Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi
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Free Balochistan
Ashraf Baloch.@imasbaloch
Last time Pakistani forces mistreated women like this, #Bangladesh was born. Guess, they don’t learn. Pakistani Police are ruthlessly arresting and beating Baloch female activists. Despite relentless crackdowns, the Baloch continue their protests. #StopBalochGenocide
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Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi

@WazhmaAyoubi Asim Munir is 100% right, you Afghandus are namak haram. Tum logon k sath sahi kar raha hai wo.
Indonesia

Imagine the mindset of Asim Munir, responding to a video of an Afghan businessman burning the Pakistani rupee by ordering bombings of Afghan cities that result in the massacre of hundreds of innocent civilians. Even if the currency comparison is unfavorable, reacting in such a manner is deeply troubling. Instead of bombing us, the focus should be on strengthening your economy and addressing internal challenges.
This raises serious concerns about judgment, accountability, and global safety, especially when such leadership is in control of nuclear weapons. Actions that harm civilians are unacceptable and demand international attention.
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Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi

BREAKING: In 1971, a Pakistani aircraft carried Henry Kissinger secretly from Islamabad to Beijing, and the flight that nobody saw rewired the entire Cold War. Tomorrow, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar flies the same route for the same reason: to broker a superpower realignment through the only country trusted by both sides of a war reshaping the global order.
Here is what has unfolded in 96 hours.
On Saturday, Islamabad hosted foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt for a quadrilateral summit on the Iran war. After the meeting, Dar confirmed that both the United States and Iran have expressed their “confidence” in Pakistan to facilitate talks. All four foreign ministers endorsed Pakistan hosting direct or indirect US-Iran negotiations.
On Thursday, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Dar that China “appreciates Pakistan’s untiring efforts” and “supports Pakistan in continuing to play a mediating role.” Wang stated that dialogue is the only way to “help restore normal navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.” That last phrase is the tell. China is not expressing abstract support for peace. It is naming the specific commercial outcome it requires: Hormuz open, oil flowing, supply chains reconnected. Tomorrow Dar arrives in Beijing to secure explicit backing for Islamabad as the venue.
Consider the structural position. Pakistan delivered the US 15-point peace plan to Iran. Pakistan maintains its “all-weather” partnership with China, reaffirmed by Wang Yi in January. Pakistan signed a mutual defence agreement with Saudi Arabia in September 2025. Pakistan’s Field Marshal Asim Munir lunched with Trump at the White House. Sharif spoke to Iran’s President Pezeshkian for over an hour on Saturday. No other country on Earth has live, trusted channels to Washington, Tehran, Beijing, and Riyadh simultaneously. The last country that occupied this structural position was Pakistan itself, in 1971, when it carried Kissinger secretly to Mao.
The variable every analyst is missing is what China actually needs. China imports roughly 1.5 million barrels per day of Iranian crude. China controls 90 percent of rare earth processing and 99 percent of gallium. The United States needs rare earths for defence, semiconductors, and energy transition. The geometry of a grand bargain, in which oil access for China is traded against rare earth supply security for the United States, with Hormuz reopened and Kharg Island accessed through negotiation rather than seizure, runs directly through Islamabad. Not because Pakistan chose this role. Because Pakistan is the only node connected to all four principals.
This is not prediction. It is structural observation. Dar in Beijing tomorrow. April 6 Trump deadline in seven days. Kharg Island fortified but un-raided. Polymarket pricing 68 percent boots by April 30. The window between mediated resolution and military escalation is exactly seven days wide, and the country standing in the doorway is the one that stood there 55 years ago when the last superpower realignment was brokered.
Whether Pakistan succeeds or fails, the attempt is historically significant. A nuclear-armed nation of 240 million people, balancing simultaneous alliances with the United States, China, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, hosting the architecture that will determine whether the world’s most important energy chokepoint reopens through negotiation or force. The last time a single country occupied this structural position, the result was the Nixon-Mao handshake that defined half a century of geopolitics.
The flight is tomorrow. The deadline is April 6. And the molecules are still boiling off.
Full analysis in The Last Molecule Standing, live on Substack now. - open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi
Mobin Qureshi retweetledi

Positive things about #SalmanKhan × Vamsi Movie.
1) Good Producer ( Dil Raju)
2) Vamshi knows how to present stars
3) High octane action Thriller
4) NO SKF
5) Salman Khan is looking serious
6) Good BGM & MUSIC.
BRING IT ON 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

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