@Vibrio @VCheng
The worlds initial reaction to the Balakot attacks was also based on a presumption of a conventional Indian military capability and superiority that Pakistan could not possibly respond to.
Pakistan’s retaliation (and actually giving India a black eye), along with the now widely acknowledged lack of credibility of Indian claims, changed those presumptions and therefore the calculus that will govern the international response to the next Indian escalation.
With respect to acting against militant groups, that was always on the cards given the FATF threat, and those international avenues remain the only points of leverage for Pakistan to take certain actions internally. That said, the point remains that any such actions, shell games or not, would not have prevented Pulwama and will not prevent a future Pulwama.
So while Pakistan can (and should) put her house in order to avoid international sanctions, a variable in the form of the brainwashed Indian public, fed on a media diet of anti-Pakistan hysteria, hate and warmongering, led by a party that subscribes to the same, demanding military escalation against Pakistan regardless of whether Pakistan is responsible or not, remains a problem that only India can resolve.