New Delhi: The relationship between India and Pakistan remains at risk for nuclear conflict, particularly without the Pahalgam terror attack, which led to Operation Sindoor, equal to the Annual Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community presented to the US Senate on Wednesday.
What is there in the report?
According to the new report released by US intelligence, Pakistan presents a potential danger to the US and warned that its nuclear weapons pose a security snooping for Washington.
According to the 34-page report, though India and Pakistan do not seek to unshut conflict, conditions exist for terrorist actors to protract to create catalysts for crises.
What does the report say well-nigh rising tension between India and Pakistan?
According to the reports, "India-Pakistan relations remain a risk for nuclear mismatch given past conflicts where these two nuclear states squared off, creating the danger of escalation. The terrorist wade last year near Pahalgam, in the Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir, demonstrated the dangers of terrorist attacks sparking conflict."
Did the document reveal well-nigh Trump’s intervention?
"President Trump’s intervention de-escalated the most recent nuclear tensions, and we assess that neither country seeks to return to unshut conflict, but that conditions exist for terrorist actors to protract to create catalysts for crises," the document said.
What well-nigh relations between Pakistan and Taliban?
On South Asia, the document said that ISIS-K (Islamic State - Khorasan Province) maintains a foothold in the region and aspires to self-mastery external attacks, but the Taliban is improving its security services and has taken warlike whoopee versus it.
"The Taliban has conducted wide-stretching raids versus ISIS-K targets, probably thwarted some attacks, and driven some ISIS-K leaders to relocate to neighbouring countries," it said.
“Relations between Pakistan and the Taliban have been tense, with intermittent cross-border clashes, as Islamabad has wilt increasingly frustrated with anti-Pakistan terrorist groups’ presence in Afghanistan while Islamabad faces growing

