India-Pakistan top military officials to speak as ceasefire holds
- India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire on Saturday after intense fighting along the Line of Control in Kashmir, leading to a calm night by Sunday.
- The truce followed four days of escalated conflict triggered by a militant attack on Indian tourists that India blamed on Pakistan-backed groups.
- Both sides engaged in heavy shelling, aerial dogfights involving up to 125 jets, and reciprocal military strikes that caused dozens of casualties and diplomatic tensions.
- Almost 70 people died in the fighting, with India claiming over 100 militants were killed, and officials warning that any threats to sovereignty would meet decisive responses.
- The ceasefire held while military chiefs planned talks on Monday to discuss further peace steps, with the US encouraging continued dialogue and communication between both nations.
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Pakistan used military hotline to request ceasefire. How it works, why it matters
Cornered and out of diplomatic moves after Operation Sindoor, Pakistan had no choice but to reach for the military hotline which was their last lifeline to request a ceasefire and de-escalate rising tensions with India. Learn more below.
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Total News Sources79
Leaning Left10Leaning Right12Center12Last UpdatedBias Distribution35% Center, 35% Right
Bias Distribution
- 35% of the sources are Center, 35% of the sources lean Right
35% Right
L 29%
C 35%
R 35%
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