visit to Lahore on Christmas day, the first time an Indian leader had set foot in Pakistan since 2004.



Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, welcomes his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi to Lahore in December 2015. Photograph: PIB/AFP/Getty Images
His Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, won a landslide election victory in 2013, determined to end the decades’ long standoff and open up trade.

“But Pakistan has a tremendous capacity to withstand coercion and a mindset that wants eternal confrontation with India that is too deeply entrenched,” he said.

On Monday, Modi ordered water officials to step up efforts to divert a greater share of the three rivers the countries share under the Indus treaty, a 1960 agreement that has survived their subsequent conflicts.

“Blood and water cannot flow together,” Modi said, a rare invocation of India’s power to meddle with the Indus river system, which flows downstream into Pakistan and provides water to 65% of the country’s landmass.

Himanshu Thakkar, the coordinator of the South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People, said it would take up to a decade to build dams capable of reducing the flow to Pakistan.

“But it sends a signal, and that signal will have an impact,” he said. “If India builds projects to store water from its entitlement, it will provide a means for India to control water flow to Pakistan, even temporarily.”

On Tuesday, Pakistan complained to the World Bank, which brokered the original treaty, urging it to prevent India from starting construction work on the Neelum and Chenab rivers.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ed-by-south-asian-countries-boycott-of-summit


@nair @Joe Shearer @MilSpec

I think this is the end of SAARC as we know it.


It does look like that, given the levels of maturity of the administration of both Pakistan and India. And it will be a pity if SAARC comes to an end. In my opinion, with the wisdom born of hindsight, the original formation of the group was faulty; this was bound to happen.
 
.
Push? How Where When? The day Hasina Govt change you guys find a new BD when northern alliance rats start run to hidden in holes you start run as well from that cursed land now make a batti of Bhutan and take it as you need a force to PUSH:lol: in civilized words to making a building need strong pillars the BD and Afghans are so weak to rely on. Now start Push and no one wake you up from your la la la stupid land.
Do you really think its over? India is done with you.
we will just leave with getting your a$$ whooped in SAARC, your water?

We are just getting started...
 
.
Would you have all these countries below?



Tanzania[Note 6] 55,155,000 July 1, 2016 0.75% UN projection
Myanmar 54,363,426 July 1, 2016 0.74% UN projection
South Korea 50,801,405 July 1, 2016 0.69% Annual official estimate
Colombia 48,855,000 September 27, 2016 0.665% Official population clock
Kenya 47,251,000 July 1, 2016 0.64% UN projection
Spain 46,438,422 January 1, 2016 0.63% Official estimate
Argentina 43,590,400 July 1, 2016 0.59% Official annual projection
Ukraine[Note 7] 42,650,186 August 1, 2016 0.58% Monthly official estimate
Sudan 41,176,000 July 1, 2016 0.56% Official annual projection
Algeria 40,400,000 July 1, 2016 0.55% Official annual projection
Poland 38,437,239 December 31, 2015 0.52% Official estimate
Iraq 37,883,543 July 1, 2016 0.52% Official annual projection
Uganda 36,861,000 July 1, 2016
Canada 36,541,700 September 27, 2016 0.497% Official estimate
Morocco[Note 8] 34,093,800 September 27, 2016 0.464% Official annual projection
Malaysia 31,773,200 September 27, 2016 0.432% Official population clock
Uzbekistan 31,575,300 January 1, 2016 0.43% Official estimate
Peru 31,488,700 July 1, 2016 0.43% Official annual projection
Venezuela 31,028,700 July 1, 2016 0.42% Official annual projection
Saudi Arabia 31,015,999 July 1, 2015 0.42% Official estimate
Nepal 28,431,500 July 1, 2016 0.39% Official annual projection
Ghana 27,670,174 July 1, 2015 0.38% Official annual projection
Afghanistan 27,657,145 July 1, 2016 0.38% Annual official estimate
Yemen 27,478,000 July 1, 2016 0.37% UN projection
Mozambique 26,423,700 July 1, 2016 0.36% Annual official projection
Angola 25,789,024 May 16, 2014 0.35% Final 2014 census result
North Korea 24,213,510 October 1, 2014 0.33% Preliminary 2014 census result
Australia 24,200,400 September 27, 2016 0.329% Official population clock
Taiwan[Note 9] 23,514,750 July 31, 2016 0.32% Monthly official estimate
Cameroon 22,709,892 July 1, 2016 0.31% Annual official projection
Ivory Coast 22,671,331 May 15, 2014 0.31% Preliminary 2014 census result
Madagascar 22,434,363 July 1, 2014 0.31% Official estimate
Sri Lanka 20,966,000 July 1, 2015 0.29% Official estimate
Niger 20,715,000 July 1, 2016 0.28% UN projection
Romania 19,760,000 January 1, 2016 0.27% Annual official estimate
Burkina Faso 19,034,397 July 1, 2016 0.26% Annual official projection
Syria 18,564,000 July 1, 2016 0.25% UN projection
Mali 18,341,000 July 1, 2016 0.25% Official annual projection
Chile 18,191,900 July 1, 2016 0.25% Official annual projection
Kazakhstan 17,753,200 May 1, 2016 0.24% Official estimate
Netherlands 17,051,900 September 27, 2016 0.232% Official population clock
Malawi 16,832,910 July 1, 2016 0.23% Official annual projection
Ecuador 16,626,279 September 27, 2016 0.23% Official population clock
Guatemala
16,176,133 July 1, 2015 0.22% Official estimate
Zambia 15,933,883 July 1, 2016 0.22% Official annual projection
Cambodia 15,626,444 July 1, 2016 0.21% Official annual projection
Senegal 14,799,859 2016 0.2% Official annual projection
Chad 14,497,000 July 1, 2016 0.2% UN projection
Zimbabwe 14,240,168 July 1, 2016 0.19% Official annual projection
Guinea 12,947,000 July 1, 2016 0.18% UN projection
South Sudan 12,131,000 July 1, 2016 0.17% Official annual projection
Rwanda 11,553,188 July 1, 2016 0.16% Official projection
Belgium 11,327,986 August 1, 2016 0.15% Monthly official estimate
Cuba 11,239,004 December 31, 2015 0.15% Annual official estimate
Tunisia 11,154,400 July 1, 2015 0.15% Official estimate
Somalia[Note 10] 11,079,000 July 1, 2016 0.15% UN projection
Haiti 11,078,033 July 1, 2016 0.15% Official projection
Bolivia 10,985,059 July 1, 2016 0.15% Official projection
Greece 10,858,018 January 1, 2015 0.15% Official estimate
Benin 10,653,654 July 1, 2016 0.14% Official projection
Czech Republic 10,564,866 June 30, 2016 0.14% Official quarterly estimate
Portugal 10,341,330 December 31, 2015 0.14% Annual official estimate
Burundi 10,114,505 July 1, 2016 0.14% Official annual projection
Dominican Republic 10,075,045 July 1, 2016 0.14% Official projection
Sweden 9,920,881 July 31, 2016 0.13% Monthly official estimate
United Arab Emirates 9,856,000 July 1, 2016 0.13% Official annual projection
Hungary 9,823,000 January 1, 2016 0.13% Annual official estimate
Azerbaijan 9,755,500 July 1, 2016 0.13% Official estimate
Jordan 9,729,610 September 27, 2016 0.132% Preliminary 2015 census result
Belarus 9,500,000 July 1, 2016 0.129% Quarterly official estimate
Austria 8,741,753 July 1, 2016 0.119% Quarterly provisional figure
Honduras 8,721,014 July 1, 2016 0.119% Official annual projection
Israel 8,588,060 September 27, 2016 0.117% Official population clock
Tajikistan 8,551,000 January 1, 2016 0.116% Official estimate
Switzerland 8,341,600 March 31, 2016 0.113% Quarterly provisional figure
Papa New Guinea 8,083,700 July 1, 2015 0.11% Annual official estimate
Hong Kong (China) 7,346,700 July 1, 2016 0.1% Official estimate
Bulgaria 7,153,784 December 31, 2015 0.097% Official estimate
Togo 7,143,000 July 1, 2016 0.097% Official estimate
Serbia[Note 11] 7,076,372 January 1, 2016 0.096% Annual official estimate
Sierra Leone 7,075,641 December 4, 2015 0.096% Preliminary 2015 census result
Paraguay 6,854,536 2016 0.093% Official estimate
El Salvador 6,520,675 2016 0.089% Official estimate
Laos 6,492,400 March 1, 2015 0.088% Preliminary 2015 census result
Libya 6,385,000 July 1, 2016 0.087% Official annual projection
Nicaragua 6,262,703 2015 0.085% Official estimate
Kyrgyzstan 6,088,000 August 1, 2016 0.083% Official estimate
Lebanon 5,988,000 July 1, 2016 0.081% UN projection
Denmark 5,724,456 July 1, 2016 0.078% Quarterly official estimate
Singapore 5,535,000 July 1, 2015 0.075% Official estimate
Finland 5,498,450 August 31, 2016 0.075% Monthly official estimate
Slovakia 5,426,252 December 31, 2015 0.074% Official estimate
Eritrea 5,352,000 July 1, 2016 0.073% UN projection
Norway 5,236,826 July 1, 2016 0.071% Quarterly official estimate
Central African Republic 4,998,000 July 1, 2016 0.068% UN projection
Costa Rica 4,890,379 June 30, 2016 0.067% Official estimate
Palestine 4,816,503 July 1, 2016 0.066% Official estimate
Ireland 4,757,976 July 14, 2016 0.065% Preliminary 2016 census result
Turkmenistan 4,751,120 December 26, 2012 0.065% Preliminary 2012 census resultRepublic of the Congo 4,741,000 July 1, 2016 0.064% UN projection
New Zealand 4,718,460 September 27, 2016 0.0642% Official population clock
Oman 4,496,760 September 9, 2016 0.061% Official estimate
Puntland (Somalia) 4,284,633 May 27, 2015 0.058% Official estimate
Croatia 4,190,669 December 31, 2015 0.057% Annual official estimate
Kuwait 4,183,658 June 30, 2015 0.057% Official estimate
Liberia 4,076,530 July 1, 2016 0.055% Official projection
Somaliland (Somalia) 3,850,000 2009 0.052% Official estimate
Panama 3,814,672 July 1, 2016 0.052% Official estimate
Georgia[Note 12] 3,720,400 January 1, 2016 0.051% Annual official estimate
Mauritania 3,718,678 July 1, 2016 0.051% Annual official projection
Moldova[Note 13] 3,553,100 January 1, 2016 0.048% Official estimate
Bosnia and Herzegovina 3,531,159 October 15, 2013 0.048% Final 2013 census result
Uruguay 3,480,222 June 30, 2016 0.047% Annual official estimate
Puerto Rico (U.S.) 3,474,182 July 1, 2015 0.047% Official estimate
Mongolia 3,107,100 September 27, 2016 0.042% Official population clock
Armenia 2,995,100 July 1, 2016 0.041% Quarterly official estimate
Albania
2,886,026 January 1, 2016 0.039% Annual official estimate
Lithuania 2,862,786 September 1, 2016 0.039% Monthly official estimate
Jamaica 2,723,246 December 31, 2014 0.037% Official estimate
Qatar
2,401,598 August 31, 2016 0.033% Monthly official estimate
Namibia 2,324,388 July 1, 2016 0.032% Official projection
Botswana 2,230,905 July 1, 2016 0.03% Official annual projection
Macedonia 2,071,278 December 31, 2015 0.028% Official estimate
Slovenia 2,063,371 April 1, 2016 0.028% Official estimate
Latvia 1,957,600 September 1, 2016 0.027% Monthly official estimate
Lesotho 1,916,000 July 1, 2014 0.026% Official estimate
The Gambia 1,882,450 April 15, 2013 0.026% Preliminary 2013 census result
Kosovo[Note 14] 1,836,978 2016 0.025% Official annual projection
Gabon 1,802,278 October 5, 2013 0.025% Preliminary 2013 census result
Guinea-Bissau 1,547,777 July 1, 2016 0.021% Official projection
Bahrain 1,404,900 July 1, 2016 0.019% Official annual projection
Trinidad and Tobago 1,349,667 July 1, 2015 0.018% Official estimate
Estonia 1,315,944 January 1, 2016 0.018% Official estimate
Mauritius 1,262,879 July 1, 2015 0.017% Official estimate
Equatorial Guinea 1,222,442 July 4, 2015 0.017% Preliminary 2015 census result
East Timor 1,167,242 July 11, 2015 0.016% Preliminary 2015 census result
Swaziland 1,132,657 July 1, 2016 0.015% Official projection
Djibouti 900,000 July 1, 2016 0.012% UN projection
Fiji 867,000 July 1, 2015 0.0118% Annual official estimate
Cyprus[Note 15] 847,000 December 31, 2014 0.012% Official estimate
Réunion (France) 843,529 January 1, 2015 0.0115% Annual official estimate
Comoros 806,153 July 1, 2016 0.011% Official estimate
Bhutan 778,500 September 27, 2016 0.0106% Official population clock
Guyana 746,900 July 1, 2013 0.01% Official estimate
Macau (China) 652,500 June 30, 2016 0.009% Official quarterly estimate
Solomon Islands 642,000 July 1, 2015 0.009% Annual official estimate
Montenegro 621,810 July 1, 2014 0.008% Official estimate
Western Sahara[Note 16] 584,000 July 1, 2016 0.0079% UN projection
Luxembourg 576,200 December 31, 2015 0.0078% Annual official estimate
Suriname 541,638 August 13, 2012 0.0074% Final 2012 census result
Cape Verde 531,239 July 1, 2016 0.0072% Official annual projection
Transnistria[Note 17] 505,153 January 1, 2014 0.007% Official estimate
Malta 429,344 December 31, 2014 0.0058% Official estimate
Brunei 411,900 July 1, 2014 0.0056% Official estimate
Guadeloupe (France) 400,132 January 1, 2015 0.0054% Annual official estimate
Martinique (France) 378,243 January 1, 2015 0.0051% Annual official estimate
Bahamas 378,040 July 1, 2016 0.0051% Official projection
Belize 375,909 April 1, 2016 0.0051% Official estimate
Maldives
344,023 September 20, 2014 0.0047% Preliminary 2014 census result
Iceland 336,060 June 30, 2016 0.0046% Official quaterly estimate
Northern Cyprus[Note 18] 294,396 December 4, 2011 0.004% 2011 census result
Barbados 285,000 July 1, 2016 0.0039% UN projection
Vanuatu 277,500 July 1, 2015 0.0038% Annual official estimate
French Polynesia (France) 271,800 December 31, 2014 0.0037% Official estimate
New Caledonia (France) 268,767 August 26, 2014 0.0037% Preliminary 2014 census result
French Guiana (France) 254,541 January 1, 2015 0.0035% Annual official estimate
Abkhazia[Note 19] 240,705 February 28, 2011 0.0033% 2011 census result
Mayotte (France) 226,915 January 1, 2015 0.0031% Annual official estimate
Samoa 194,899 January 1, 2016 0.0027% Official projection
São Tomé and Príncipe 187,356 May 13, 2012 0.0025% 2012 census result
Saint Lucia 186,000 July 1, 2016 0.0025% UN projection
Guam (U.S.) 184,200 July 1, 2015 0.0025% Annual official estimate
Curaçao (Netherlands) 158,986 January 1, 2016 0.0022% Annual official estimate
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic[Note 20] 150,932 2015 0.002% Preliminary 2015 census result
Kiribati 113,400 July 1, 2015 0.0015% Annual official estimate
Aruba (Netherlands) 110,108 December 31, 2015 0.0015% Official quarterly estimate
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 109,991 June 12, 2012 0.0015% Preliminary 2012 census
United States Virgin Islands (U.S.) 106,000 July 1, 2016 0.0014% UN projection
Grenada 103,328 May 12, 2011 0.0014% 2011 census result
Tonga 103,252 November 30, 2011 0.0014% 2011 census result
Federated States of Micronesia 102,800 July 1, 2015 0.0014% Annual official estimate
Jersey (UK) 102,700 December 31, 2015 0.0014% Annual official estimate
Seychelles 93,144 December 31, 2015 0.0013% Annual official estimate
Antigua and Barbuda 86,295 May 27, 2011 0.0012% Preliminary 2011 census result
Isle of Man (UK) 84,497 March 27, 2011 0.0011% 2011 census result
Andorra 78,014 December 31, 2015 0.0011% Annual official estimate
Dominica 71,293 May 14, 2011 0.00097% Preliminary 2011 census result
Guernsey (UK) 63,001 September 30, 2015 0.00086% Official estimate
Bermuda (UK) 61,954 July 1, 2013 0.00084% Official estimate
Cayman Islands (UK) 60,413 December 31, 2015 0.00082% Official estimate
American Samoa (U.S.) 57,100 July 1, 2015 0.00078% Annual official estimate
Northern Mariana Islands (U.S.) 56,940 July 1, 2015 0.00077% Annual official estimate
Greenland (Denmark) 56,186 July 1, 2016 0.00076% Annual official estimate
Marshall Islands 54,880 July 1, 2015 0.00075% Annual official estimate
South Ossetia[Note 21] 53,559 October 15, 2015 0.00073% Official estimate
Faroe Islands (Denmark) 49,755 August 1, 2016 0.00068% Monthly official estimate
Saint Kitts and Nevis 46,204 May 15, 2011 0.00063% 2011 census result
Monaco 38,400 December 31, 2015 0.00052% Annual official estimate
Sint Maarten (Netherlands) 38,247 January 1, 2015 0.00052% Official estimate
Liechtenstein 37,623 December 31, 2015 0.00051% Semi annual official estimate
Saint-Martin (France) 36,457 January 1, 2015 0.0005% Annual official estimate
Gibraltar (UK) 33,140 December 31, 2014 0.00045% Annual official estimate
San Marino 33,005 December 31, 2015 0.00045% Monthly official estimate
Turks and Caicos Islands (UK) 31,458 January 25, 2012 0.00043% 2012 census result
British Virgin Islands (UK) 28,514 July 1, 2013 0.00039% Official estimate
Bonaire (Netherlands) 18,905 January 1, 2015 0.00026% Official estimate
Cook Islands 18,100 March 1, 2016 0.00025% Official quarterly estimate
Palau 17,950 July 1, 2015 0.00024% Annual official estimate
Anguilla (UK) 13,452 May 11, 2011 0.00018% Preliminary 2011 census result
Wallis and Futuna (France) 11,750 July 1, 2015 0.00016% Annual official estimate
Tuvalu 10,640 November 4, 2012 0.00014% 2012 census result
Nauru 10,084 October 30, 2011 0.00014% 2011 census result
Saint Barthélemy (France) 9,417 January 1, 2015 0.00013% Annual official estimate
Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France) 6,286 January 1, 2015 0.000086% Annual official estimate
Montserrat (UK) 4,922 May 12, 2011 0.000067% 2011 census result
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (UK) 4,255 February 10, 2008 0.000058% 2008 census
Sint Eustatius (Netherlands) 3,877 January 1, 2015 0.000053% Official estimate
Falkland Islands (UK) 2,563 April 15, 2012 0.000035% 2012 census result
Norfolk Island (Australia) 2,302 August 9, 2011 0.000031% 2011 census result
Christmas Island (Australia) 2,072 August 9, 2011 0.000028% 2011 census result
Saba (Netherlands) 1,811 January 1, 2015 0.000025% Official estimate
Niue 1,470 July 1, 2015 0.000020% Annual official estimate
okelau (NZ) 1,411 October 18, 2011 0.000019% 2011 census result
Vatican City 842 January 1, 2014 0.000011% Official estimate
Cocos (Keeling) Islands (Australia) 550 August 9, 2011 0.0000075%
Pitcairn Islands (UK)





Or only this?


CHIN0001.GIF


The answer is obvious.

India would go with option 1 while Pakistan would go with option 2.
 
.
Do you really think its over? India is done with you.
we will just leave with getting your a$$ whooped in SAARC, your water?

We are just getting started...
As I Said make a batti of Bhutan or even whole SAARC its a dead dead dead cow we are happy with CPEC and need to put all attention and sources energies on it, and water? stop it:lol:
What's the reality?
Russia not with you
China not with you
USA is neutral
Iran interesting in CPEC
Now sleep again keep dreaming fake sardar.
 
.
All those above mentioned countries mean as much to Pakistan as does Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea and the North pole. It makes no difference to Pakistan whatsoever. Will not affect us in the slightest. Apart from China & Turkey, all other nations are meaningless to Pakistan. The above title is very misleading also. It insinuates that Pakistan cannot survive because india, afghanistan, bangladesh & Bhutan have boycotted us.......lol.

The most amusing post so far.

@hellfire @PARIKRAMA @jbgt90

And to think that Pakistan was enthusiastically into meeting these same 'no difference to Pakistan whatsoever' countries at every opportunity. These terribly sour grapes.....
 
.
Such farcical action of India actually is a massive victory for Pakistan. Indian actions are proving that India has zero planning in tactical response and delivery mechanism. Pakistani military mechanism can literally slap India in the face and all India can do is frown and cry profusely. That's exactly what this is. India does not have the Balls to take out 10 Pakistani posts and get into an escalation regimen, that is what happens to country of bean counters.

SIr

I have to step in here. Sorry to say, but i could not disagree with you more. Let's for argument sakes say that Indian Army takes out 10 Pakistani Forward Posts which they definitely can. What's to stop PA Infantry Forward Units from doing the same on the Indian side? On a low level engagement, Pakistani Forward Units are equally as potent and can inflict the same damage on the Indian side as the Indian to the Pakistani side.

Long term solution is peace. These di** measuring contests of taking out 10 Pakistani Posts won't serve any purpose. Pakistan can do the same, and Pakistan Army can easily absorb the loss of 10 Posts and build 20 more. Both sides need to come together and hash out our problems. I would rather we put the precious little money we have on our butter than buying thee expensive arms.
 
.

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom