Pakistan Missiles - Updates, News & Discussion

There's more to it that people here are missing.

The US is fundamentally opposed to peer competitors - Pakistan can never under any circumstance be one. However, after China, india is the only other country that can be - being the other country with over a billion people.
The emergence of that future competitor will necessitate regional allies for "containment"
1773936218629.png
 
Islamabad, Pakistan – The United States’ top intelligence official has placed Pakistan alongside Russia, China, North Korea and Iran as a country whose advancing missile capabilities could eventually put US territory within reach.

Presenting the 2026 Annual Threat Assessment [PDF] before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Wednesday, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said the five countries were “researching and developing an array of novel, advanced or traditional missile delivery systems with nuclear and conventional payloads, that put our homeland within range”.

Recommended Stories​

list of 4 items
end of list
On Pakistan specifically, Gabbard told lawmakers that “Pakistan’s long-range ballistic missile development potentially could include ICBMs with the range capable of striking the homeland”.

The written assessment went further, placing Pakistan across multiple threat categories.

On missiles, it said Pakistan “continues to develop increasingly sophisticated missile technology that provides its military the means to develop missile systems with the capability to strike targets beyond South Asia, and if these trends continue, Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) that would threaten the US”.

On weapons of mass destruction, it assessed that Pakistan, alongside China, North Korea and Russia, would “probably continue to research, develop, and field delivery systems that will increase their ranges and accuracy, challenge US missile defenses, and provide new WMD-use options”.

The report also flagged South Asia as a region of “enduring security challenges”, warning that India-Pakistan relations “remain a risk for nuclear conflict”.

1773952242520.png
 
The US National Intelligence Director said Islamabad's long-range ballistic missile efforts may evolve into intercontinental systems capable of targeting the American mainland

1773854192-9395.jpg

Tulsi Gabbard speaking at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on global threats. (Photo: Bloomberg)

United States Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesday told lawmakers that Pakistan’s advancing missile programme could eventually bring the American mainland within its reach, placing Pakistan in a group of nations - comprising Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran - that pose a threat to the US.

Speaking at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on global threats, Gabbard said Islamabad’s long-range ballistic missile efforts may evolve into intercontinental systems capable of targeting the United States.

“Pakistan's long-range ballistic missile development potentially could include ICBMs with a range capable of striking the homeland,” she said, outlining the widening scope of strategic risks.

Her remarks came as part of a broader warning that multiple state actors are accelerating both conventional and nuclear delivery systems. Gabbard noted that countries like Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, and Pakistan are actively developing advanced missile technologies, alongside capabilities in cyber and kinetic warfare.

“The intelligence community assesses that Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, and Pakistan have been researching and developing an array of… missile delivery systems with nuclear and conventional payloads that put our homeland within range,” she said.

Global missile threat set to expand: Gabbard

Gabbard further cautioned that the scale of the threat is expected to grow sharply over the next decade. According to US intelligence estimates, the number of missiles capable of reaching American territory could rise from more than 3,000 today to over 16,000 by 2035.

She added that China and Russia remain the most consistent and active challengers, particularly in developing systems designed to evade US missile defence networks. North Korea, she added, already possesses intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching US soil and continues to expand its nuclear arsenal.

“The IC assesses that China and Russia present the most persistent and active threats,” she said, adding that Pyongyang’s cyber operations remain a significant concern.

Gabbard omits Iran uranium enrichment claim in testimony
On Iran, Gabbard said Tehran retains the technical base to eventually develop an intercontinental missile, should it choose to pursue that path before 2035. She also indicated that Iran had been attempting to recover from damage to its nuclear infrastructure following strikes by the US and Israel.

“Prior to Operation Epic Fury, the IC assesses Iran was trying to recover from the severe damage to its nuclear infrastructure… and continued to refuse to comply with its nuclear obligations,” she said, while referring to restrictions placed on international inspectors.

Her comments marked a shift from earlier prepared remarks that suggested Iran had not resumed enrichment activities after the strikes. The omission drew scrutiny from lawmakers during the hearing.

When questioned by Senator Mark Warner on why that portion was not included in her opening statement, Gabbard attributed it to time constraints, saying she had skipped parts of her prepared text.

She also pushed back on suggestions that intelligence assessments were being shaped by political narratives, maintaining that the intelligence community provides objective inputs while threat determinations ultimately rest with the president.

“It is not the intelligence community's responsibility to determine what is and is not an imminent threat,” she said.

The testimony comes amid ongoing debate within the administration over the justification for military action against Iran. While President Donald Trump has repeatedly asserted that Tehran posed an immediate threat, some officials have expressed more measured assessments.

Gabbard, who has previously criticised US military interventions, said Iranian leadership had been weakened by recent strikes but added that the government structure remains intact.

At the same time, internal disagreements appear to persist. A senior adviser to Gabbard, Joe Kent, resigned a day earlier, arguing that Iran did not pose an imminent threat to the United States.

During the hearing, lawmakers also pressed intelligence officials on whether the president had been warned about potential Iranian retaliation, including threats to Gulf nations and the Strait of Hormuz.

Gabbard declined to discuss specific briefings but said historical patterns indicated that Iran has long signalled its willingness to leverage the strategic waterway.

“I will say that those of us within the intelligence community continue to provide the president with all of the best objective intelligence available to inform his decisions,” she said.
 
Last edited:
The Americans are back with their accusations or should I say, Hindutva Tulsi Gabbard.

This is finger licking good. The prospects of possessing an ICBM is fantastic. Of course Pakistan is developing extremely powerful missile capabilities and why shouldn’t it?
 
She is a rabid dog of saffronism, struggling to contain her excitement at randomly deploying the word "Pakistan" in a wholly discordant and randomised context.

She thought that her narrative would diffuse effortlessly among the audience by virtue of this subterfuge, but the obsession for Pakistan demonstrated by these brown skinned pseudo-Americans is laid bare by such bilious antics.

It is like a verbal tic for these civilisational tourrette's victims.

"Pakistan" they utter, pausing amidst the sea of white faces to check for validation. Gosh it's pathetic.

So be it.

Let us now pursue a ballistic missile and paint "Adab, Tulsi" on the side of it and parade it down Islamabad's boulevards on 14th Aug.
 
Good, but why desist from highlighting Tulsi's actual religious and political affiliations?

"A United States official" who happens to be a Hindutva fangirl and RSS loyalty club elite member.

"Gabbard’s political career exists because of financing and promotion provided by US-based affiliates of the RSS and VHP. She has spent the past five years serving as the handmaiden of Hindutva"


Why do our departments keep dropping the ball? Are they retarded?

It is precisely this conflict of interest and her need to instinctively serve a global hindutva cause that prompt her statements against Pakistani interests. It is quite simple to highlight this, yet somehow our administrators politely describe her as a "US official".
 
Good, but why desist from highlighting Tulsi's actual religious and political affiliations?

"A United States official" who happens to be a Hindutva fangirl and RSS loyalty club elite member.

"Gabbard’s political career exists because of financing and promotion provided by US-based affiliates of the RSS and VHP. She has spent the past five years serving as the handmaiden of Hindutva"


Why do our departments keep dropping the ball? Are they retarded?
write a letter to MoF , i will do it to
 
The US National Intelligence Director said Islamabad's long-range ballistic missile efforts may evolve into intercontinental systems capable of targeting the American mainland

View attachment 186954

Tulsi Gabbard speaking at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on global threats. (Photo: Bloomberg)

United States Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesday told lawmakers that Pakistan’s advancing missile programme could eventually bring the American mainland within its reach, placing Pakistan in a group of nations - comprising Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran - that pose a threat to the US.

Speaking at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on global threats, Gabbard said Islamabad’s long-range ballistic missile efforts may evolve into intercontinental systems capable of targeting the United States.

“Pakistan's long-range ballistic missile development potentially could include ICBMs with a range capable of striking the homeland,” she said, outlining the widening scope of strategic risks.

Her remarks came as part of a broader warning that multiple state actors are accelerating both conventional and nuclear delivery systems. Gabbard noted that countries like Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, and Pakistan are actively developing advanced missile technologies, alongside capabilities in cyber and kinetic warfare.

“The intelligence community assesses that Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, and Pakistan have been researching and developing an array of… missile delivery systems with nuclear and conventional payloads that put our homeland within range,” she said.

Global missile threat set to expand: Gabbard

Gabbard further cautioned that the scale of the threat is expected to grow sharply over the next decade. According to US intelligence estimates, the number of missiles capable of reaching American territory could rise from more than 3,000 today to over 16,000 by 2035.

She added that China and Russia remain the most consistent and active challengers, particularly in developing systems designed to evade US missile defence networks. North Korea, she added, already possesses intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching US soil and continues to expand its nuclear arsenal.

“The IC assesses that China and Russia present the most persistent and active threats,” she said, adding that Pyongyang’s cyber operations remain a significant concern.

Gabbard omits Iran uranium enrichment claim in testimony
On Iran, Gabbard said Tehran retains the technical base to eventually develop an intercontinental missile, should it choose to pursue that path before 2035. She also indicated that Iran had been attempting to recover from damage to its nuclear infrastructure following strikes by the US and Israel.

“Prior to Operation Epic Fury, the IC assesses Iran was trying to recover from the severe damage to its nuclear infrastructure… and continued to refuse to comply with its nuclear obligations,” she said, while referring to restrictions placed on international inspectors.

Her comments marked a shift from earlier prepared remarks that suggested Iran had not resumed enrichment activities after the strikes. The omission drew scrutiny from lawmakers during the hearing.

When questioned by Senator Mark Warner on why that portion was not included in her opening statement, Gabbard attributed it to time constraints, saying she had skipped parts of her prepared text.

She also pushed back on suggestions that intelligence assessments were being shaped by political narratives, maintaining that the intelligence community provides objective inputs while threat determinations ultimately rest with the president.

“It is not the intelligence community's responsibility to determine what is and is not an imminent threat,” she said.

The testimony comes amid ongoing debate within the administration over the justification for military action against Iran. While President Donald Trump has repeatedly asserted that Tehran posed an immediate threat, some officials have expressed more measured assessments.

Gabbard, who has previously criticised US military interventions, said Iranian leadership had been weakened by recent strikes but added that the government structure remains intact.

At the same time, internal disagreements appear to persist. A senior adviser to Gabbard, Joe Kent, resigned a day earlier, arguing that Iran did not pose an imminent threat to the United States.

During the hearing, lawmakers also pressed intelligence officials on whether the president had been warned about potential Iranian retaliation, including threats to Gulf nations and the Strait of Hormuz.

Gabbard declined to discuss specific briefings but said historical patterns indicated that Iran has long signalled its willingness to leverage the strategic waterway.

“I will say that those of us within the intelligence community continue to provide the president with all of the best objective intelligence available to inform his decisions,” she said.

Pakistan should develop its own ICBM ASAP.
 
I think two things:

1.) Indian Hindutva & Jewish lobbies in the US pay a lot of money to try and mainstream these narratives as normal

2.) The US has some of its own kind of trust/anxiety with Pakistani nukes because of a certain minority of psychos that exist, the insecure identity-less types who subscribe to idealistic caliphate dreams where thousands of nations become one like some medeival fantasy and wage religious wars

But the second is overblown. Majority don't subscribe to it, especially not the more nationalist kind.
 
This is just typical Zionists fermenting the ground work for the future war against Pakistan. Their destroying Iran as we speak now, they've already gone on record to call Turkiye the next Iran.

If you think about it, after iran it leaves just two Muslim majority nations with any capacity to resist/fight.

Turkiye with her strong military and historic military mindset and Pakistan who critically has nuclear weapons.

You take those two nations out the equation and islamic civilisation is forced into a state where she has no potential to ever walk her own independent path. And eventually when the criminalisation of islam comes into force in the west, there will be no strong Muslim majority nations to make a case against it.

However despite iran taking an absolute pounding, their still not defeated yet. So lets see where things take us.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top