Entertainment
Modi’s China ploy
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been having quite a rocky ride of late. Of course, if one were to go purely by the way much of the mainstream India media (pejoratively called “Godi media” by many non-BJP supporters in India) Modi can still do no wrong.
However, the situation for him on social media, in particular, where the BJP Troll Army used to hold sway till not too long ago, seems to have changed considerably.
Several things have contributed to this, and all of these have given rise to very popular memes. The first relates to Operation Sindoor and how the Indians basically ran to the US and asked it to request Pakistan for a ceasefire. The US obliged, and US President Trump deftly played the trade deal card and got both sides to stop.
However, soon after relations between India and the US, specifically between Modi and Trump, soured, with the former refusing to publicly acknowledge any American role in the ceasefire.
In the weeks that have followed, Trump has said on record that he was the one who stopped the war, which he has repeated could have gone nuclear — a war in which between five to seven jets were shot down (he has used the figure of five, six and most recently seven) after he persuaded both countries to end it and in return the US would offer them a trade deal.
Pakistan played its cards deftly, with its army chief even being invited to a one-on-one lunch by the most powerful man in the world, to getting a relatively low tariff of 19% — compared to India’s at 50%. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) also followed this up by approving investment in Pakistan, and in particular, a $410 million financing for the Reko Diq project.
The ADB stated that this was the first financing of its kind under the new Critical Minerals-to-Manufacturing Value Chains approach and marked the bank’s first financing of a mining project in decades.
And more potential rewards followed for Pakistan, with the US resuming fisheries imports after a several-year prohibition.
The rocky ride, so to speak, is of course not entirely related to America’s improving ties with Pakistan. It has a lot to do with India’s own faults, in particular Modi’s insecure and paranoid personality. According to a German publication, he did not take at least four phone calls from the US president, and while much of India’s mainstream media takes that as a sign of Modi standing up to a bully, the fact is that Modi doesn’t want to be confronted by the truth.
After all, he cannot admit before his right-wing Hindutva followers that it was India which requested a ceasefire with Pakistan — that would be a major no-no and could cost him the right-wing vote.
There is also the tariff issue, but it stems mainly from Modi’s mishandling of the Operation Sindoor fiasco and his refusal to acknowledge the role played by the US and in particular President Trump. This was further exacerbated by its oil imports from Russia, which is then refined by companies owned by Modi’s friends and sold at a sizeable profit.
The consequence of this chain of events and the rapid deterioration in ties between India and the US has seen Modi cosying up with the presidents of Russia and China at last week’s SCO summit. While the Godi media has made much of his photo ops holding the hands of Presidents Putin and Xi, the Indian prime minister has been severely ridiculed and mocked for now running to express solidarity with a country that has defeated it at least twice in war recently.
One is, of course, speaking of China, where in Galwan in 2020-21 its military inflicted an embarrassing loss on India’s military. And the other is the conflict with Pakistan in May this year, where missiles and fighter jets supplied to Pakistan by China were behind the shooting down of as many as seven Indian Air Force (IAF) fighter jets, including three Rafales.
One can and should ask how Modi can now justify coddling up to China. And the answer to that is that this is a face-saving exercise for him because the only reason for him to act the way he did during the SCO summit was because India and US ties are now at an abysmal low and look likely unsalvageable, at least for the remainder of President Trump’s second term.
The photo ops at the SCO summit are just that — optics — and they don’t define a bilateral relationship. And in the not-too-distant past, India has tried to cosy up to the US while simultaneously leading alliances like BRICS, which the US sees as working against its interests.
That duplicity has now been called out, and it won’t be seen as duplicitous only by America but by China as well. Pakistan’s own relationship with China is very strong and as the May conflict showed, it’s at a level militarily with no other such example elsewhere in the world. And it is unlikely that there would be space for India in this.
India is clearly eyeing a trade relationship with China, which means it doesn’t see itself fighting a war with it. That is a positive development because by extension, it should seek the same kind of relationship with Pakistan as well. That would be a potentially win-win situation for both countries. But it will take more than someone like Modi to do that.
Disclaimer: The viewpoints expressed in this piece are the writer’s own and don’t necessarily reflect Geo.tv’s editorial policy.
The writer is a journalist based in Karachi. He posts @omar_quraishi and can be reached at: [email protected]
Originally published in The News
Entertainment
US warships head to Middle East amid Iran tensions
- USS Abraham Lincoln moves from Asia-Pacific: US officials.
- Say other assets to arrive in ME in coming days.
- Trump says Iran ‘can’t do the nuclear’.
WASHINGTON: A US military aircraft carrier strike group and other assets will arrive in the Middle East region in the coming days, two US officials said on Thursday, even as President Donald Trump voiced hopes of avoiding new military action against Iran.
US warships, including the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, several destroyers and fighter aircraft, started moving from the Asia-Pacific last week as tensions between Iran and the United States soared following a severe crackdown on protests across Iran in recent months.
One of the officials said additional air defence systems were also being considered for the Middle East. The United States often increases troop levels in the region at moments of heightened tension, something experts note can be entirely defensive in nature.
However, the US military staged a major build-up last summer ahead of its June strikes against Iran’s nuclear programme, and later boasted about how it kept its intention to strike a secret.
Trump had repeatedly threatened to intervene against Iran over the recent killings of protesters there, but demonstrations dwindled last week and Trump’s rhetoric on Iran has since eased. He has shifted his focus to other geopolitical issues, including his pursuit of Greenland.
On Wednesday, Trump said he hoped there would not be further US military action in Iran, but said the United States would act if Tehran resumed its nuclear programme.
“They can’t do the nuclear,” Trump told CNBC in an interview in Davos, Switzerland, referring to major US air strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June 2025. “If they do it, it’s going to happen again.”
It has now been at least seven months since the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, last verified Iran’s stock of highly enriched uranium. Its own guidance says such checks should be carried out monthly.
Iran must file a report to the IAEA on what happened at the sites struck by the United States and on nuclear material believed to have been there, including an estimated 440.9 kg of uranium enriched to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% weapons-grade level. That is enough material, if enriched further, for 10 nuclear bombs, according to an IAEA yardstick.
It remains unclear whether protests in Iran could surge again. The demonstrations began on December 28 as modest protests in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar over economic hardship and quickly spread nationwide.
Entertainment
Microsoft 365 hit by major outage caused by failed infrastructure
Microsoft is hit by a major outage that has crippled its 365 products for thousands of users.
The outage affected business communities widely.
Reports of technical failures began coming in early afternoon on Thursday, January 22, impacting core productivity platforms such as Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft 365, and Microsoft Teams.
The DownDetector confirmed over 45,000 reports were recorded for Microsoft 365 and around 40,000 for Outlook.
This hindered sending or receiving emails, accessing files, or joining team meetings.
The outage is confirmed by Microsoft officials.
The company’s 365 X (formerly Twitter) account stated that investigators “identified a portion of service infrastructure in North America that is not processing traffic as expected.”
Officials added that the team is working to restore the infrastructure to recover the service traffic.
Prior to one day, users experienced a similar outage that was attributed to a third-party networking issue.
As of now, Microsoft support teams are working to resolve the issue for the affected systems; however, a specific timeline has not been provided yet.
Microsoft advises its customers that updates are available on its official Cloud status webpage.
Entertainment
Drake takes legal battle over Kendrick Lamar track to next level
Drake is now furious as he fighting back after a court threw out his defamation case against Universal Music Group.
The 39-year-old rapper filed an appeal officially on January 21 in U.S. Court of Appeals while showing that he isn’t ready to give up just yet on the heated high-profile lawsuit over Kendrick Lamar’s diss track Not Like Us.
The case dramatically started in January 2025 where he said that the song hurt his reputation because it called him a “certified pedophile.”
However, Drake also argued that Universal’s promotion of that track made things even worse but now Kendrick is not part of the lawsuit.
A federal judge dismissed the case in October 2025, claiming that the lyrics were opinions, not facts.
Drake’s team disagreed to judge’s conclusion as they went on to add that the song presented its words as clear facts and that it misled fans through its marketing while causing even more damage.
For the unversed, Drake first filed a notice of appeal in November 2025, officially starting the process.
Moreover, the never-ending case which has been sparking buzz for so long now continued to draw a lot of attention in the music world.
All of Drake and Kendrick’s fans and industry insiders are now talking about where the thin line is.
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