Former Pakistan High Commissioner to India, Abdul Basit, has sparked widespread outrage after suggesting that Islamabad should target Indian cities like Mumbai and New Delhi if the United States ever attacks Pakistan’s nuclear assets. Speaking in a recent interview, Basit framed India as a “default” target in a hypothetical worst-case scenario, arguing that since the U.S. is out of Pakistan’s nuclear range, retaliation would be directed at India.
The remarks come amid heightened regional tensions following India’s ‘Operation Sindoor’ and a 2026 Annual Threat Assessment by U.S. Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, which flagged Pakistan’s growing missile capabilities. While Islamabad’s foreign ministry maintains its stance is “exclusively defensive,” the provocative rhetoric has drawn sharp condemnation from Indian political leaders who have labelled the statement as a sign of “mental instability.”
A “Default” Target: Escalating Rhetoric
During a discussion with a local Pakistani channel, Abdul Basit asserted that Pakistan would strike Mumbai and New Delhi “without a second thought” if the country were to be targeted by foreign powers like the U.S. or Israel. “America won’t attack Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal. Even if we believe that in a hypothetical situation, America attacks Pakistan… what do you think will be our option then? India,” Basit stated.
This alarming logic of using India as a proxy for Western adversaries has been interpreted by security analysts as a “hybrid threat” aimed at normalising aggression. Reacting to the viral clip, BJP National Spokesperson Tuhin Sinha remarked, “Abdul Basit’s threat shows that even today, Pakistan is rattled… It has lost its mental balance.”
He further noted that such language suggests terrorism is “ingrained” in the mindset of certain high-profile Pakistani figures.
Background: A Climate of Regional Friction
The timing of Basit’s comments coincides with a volatile period in South Asian geopolitics. Earlier this year, India reportedly conducted ‘Operation Sindoor,’ a series of strikes targeting terror infrastructure in Pakistan and PoK following a major terror attack in Pahalgam that claimed 26 civilian lives.
Furthermore, the 2026 U.S. Intelligence report by Tulsi Gabbard explicitly mentioned Pakistan among nations developing advanced missile systems with nuclear payloads. While the Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Tahir Andrabi, categorically rejected these assertions as a threat to the U.S. homeland, Basit’s personal rhetoric has complicated official diplomatic efforts.
Basit, who served as the top diplomat in New Delhi from 2014 to 2017, is no stranger to bilateral friction, but his latest comments mark a significant departure from standard diplomatic decorum.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we believe that such inflammatory language from former diplomats is not only irresponsible but dangerous. In a region already grappling with historical wounds and the constant threat of escalation, rhetoric that treats the lives of millions of civilians in Mumbai or Delhi as “default targets” is deeply disturbing.
True leadership and diplomacy should be rooted in the pursuit of peace, empathy, and constructive dialogue, rather than the brinkmanship of nuclear threats. We must strive for a South Asia where coexistence and harmony are the priorities, not the strategic mapping of destruction. Words have power, and when they are used to incite fear rather than foster understanding, they only serve to widen the chasm between neighbouring nations.
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