The President of the Pakistan Business Network Omar Butt stated on Tuesday that Pakistan Army has permanently altered the regional balance of power within a matter of hours.
He noted that the humiliation of India’s retreat and Pakistan’s swift military success have astonished the experts all over the world.
Speaking to the business community, Omar Butt said that Pakistan’s war strategy has shaken the global power equilibrium. Pakistan has not only shattered India’s military pride but also demolished its very foundations of war, leaving observers stunned.
He praised the technical brilliance and modern warfare model of the Pakistan Army, led by General Asim Munir, which crushed all of Modi’s assumptions and left him disgraced on the world stage. The Pakistan Army has created a new chapter in South Asian military history, he remarked.
The business leader further stated that Pakistani soldiers demonstrated unmatched faith, sacrifice, and professionalism, while Pakistani experts decimated India’s entire defence network, grounding its air force. Pakistani aircraft patrolled Indian airspace without fear; a total failure of Indian leadership, he noted.
The President of the Pakistan Business Network Omar Butt mentioned that Pakistan’s success and India’s downfall prompted previously silent global powers to spring into action, calling for a ceasefire. Pakistan acted wisely as a responsible nuclear power and limited the war in time, demonstrating strategic wisdom in its military actions.
General Asim Munir has shown the world that modern warfare is not just about weapons but also technology, intelligence, and strategy. Victory lies not in numbers but in training, discipline, faith, and technological superiority.
Omar Butt added that Pakistan used its military edge not for aggression but for strategic defence, successfully thwarting enemy plans. This triumph has elevated national morale and improved Pakistan’s global standing.
He emphasised that now is the time to apply the same spirit to Pakistan’s economic and industrial policies, underlining the urgency and importance of these measures to make the country invincible militarily and economically.
To achieve this, he proposed providing incentives to local industries to boost production and exports, simplifying the tax structure, ensuring ease in energy and raw material supply, replacing complex tax policies with a transparent and business-friendly system, and prioritising exports in IT, agriculture, textiles, and defence equipment.
He also suggested that exporters be made more comfortable with refunds, subsidies, and market access, that investor confidence be restored through political stability, justice, and an end to corruption, that youth be equipped with modern technology, entrepreneurship, and vocational training, that university-industry links be strengthened, and that frequent policy shifts be avoided to enable long-term planning.
He concluded that if Pakistan applies the same focus and planning to its economic strategy as it did to its military strategy, it could soon rank among the strongest nations in the world, instilling hope and optimism about the country’s future.