
Innocent Tourists Attacked in Pahalgam: Another False Flag as India Blames Neighbor During US VP Visit
April 22, 2025The Pahalgam attack is being used as political ammo. Indian media claims it is meant to disrupt tourism and spread fear. But no one is asking how such an attack happened in a so-called “normal” and “secure” IIOJK.
Today, Hindu tourists are attacked in Baisaran Valley, Pahalgam (IIOJK). The timing raised eyebrows—it happened while the US Vice President JD Vance is visiting India. Within hours, BJP leader Ravinder Raina blamed Pakistan. No investigation. No evidence. Just the same old script.
This isn’t the first time.
In March 2000, 35 Sikhs were massacred in Chattisinghpora, Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir—right when US President Bill Clinton was touring India. Back then too, India blamed Pakistan instantly. Years later, independent voices, including Indian journalists and rights groups, questioned that version. But the damage was done. The narrative took over.
Now, 25 years later, the pattern repeats.
The Pahalgam attack is being used as political ammo. Indian media claims it was meant to disrupt tourism and spread fear. But no one is asking how such an attack happened in a so-called “normal” and “secure” IIOJK.
The truth is, if IIOJK was really stable, this wouldn’t have happened. This attack has exposed India’s fragile grip on the region. The “normalcy” narrative is just surface-level. Beneath it, the situation remains tense and unresolved.
Kashmiri leaders condemns the attack. They demands accountability. But instead of addressing the security failure, the Indian government fell back on blame. It’s easier to name Pakistan than to fix the system.
This isn’t about peace or justice. It’s about optics.
Every time a high-profile foreign official visits India, there’s a sudden tragedy. The pattern is too obvious now. A crisis unfolds, fingers point at Pakistan, and India plays the victim in front of the world.
The Pahalgam incident isn’t just a tragedy—it’s part of a strategy. A strategy to deflect, distract, and dominate the narrative.
Innocent lives are lost. But the Indian propaganda machine keeps running.