Asmongold TV - What actually happened in India | Asmongold TV
Episode Date: September 2, 2025What actually happened in India Asmongold show for all of his stream highlights, competitions, reactions & more. ---------------------- ----------- Keywords: gaming culture, gaming content creator, ...game criticism, gaming community, twitch clips Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In April 2025, a peaceful tourist town in Kashmir turned into a nightmare.
28 people have reported to have been killed after gunmen opened fire on tourists in Indian administered Kashmir.
Why would they do that?
A group of armed terrorists stopped travelers and began asking one terrifying question.
Are you Hindu or Muslim? If the...
Huh. That sounds a lot like terrorism to me.
And then they shoot them if they say that
they're not like the right one?
Answer didn't match.
They opened fire.
Right.
26 innocent tourists were killed.
One woman crying over her husband's body.
See, this is one of the big differences that a lot of people don't really understand is that
the difference between a war and terrorism is that these terrorists actively target civilians
and they kill civilians specifically.
They don't go in trying to attack a military base and civilians get.
killed in the process. They don't, you know, like, they don't try to bomb a place where there
are a military area and there's casualties of like collateral damage. These people actively
target civilians. They do. They actively target them.
Begged the attackers to shoot her too. Yeah. It's like in rust where like you're sitting
out there on the beach ready to shoot some new person.
Harris laughed telling her to go tell India's prime minister. Since that moment, India's people
are furious. The army is on alert. Pakistan is getting nervous. And now the big question is...
Well, why would Pakistan be nervous? Shouldn't Pakistan use their own military to find out where these
insurgency terrorist groups are and get rid of them themselves? Because like if they have a terrorist
group in their country, isn't that a problem for Pakistan? And if that's not a problem for Pakistan,
then that sounds like Pakistan is a problem.
That's what I would say.
That's their responsibility.
Is the next war loading in 2025?
Let's go back.
See how it all began.
What is this?
At the time of independence in 1947, British India was divided into two separate nations.
India, which had a Hindu majority population, Pakistan, created as a homeland for Muslims.
But the split wasn't as clean as drawing.
the line on a map. It was violent, brutal, and deeply personal. Over 15 million people were forced to move.
Muslims from India to Pakistan and Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan to India.
Entire families uprooted. Trains filled with refugees arrived.
Why is Britain over their fucking...
Why are they playing civilization over in India?
Spices?
This is ridiculous.
This is why, this is, by the way, this is why a lot of the world hates the West.
It's because of bullshit like this.
This is a country that they're not even next to.
They're in a totally different fucking place.
And now they're trying to play fucking, you know, I don't know, civilized, playing risk with this country.
It's insane.
The spice must flow.
guess so. But I just wanted you guys to see, this is the reason, and by the way, it doesn't
excuse terrorism. Obviously, it doesn't excuse terrorism. It doesn't excuse this to happen.
But like, if you were in one of these countries and your family got displaced, yeah, I wouldn't
like Britain either. Slaughtered neighborhoods that had coexisted for centuries turned on each other
overnight. It became one of the biggest and bloodiest migrations in human history with over a million
people dead. Wow. That trauma didn't just vanish. It turned into resentment. And the cracks only got deeper.
One of the biggest cracks of paradise called Kashmir. Why aren't they mad at Britain?
Because I feel like Britain is the one that did this, not even Pakistan, India.
Kashmir was and still is. They are. One of the most breathtaking places in the world.
That's a really nice place.
Peaceful lakes. Wow. Lush green valleys. A literal heaven on earth.
They're too far away.
But politically, it's been a hell.
When the British left, they gave over 560 princely states like Kashmir a choice.
Join India, join Pakistan, or stay independent.
The ruler of Kashmir, Maharaja Harry Singh, was a Hindu.
But most of the people in Kashmir were Muslim.
The Maharaja wanted to stay independent, not join either India or Pakistan.
Uh-oh.
But then, in October 1947, tribal militias from Pakistan,
Pakistan, backed by its army, launched an invasion into Kashmir to force it into Pakistan.
In panic...
Well, I mean, that's pretty one-sided, isn't it?
The Maharaja turned to India for help.
India agreed.
But on one condition, Kashmir must officially become part of India.
The Maharaja signed the instrument of a session, legally joining Kashmir to India.
And Indian troops flew in to push back the attack.
Want to blame Britain now?
Yeah, of course, because Britain are the ones that started this.
Just because Britain isn't responsible for every action along the chain,
doesn't mean that Britain didn't light the fuse.
Just like that, the first Indo-Pak war began.
That war ended in 1948, with a ceasefire brokered by the United Nations.
And also, it doesn't mean Pakistan is...
Look, it doesn't mean Pakistan is good.
Like, obviously, I mean, these people are...
They're awful terrorists, right?
That are, like, going in here and killing, like, civilians.
Yeah, not everybody in Pakistan, obviously, before somebody tries to take that out of context again.
But like the people that are going in and forcing these military insurgency groups, they're awful people.
They're terrible. They're terrorists.
Of course.
But if you can't see the downstream effect of this nation building and imperialism and how this creates these structural problems, I don't know what to tell you.
two things can be wrong at the same time.
And like, do you know what I'm saying?
And not just Britain?
Do you know how like I've criticized like Hassan, for example,
for not being able to like acknowledge that, you know,
there are bad actors on both sides?
I think that we're doing the same thing by not acknowledging that Britain was also a bad
actor in this situation as well.
I do.
I think we're doing the same thing.
We shouldn't do that.
Look, here's my point.
I think that the amount of imperial.
and the amount of oversight that foreign countries do on countries that do not have the same race,
culture, traditions, or religion as them, making decisions for them,
enforcing their will on these countries.
I think this is a recipe for disaster.
It is, and I think historically, this can be proven in so many cases.
And I think a lot of the current conflicts that we have right now are the result of that happening.
So I and I don't see how you can ignore that.
I don't see how you can say that's not happening.
You don't have you don't lose anything by acknowledging that this is true.
It doesn't mean that the West is evil or the West is bad.
It just means that maybe we shouldn't meddle in people's affairs so much.
And then maybe it wouldn't create these problems that happen down the line.
It's it's not unreasonable to think that way.
There's nothing that's unreasonable about this at all.
If you're going around and you're fucking taking over countries and then trying to make decisions for them, you're going to have problems.
I don't know what to say.
That war ended in 1948.
Okay, that was pretty fast.
With a ceasefire brokered by the United Nations.
Anyway.
But the damage was done.
Kashmir was now divided.
India controlled about two-thirds of the region.
Pakistan controlled the rest, which it still holds today as Puck or Pakistan occupied Kashmir.
Okay.
The UN called for a referendum to let the people of Kashmir decide their future, but that vote never happened.
And said-
What a surprise.
Man, that sucks.
Since then Kashmir has remained the bone of contention in every major conflict between the two nations.
India and Pakistan have fought four wars in total.
Nineteen 47 to 48, the first war right after partition over Kashmir.
This is about to be five.
1965, another full-scale war again over Kashmir.
19701 the most devastating war, but this time not about Kashmir.
It was about East Pakistan where India supported the independence movement that eventually created Bangladesh.
1999 cargo war.
Pakistani soldiers and militants.
I didn't even know about this.
Disguised as locals infiltrated Indian territory in the cargo region,
India launched a massive counterattack operation and pushed them back.
Wow.
In each of these wars, India emerged stronger militarily.
But the cycle of hatred and mistrust never broke.
And when war didn't work, Pakistan tried something else.
By the early 2000s, a new kind of war had begun, a shadow war.
Terrorism became the weapon of choice.
It does seem like, I mean, again, this video could be biased.
But from this, the way the video is prescribing this,
it seems like Pakistan is the aggressor in every single one of these instances.
That they're the ones that are starting at every single one.
Instead of soldiers crossing the borders with tanks, militants,
a video could be biased. It's important to keep in mind.
Just quietly with backpacks, guns, and suicide vests,
attacks on civilians.
became a tool to destabilize India, especially in Kashmir.
One of the most horrific examples, Mumbai, 2611.
On the night of November 26, 2008, 10 terrorists from Pakistan arrived by boat on the shores of Mumbai,
armed with AK-47s, grenades and explosives.
They split into teams and launched simultaneous attacks across the city.
The Taj Mahal Hotel, the Oberoi
Trident Hotel, Cafe Leopoid, a Jewish community center, Shivaji train station.
For nearly 60 hours, Mumbai turned into a war zone.
More than 170 people died, including American, Israeli, and British citizens.
Over 300 were injured.
The only surviving attacker, Ajma al-Kasab, was captured alive.
His interrogation revealed detailed planning and training all traced back to Pakistan.
based terror.
That's brutal.
Lashkar-e-Tiba.
Then came Pulama in 2019.
A suicide bomber rammed a vehicle full of explosives
into a convoy of Indian paramilitary forces.
So it's just every time.
I mean, why can't Pakistan keep these people under control?
Yeah, I don't get it.
Video is probably biased.
If my knowledge in a situation, Pakistan is more an incentive to be aggressive than India.
You think videos biased?
Okay.
In Pulama District Kashmir, 40 soldiers were killed instantly.
It was the deadliest attack on Indian security forces in decades.
The terror group, Jash E. Muhammad, based in Pakistan, claimed responsibility.
India's response, swift and bold.
In the early hour of February 26, 2019, Indian Air Force jets crossed the border and bombed a terror training camp in Palakot, Pakistan.
This was under.
unprecedented. The first air strike on Pakistani soil since 1971. Pakistan responded by sending its
own jets, leading to a short but intense dog fight. One Indian pilot in Hanandan Varthamon was captured,
but returned two days later as a peace gesture. The world watched nervously. That's good. Two nuclear-armed
nations, one spark away from disaster. But the situation de-escalated for the moment. That's nice.
the attackers never fully stopped. Cross-border terrorism continued. Sleeper cells were busted.
Indian security forces worked round the clock to prevent further strikes. But everything changed.
On April 22nd, 2025. So this is the shit that just happened.
With a horrifying incident in Pahalgam Kashmir. The scenic town of Bahá
Baháil
nestled in the Kashmir valley is known for its tranquil beauty, horse-rised
rides through pine forest and peaceful rivers.
Every year, it's a drawl in thousands of tourists
from across the country and abroad.
But that day became a killing field.
Tours, like always, had arrived to enjoy the mountains.
Vehicles can't go deep into the region.
So most visitors hop on horseback and local guides
to explore.
Among them was a woman from central India, accompanied
by her husband.
Their horse guide chatted with them, but something
about him was off. Okay. He wasn't just asking friendly, touristy questions. He started probing. Where are you from?
Have you read the Quran? Are, oh my God. Oh boy. Oh boy. Here it is. All right. Yeah, I didn't see any of this at all.
Holy shit, man. Are you Hindu or Muslim? The woman tried to brush it off, but then she heard him whisper on a call.
Wait, so they just, okay. Go with plan B.
Guns are in place.
Panic surged through her veins.
She discreetly messaged India's intelligence tip line.
A hotline most tourist wouldn't even know about.
But before the agency could act, it was already too late.
Around six to seven armed men dressed like locals suddenly appeared out of nowhere.
Not military uniforms, civilian clothes, horses, and hidden weapons.
Yeah, sure.
But what they carried wasn't small arms.
It was full-blown automatic weapons.
They started pulling terrorists off horses shouting at them.
Are you Hindu or Muslim?
If Muslim read the Quran.
If not, they opened fire.
Bullets flew in all directions.
Screens echoed through the valley.
The attackers didn't care if there were women, children, or elderly.
Anyone who couldn't answer in the way they wanted was shot.
26 innocent tourists.
died on the spot. One woman lost her husband right in front of her eyes. Through tears, she shouted at the attackers.
You killed him? Kill me too. But the response was chilling. One of the terrorists sneered and said,
No, go tell your prime minister what happened today. And then he laughed. A laugh that still
Well, didn't they just get bombed yesterday? So that would really, you know, that didn't really work out too well for them, did it?
Yeah
rings in the ears of many Indian
who heard her testimony
The country erupted in grief
And then in fury
Across social media
protests, news channels
There was only one question
How long will we tolerate this?
This wasn't just a terror attack
This was psychological warfare
A brutal reminder
That terrorism in Kashmir isn't gone
It's just evolved. And once again, all eyes turned toward Pakistan. Because here's the truth.
Attacks like these aren't random. They don't come out of nowhere. These are trained operatives,
supplied, funded, and sheltered, not by rogue street gangs, by organized networks, many of which
have found safe havens across the border. India's intelligence agency. That's insane, man.
Like, it's hard to know, like I said before, right? It's always hard to know, like, if this kind of stuff is
biased or not, but
I don't know what to say.
It keeps saying this was in
the same thing with a different name.
None of our Muslim as a terrorist.
I mean, obviously, like, it's, look,
religious extremism is bad no matter
what you're doing, right? I mean, like,
I don't know why it's hard
to understand. Like, this
is my stance on it. All
religious extremism is bad.
Any group that uses their religion
to be violent
to civilians and commit terrorists
activities, I think should be completely annihilated. That's why I pay my taxes to the military.
That's what I want the military to do. So that's it, right? And so, like, it doesn't matter.
Is it disproportionately affecting one religion or another? It doesn't matter. Even if it only
affects one religion, it doesn't matter because it's the action that's the problem, not the religion.
He began tracing the attacker's origins. Early reports suggested ties to a radicalized splinter group
operating out of Pakistan, administered Kashmir.
The government didn't realize all the details, but what came out was enough.
And India's response?
It wasn't immediate missiles or strikes.
It was something smarter.
Enter the Water War.
Let's rewind to the 1960s for a moment.
India and Pakistan signed the Indus Waters Treaty, brokered by the World Bank under it.
Pakistan would get unrestricted access to the Indus, Jalem, and Shinnab Rivers.
India would control the Ravi, Bias, and Sutledge.
This was meant to prevent disputes over water, a resource both countries rely on heavily.
But post-Paholgum, India began-
This is crazy how nice.
I can see why they're fighting over this shit.
This looks really nice.
Oh my God, that looks amazing.
Bro, like, that's out of a video game.
Post-Paholgum, India began reviewing the tree.
And in a bold but silent move, India started diverting excess water
that traditionally flowed into Pakistan, not cutting off water, but minimizing the outflow
legally within treaty terms. It was a message. You keep sending terror, we'll stop sending
rivers. In agriculture-dependent Pakistan, where 70% of the water comes from these rivers,
this hit hard. The government issued press releases, held emergency meetings, and called it a
violation. But legally, India hadn't broken anything. It had simply,
stopped playing nice. Meanwhile, back at the line of control, things got hotter, literally. Small
gunfire exchanges began almost... I mean, like, this is kind of how I see something like that is like,
I think cutting off their water supply is fucking awful, right? It is. But I think that what they're saying
is like in the same way that the Pakistani government, they think is probably playing stupid with
these terrorist organizations, they're going to play stupid with the treaty as well. I think that's
that seems like kind of what's going on.
Daily report.
That's what they think is happening.
The list of drone intrusions, sniper activity,
and unmanned surveillance aircrafts being taken down.
But that wasn't all.
For the first time in over a year,
Indian Air Force fighter jets began routine patrols
across northern air zones,
especially near the borders.
Troop movement increased.
Tanks were spotted near Ford Base.
Special forces began training drills close to the border.
This wasn't war, but it wasn't peace either.
Pakistan already reeling from an economic crisis,
a falling currency and skyrocketing inflation
suddenly had to prepare for something it wasn't ready for.
Escalation.
While Indian military analysts discussed precision response
and surgical strikes, Pakistani generals were seen holding
late-night emergency meetings.
And the civilians?
They were lining up.
for basic groceries.
As flour prices doubled and fuel became scarce,
public trust in the government hit rock bottom.
But did that stop the military elite?
Not really.
Pakistan's leadership has often operated
with the mindset of strategic depth,
keeping the India conflict alive
to justify its military control over internal affairs.
But this time, with international pressure building
and their economy and free fall,
their bluff might just be called.
Wow.
At this moment, India hasn't launched
a full-blown military strike, but the chess board is set.
Tensions are the highest.
They've been in years.
It's crazy that both of these countries have nukes, too, which is what's nice.
Are alert.
Borders are hot.
Yeah, that's a whole lot.
Diplomats are working overtime, and across both countries, citizens are wondering,
is this the start of something big?
Wow.
Well, I think it probably will be, honestly.
It's true.
It's an effective technique, usually.
Do you not even one prime minister in Pakistan?
a complete full term. They were always arrested by the military. Yeah, I mean, like, that sounds
pretty bad. I mean, the thing is, whenever I look at the video like this, it's very obvious to me that,
I mean, like, I don't know, it seems like it was biased in favor of India and like it was pretty
much one-dimensional, but like some conflicts are like that, right? I mean, like, there's a good,
there's a good side and the bad side, right? I don't know whether that's true or not, but like my
skepticism, you know, like shield kind of goes up when I see that.
every single instance that's shown in the video is an instance of, you know, like one person
being the aggressor and the other person not being. And this is just me coming at it from like a
layman's perspective because I know that, you know, the way with all media is, it can be deceptive.
And so when I see something that's like trying to paint a very one dimensional picture,
I do begin being very skeptical because of that. Sadly, it's the case. Yeah, I just, I'd need to know more
about it before I was sure. But yeah, that's actually really good to know. This is.
is a YouTube video too. I just somebody just linked it on my Reddit, but I'll link it to you guys right now.
Which one is it? I think this is it. Yeah, this is it. And this guy actually, he's only made two
videos ever. This is a really, really good video. Yeah, I mean, I would say like the editing and
everything is really, really well put together. So I'll link you guys this video so you can subscribe
to his channel. Yeah, there it is.
